Fr. Benedict Mary Augustine Blank, OP
Augustine Blank was born in Sacramento, California on May 31, 1902. Orphaned at an early age, he was raised by
relatives and attended grammar and high schools in Sacramento, San Francisco, and Oakland. His first affiliation with the Order and Province
was the two years he spent at St. Thomas College, the apostolic school then conducted by
the Province at Ross (Kentfield), California. In
1923 he received the habit and began his novitiate at St. Josephs Priory, Somerset,
Ohio. It was at this time that he took the
name Benedict Mary, which later became well known throughout the Province in
their initialed form, B.M.B. He
made his profession of simple vows at Somerset in 1924 and then for two years studied
philosophy at St. Rose Priory, Springfield, Kentucky and at the Dominican House of
Studies, River Forest, Illinois.
In 1926 he was sent to Rome and resided at the Roman
priory of the Irish Province, San Clemente, while pursuing his theological studies at the
Collegio Angelico of the Order (now the
Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas). He
made his solemn profession in Rome in 1927 and was ordained to the priesthood there on
July 7,1929. Two years later he was awarded
the degrees of Lector and Doctor of Theology. Returning
to the Province, he began his long association with St.
Alberts College as Professor of Philosophy, Theology, and Canon Law. In 1932 he was appointed Master of Students and
Pro-Regent of the Studium, positions that he held until 1940. From 1935 until 1946 he also taught philosophy and
theology at Dominican College of San Rafael.
In 1940 Father Blank was elected Provincial of the Province of the Holy Name, a post
that he filled for three successive terms, until 1952.
As Provincial he showed himself to be a forceful superior and a vigorous
administrator. Due mainly to his efforts, the
present physical plant of St. Alberts College was completed and dedicated and the
Kentfield Priory, which served as the novitiate of the Province, was constructed and
staffed. Even as Provincial he continued his
interest in teaching, his first love, and served as Professor at Dominican College of San
Rafael and as lecturer in the summer sessions of the Catholic University of America, held
on the San Rafael campus.
Upon completion of his third term as Provincial in 1952, he was appointed as Prior and
Regent of the Angelicum in Rome by Father Master General Emanuel Suarez. In the same year he was honored with the degree of
Master in Theology. He is still remembered in
Rome for his hard work in reorganizing the community and intellectual life of the
Angelicum after the destructive years of World War II. He returned to California again from Rome in 1955
to serve as chaplain and Professor of Theology to the Dominican Sisters at Mission San
Jose, and as Professor of Dogmatic Theology at St. Alberts. In 1958 he accepted the position of chairman of
the departments of philosophy and theology at Dominican College, San Rafael, and held
these positions with distinction until a series of strokes beginning in 1968 compelled him
to resign.
Father Blank was totally dedicated and objective in his work for the Church, the Order,
and the Province. He treasured his friends,
both among the brethren and among the laity. Behind
the gruff, impatient, often sarcastic exterior, there was a man of warmth, humor, loyalty,
and generosity. Father Blank bore the pain
and humiliation of his long, debilitating illness with exemplary patience and gentleness. As a man used to intense activity, he suffered for
five years the agony of almost total inactivity. He
died peacefully on February 13, 1973, while under the care of the Sisters of Nazareth at
their hospital near San Rafael and is buried in the Dominican Cemetery, Benicia,
California.
- Photo: Father Benedict Blank with Pope Pius XII on
October 27, 1954
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