Benedict Harrison graduated from the University of Oregon with a B.A. in 1931. He then attended Saint AnthonyÕs Seminary, Santa Barbara, California, receiving his D.D. in 1939. He was ordained a Catholic Priest of the Franciscan Order. From 1939 until the outbreak of war, he lived with the Apache Indians in the White River Mountains of New Mexico, studying and systemizing the Apache language. He also served as Assistant Pastor of a local church. He volunteered for service as a U.S. Army chaplain, and upon receiving special permission from the Vatican, he was commissioned in April 1942. He may be the only Franciscan Priest thus accepted into the Chaplaincy in World War II. His first assignment was in the Panama Canal Zone, and later to the 80th Infantry Division, going into the European Theater of Operations with them in 1944, shortly after D-Day. Following the war he remained in service and, in 1949, attended the Command and General Staff College, and the following year became Assistant Army Chaplain of the FOURTH Army. He subsequently served with the 7th Infantry Division in Korea. He attended the Army War College in 1953-54, and then became Division Chaplain for the 1st Infantry Division, and then was appointed Director of Personnel for the Chief of Chaplains at the Pentagon. He retired as a U.S. Army colonel. In 1970 he was serving as pastor of a church in Mexico when he was killed in an automobile accident.




