BIOGRAPHY: Rev. Michael HOFMAYR, O. S. B., Cambria County, PA Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by Lynne Canterbury and Diann Olsen. Portions of this book were transcribed by Clark Creery, Martha Humenik, Betty Mirovich and Sharon Ringler. USGENWEB ARCHIVES (tm) NOTICE All documents placed in the USGenWeb Archives remain the property of the contributors, who retain publication rights in accordance with US Copyright Laws and Regulations. In keeping with our policy of providing free information on the Internet, these documents may be used by anyone for their personal research. They may be used by non-commercial entities so long as all notices and submitter information are included. These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit. Any other use, including copying files to other sites, requires permission from the contributors PRIOR to uploading to the other sites. The submitter has given permission to the USGenWeb Archives to store the file permanently for free access. http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/cambria/ ____________________________________________________________ From Wiley, Samuel T., ed. Biographical and Portrait Cyclopedia of Cambria County, Pennsylvania. Philadelphia: Union Publishing Co., 1896, p. 109-10 ____________________________________________________________ REV. MICHAEL HOFMAYR, O.S.B., a courteous and scholarly gentleman, and prior of St. Benedict's, at Carrolltown, was born in Toelz, Bavaria, January 2, 1838, and is a son of Joseph and Mary Frances (Petz) Hofmayr. He was reared in his native country, and after taking the full classical course of Ludwig's gymnasium of Munich, Bavaria, came, April 29, 1861 to Pennsylvania, where he pursued advanced studies at St. Vincent's college, an abbey in Westmoreland county, which noble institution of learning had been founded in 1846, by Rt. Rev. Boniface Wimmer, who thus revived in America the grand institutions of the Benedictine abbeys of the middle ages for the wider spreading of the glad tidings of Christianity. After five years of close and successful study he completed the work, and on May 30, 1866, was ordained priest, at Covington, Kentucky, by Rt. Rev. A Carell. After his ordination he was made assistant to the church at Covington, where he remained acceptably until September, 1868, when he was transferred by his ecclesiastical superiors to St. Boniface's and St. Lawrence churches, near Carrolltown, where he remained in charge one year. At the end of that time he became the first resident priest at Lincoln, Nebraska, and in the winter of 1871 returned to Carrolltown, where his pastoral labors continued from February, 1871, to February, 1877. During the spring of the last-named year he was at St. Vincent's abbey and college, and then went to St. Mary's German Catholic church of Allegheny city, where he remained as assistant pastor to St. Vincent's, where he served for five and a-half years. He then served as prior at Covington, Kentucky, from April, 1888, to October, 1889; as assistant pastor of St. Mary's, Allegheny city, from 1889, to September, 1892, and as professor of moral theology at St. Vincent's college from September, 1862, to August, 1894. In the last-named month he returned to Carrolltown, where he has since served as prior. Father Hofmayr has always proved to be an efficient, careful, and successful pastor, accomplishing much in the mental and spiritual interests of his people in the different cities and towns where he had churches, and winning worthy commendation in his other fields of important labor as teacher and as prior.