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Catholic Life
Publication of the Diocese of Sale
ISSUE 147
St Brigid’s sole Grade 6 graduate - Page 5
Koo Wee Rup Australia Day honor - Page 6
February 2011
Marist Brother takes his first vows - Page 7
Fr Bill Shanahan dies By Colin Coomber
THE funeral of veteran Gippsland priest Fr Bill Shanahan was held in St Mary’s Church, Bairnsdale, last Wednesday, February 2.
Fr Bill Shanahan
Fr Shanahan, 80, died on January 27 in Bairnsdale where he has been living in retirement. The church was filled for the requiem Mass attended by three bishops, 38 priests, two deacons and people from all parts of the diocese. He was born in South Melbourne in 1930 and was raised in Omeo and is believed to be the only person from the town to become a priest. When he was young his parents moved to Myrtleford to run a hotel and so he began is schooling at Presentation College, Myrtleford, before starting secondary schooling as a boarder at Assumption College, Kilmore. His parents died when he was at school so he moved back to Omeo to live with his aunt Kath O’Brien at the Hilltop Hotel. The move back into Gippsland enabled him to complete his secondary schooling at St
THE plain wooden coffin of Fr Bill Shanahan at the start of his requiem Mass last week.
Patrick’s College, Sale. After school he helped his aunt in the hotel and became a member of the famous 1948 Omeo Football Club premiership team. A mistake by him almost cost Omeo the premiership. Fr Shanahan was playing at centre half forward and with a couple of minutes to go marked the ball with Omeo leading by two points. Thinking he had to reduce the pressure, he wasted some time ambling back to take his kick, then absent-mindedly bounced the ball. The umpire called play-on, and after a hurried kick, the opposition took the ball and swarmed forward where fortunately a shot on goal only resulted in a point. Shortly after the siren sounded to end play and Fr Shanahan breathed a sigh of relief that his lapse in concentration had not robbed his team of the premiership. The following year he entered Corpus Christi Seminary at Werribee to study for the priesthood. He was ordained at St Mary’s Cathedral, Sale, in 1956 by Coadjutor Archbishop of Brisbane, Patrick O’Donnell, who had been a priest of Sale Diocese. The following day he celebrated his first Mass at Immaculate Conception Church, Omeo. Over the years he served as assistant priest at Bairnsdale, Sale and Warragul before becoming administrator at Warragul from 1966-71. He was administrator of the Cathedral parish in Sale from 1972-73 before serving as parish priest at Newborough, Dalyston, San Remo and Bairnsdale. He became Bairnsdale parish priest in June 1982 but ill health forced his early retirement in November 1988. He was instrumental in estab-
Help restore St Mary’s Cathedral
Bishop Christopher Prowse has launched an appeal to raise up to $1 million to restore and enhance the Mother Church of the Diocese of Sale. Please be generous in your giving. Send donations to Cathedral Appeal, Reply Paid 508, Sale, 3853 * Credit card form can be downloaded at www.sale.catholic.org.au. Fill-in on line, print, sign and post.
THE newly ordained Fr Bill Shanahan in 1956. lishing the Catholic Youth Association across the diocese and had a great love of golf which helped him maintain connections with fellow clergymen throughout Victoria and beyond. After a series of heart operations involving 10 by-passes in five years doctors gave him little chance of making his golden jubilee. His health gradually deteriorated as the bypasses blocked one by one but surgeons gave him a new lease of life in 2005 when they inserted four stents in the original arteries which had been blocked for 25 years and a better blood flow was established. He was able to take on new challenges and started filling in for other priests around the diocese, usually celebrating three Masses each Sunday. In 2006 he celebrated the golden jubilee of his ordination. Fr Shanahan remained in good health up until the past six months when heart trouble and prostate cancer began to sap his energy. • Funeral story Page 3