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  1. Father Edward Albert Hughes (August 28, 1918 - October 12, 1980) was a Roman Catholic priest who served as an assistant pastor from June 16, 1948 to June 18, 1960 at St. James Church in Mt. Rainier, Maryland.

  2. May 26, 2016 · In 1949, a Saint James priest named Father Albert Hughes first proclaimed Roland's need of an exorcism. Roland, who was then Lutheran, converted to Catholicism and joined Saint James...

    • Glen Barber
    • The Troubled Life of “Roland Doe”
    • More Help Arrives For Ronald Hunkeler
    • The St. Louis Exorcism of Roland Doe
    • The True Story of The Exorcist
    • What Happened After The Exorcism of “Roland Doe”

    The true story behind The Exorcistbegins in the late 1940s in suburban Washington, D.C., with a German-American family. Their 13-year-old, believed to be named Ronald Hunkeler (later referred to pseudonymously as “Roland Doe” or “Robbie Mannheim”), was despondent over the loss of his beloved Aunt Harriet. Harriet was a spiritualist who’d taught him...

    A cousin of the family was attending St. Louis University at the time of Ronald’s struggles. She put the Hunkelers in touch with Father Walter H. Halloran and Rev. William Bowdern. After consulting with the university’s president, these two Jesuits agreed to perform an exorcismon young Ronald with the help of several assistants. The men gathered at...

    The two priests never gave up as they continued the exorcism night after night. On the evening of March 20, the exorcism reached an unhealthy new level. Ronald urinated all over his bed and began shouting and cursing at the priests. Now, Ronald’s parents had had enough. They took him to Alexian Brothers Hospital in St. Louis for more serious treatm...

    No one would have ever known about the exorcism of “Roland Doe” (nor would it have become the true story of The Exorcist) if not for an article in The Washington Post, which reported in August 1949 that priests had indeed performed an exorcism. But the article was scarce on details. It didn’t even give a name, whether Roland Doe, Robbie Mannheim, o...

    Following the exorcism of “Roland Doe,” his family moved back to the East Coast. Sources, which have also referred to him as Robbie Mannheim, say that he found a wife and started a family. He named his first son Michael after the saint believed to have saved his soul. If Roland is still alive today, he would be in his mid-80s. William Bowdern died ...

    • William Delong
  3. May 6, 1985 · The boy, a Protestant, was first attended by his minister and then referred to the Rev. Albert Hughes, assistant pastor at the nearby St. James Catholic Church.

  4. On Schulze's advice, the family went to a local priest, Father E. Albert Hughes, who "gave them a bottle of holy water and candles and sent them on their way," Allen said. Hughes later asked the arch­bishop of Washington, D.C., for permission to perform an exorcism on the boy.

  5. Nov 21, 2020 · Schulze, who apparently wasn’t able to tackle the issue himself, sent them to a priest named Father E. Albert Hughes, who some believe unsuccessfully attempted to perform an exorcism and was injured in the process after the boy reportedly broke off a piece of the spring from his mattress and slashed Hughes’s arm. [ix]

  6. Sep 29, 2021 · By February 1949, Father E. Albert Hughes requested permission from his superiors at the Catholic Church to perform an exorcism on Roland. During the exorcism, Roland was tied down on his...

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