William was born 18 May 1884 (though it’s also claimed he was born in ’85 and ’86, depending on which census/documents you check) and followed his three elder brothers into the priesthood. Newly ordained, William Arendzen SSE was posted to St Labre Indian School, Montana, arriving by ship in Quebec on Oct 13, 1913 where he stayed until he was transferred in 1921. In a letter to another Edmundite father, Bishop Lenehan wrote:
“Father Arendzen was up this week and told us everything was going on well at the mission. The Indians were never so contented as they seem at present. Mother Gertrude (Ursuline) wrote me that the church was filled to the door at Mass on Easter Sunday. Nearly all the Indians received Holy Communion, some of them made their first Communion. I think the grace of God is at present working wonders among the good Cheyenne . . .”
You can read a one hundred year history of St Labre on their website. Whilst working with the Indians, William was made honorary “Big Chief Pink Ear” and when he eventually returned to England, he brought with him two large trunks full of Indian paraphernalia; headdresses, moccasins, tomahawks etc.
William later became parish priest at Porthcawl, in the diocese of Cardiff, where he remained until his death.
There is a remarkable collection of photographs, supplied by my cousin Mark Stancombe, showing William amongst the Cheyenne Indians in Montana. You will find them by clicking ‘Photographs’ and selecting ‘Indian Mission’ in the dropdown menu.
Click the following link for interactive tree and further information on William Arendzen
William-USA-department-of-Labor-02
Four years after arriving in the United States, aboard the SS Laurentic, William applied for permanent residency there. The chronology is a puzzle because, although Petrus moved his family to London in 1873, William was born in Amsterdam some eleven years later and, according to the declaration shown here, apparently remained a Dutch citizen.
The SS Laurentic was completed by Harland and Wolff in Belfast and made her maiden voyage in 1909 from Liverpool to Montreal and Quebec. She subsequently made many voyages carrying emigrants to Canada and the New World from Britain.
The SS Laurentic was selected by the Admiralty in 1914 as a transport vessel and later as an auxilliary cruiser. William sailed in her to the United States in September 1914, so it’s quite possible that this was the SS Laurentic’s last voyage in that role.
Archive: Matthew Stancombe.