Monsignor James D. Dawson was born in McCool, Neb. in 1929 to Harold
and Sarah Dawson. He was one of five children in the Dawson household.
He graduated from Fairmont High School in 1946 and within the next few
years he had the opportunity to become a teacher or a banker, but received
his calling and instead chose to become a priest.
He began his formation at the St. Paul Seminary in St. Paul, Minn.
where he was the youngest in a class of seventy students. He received
both his philosophy and theology degrees from there and was ordained
a priest on June 9, 1954.
Upon his return to the Lincoln Diocese after his ordination, he was
assigned as Assistant Pastor at St. Cecelia's in Hastings, Neb. He
later earned his degree in educational administration at Catholic University
in Washington, D.C. and began his long-running role as superintendent
of Lincoln's Catholic schools in 1961. Monsignor Dawson was assigned
as the Superintendent of Pius X High School in 1964.
During his tenure, he saw the addition of several new schools in Lincoln,
including North American Martyrs, St. Joseph's and St. Peter's, but
the opening of Villa Marie School (a boarding school for developmentally
disabled children) outside of Waverly, Neb., is one that Monsignor
Dawson holds close to his heart.
For many years, he was an advocate for students with special needs.
He went before the Lincoln Board of Education asking the public schools
to provide special education services in parochial schools. His vision
was became reality due in part to a 1995 U.S. Supreme Court decision.
His service also included roles of Vicar General of the Diocese of
Lincoln, Diocesan Consultor and being named to the Board of Directors
of the Diocesan Housing Ministries, Inc. It’s very remarkable
that Monsignor was able to find time to travel, and visited forty European
countries while fulfilling these roles.
Monsignor Dawson's last assignment as a pastor was at St. Michael's
parish in Cheney, where he served from 1999-2005. In his love for working
with children, he allowed the youth at that parish to spike his hair
as part of a fundraiser.
He retired in 2005 and currently resides in the Bonacum House on Sheridan
Blvd., a place that he had helped design several years earlier. It
is without question that Monsignor Dawson touched the lives of many
and will continue to do so. When the Lincoln Journal Star interviewed
him for a story in 2004, the summation he gave of his life was this: "The
beautiful thing about being a priest is being able to go into the confessional,
hear people's confessions and then tell people that their sins are
forgiven. The sacraments - that's my life, not all this garbage like
traveling to 40 countries."
The Monsignor James D. Dawson Scholarship was established in his honor
in 2004, when he celebrated the 50th anniversary of his ordination.
He requested that the Pius X Foundation establish this scholarship
with gifts received on his behalf.