The rock ‘n’ roll congressman priest from Wisconsin who was benched by the pope

Green Bay priest Robert Cornell hobnobbed with rock stars, then befriended – and tangled with – powerful politicians from both sides.

A photo of Father Robert Cornell with Johnny Cash and an unknown boy. The priest organized concerts in Green Bay in the '60s and '70s and hosted the Johnny Cash Show and other well-known performers.
Father Robert Cornell poses with Johnny Cash and an unknown boy. The priest organized concerts in Green Bay in the ’60s and ’70s and hosted the Johnny Cash Show and other well-known performers. Photo courtesy of the St. Norbert Abbey.

A photo of Father Robert Cornell campaigning with Walter Mondale at an unknown location.
Father Robert Cornell campaigns with Walter Mondale at an unknown location. Photo courtesy of St. Norbert Abbey.

Father Cornell was “a firm believer in compromise,” said LaurieAn Zollar, whose deceased husband Dan played cribbage with the congressman and served as his campaign treasurer.

“He would listen to both sides, said Zollar, 84, of De Pere. “He would figure it out. He was a master at that.”

ROSES FOR JUNE

The priest and politician was born in Gladstone, Michigan, near Escanaba, in 1919, according to the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. He earned his bachelor’s degree from St. Norbert, where he would go on to teach from 1947 until 2001, taking breaks for two terms in Congress.

Before he entered partisan politics, Cornell was perhaps best known in northeast Wisconsin for organizing concerts. They featured big-name performers like Johnny Cash and June Carter, The Yardbirds, and The Carpenters at the recently-demolished Brown County Arena.

Cornell donated the profits from the concerts to needy students at St. Norbert and other schools.

Though the priest cheekily mocks himself as a “lonely celibate” in his memoir, the star performers who came to town got to know him well. Cornell always left roses in the dressing room for June Carter, several of his friends recalled. That gesture prompted the singer to call the Green Bay venue her favorite, Wegge recalled Cornell saying.

Zollar remembered loaning her ironing board to Cornell so Karen Carpenter could press her costume before the show.

And when Green Bay Packer Forrest Gregg surprised Cornell by campaigning for him at a rally in 1972, the concerts were a critical factor.

“At the time I told him that I would do anything to meet Johnny Cash,” Cornell quotes Gregg in the memoir. “Now I’m paying off.”

Father Robert Cornell speaking to the press in an undated photograph.
Father Robert Cornell speaking to the press in an undated photograph. Photograph courtesy of St. Norbert College.
Former U.S. Rep. Dave Obey (D-WI), U.S. Rep. Robert Cornell and President Jimmy Carter in an undated photo.
Former U.S. Rep. Dave Obey (D-WI), Father Robert Cornell and President Jimmy Carter in an undated photo. Photo courtesy of St. Norbert Abbey.
A photo of Father Robert Cornell teaching at St. Norbert College in an undated photo.
Father Robert Cornell teaching at St. Norbert College in an undated photo. Photo courtesy of St. Norbert College.
A photo of David Wegge, political science professor emeritus, St. Norbert College
David Wegge, political science professor emeritus, St. Norbert College

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