Joseph McShea

[3] His first assignment, following his return to Pennsylvania, was as a professor at St. Charles Borromeo Seminary, where he taught Latin, Italian, and history (1932–35).

He received his episcopal consecration on March 19, 195 2, from Archbishop Amleto Cicognani, with Bishops Eugene J. McGuinness and William O'Brien serving as co-consecrators, at the Cathedral of SS.

McShea founded "Operation Rice Bowl" which began in the form of a small cardboard box in the parishes of the diocese to receive alms directed to relieving a famine in Africa.

[6] McShea helmed the founding of Holy Family Manor, a nursing and rehabilitation center at the former Eugene Grace mansion in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.

[8] On February 3, 1983, Pope John Paul II accepted McShea's resignation as bishop of the Diocese of Allentown.

[4] McShea, long ill from diabetes and other ailments, died on November 28, 1991, at age 84, and is buried on the cathedral grounds.

Bishop McShea's grave on the grounds of the Cathedral of Saint Catharine of Siena in Allentown, Pennsylvania