Cyprian Davis, O.S.B. was an African-American Catholic monk, priest, and church historian at St. Meinrad Archabbey. He is known for his work on the history of African American Catholicism.
Biography
Davis was born with the name Clarence John in Washington, D.C. on September 9, 1930. He converted to Catholicism in his teenage years and became interested in joining the priesthood as well as becoming a monk. Though many monastic communities did not accept African Americans at the time, after high school, Davis joined the seminary of St. Meinrad Archabbey. He became a novice on July 31, 1950, took the monastic name Cyprian on August 1, 1951, and was ordained a priest on May 3, 1956. He became the first African American to join the monastic community of St. Meinrad. Davis received a S.T.L. from the Catholic University of America, before going to the Catholic University of Louvain, Belgium to study church history, obtaining a licentiate and a doctorate. Upon his first return from Belgium in 1963, he taught church history at St. Meinrad, and eventually became the school's first professor emeritus in 2012. During his studies in Belgium, Davis focused his work on the church during the middle ages to avoid American church history and concerns of race and slavery. However, returning to the United States in the midst of the civil rights movement, Davis attended the August 1963 March on Washington and heard Martin Luther King Jr. deliver his "I Have a Dream" speech. As a black Catholic professor, he began to be invited to speak in black parishes and was constantly asked about the place of African Americans in the Catholic church. He was involved in writing two pastoral letters on race, "Brothers and Sisters to Us" and "What We Have Seen and Heard", and later received a grant from the Lilly Endowment to the study the black church, resulting in the publication of his award-winning The History of Black Catholics in the United States Davis died on May 18, 2015 in Memorial Hospital in Jasper, Indiana, at age 84.