Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
102 Park St, Haworth: St. John the Baptist 69 Valley St, Hillsdale: St. Luke 340 N Franklin Tpk, Ho-Ho-Kus: St. John the Evangelist 235 Harrison St, Leonia: St. Margaret of Cortona 31 Chamberlain Ave, Little Ferry: St. Francis de Sales 125 Union St, Lodi: St. Joseph 40 Spring St, Lodi Immaculate Conception 900 Darlington Ave, Mahwah: Immaculate ...
Sussex, Bergen, Morris, Essex, Somerset, Middlesex, and Monmouth counties in New Jersey became part of the Diocese of New York; The rest of New Jersey became part of the Diocese of Philadelphia. [4] St. John's Parish, founded in 1826, was the first parish in Newark. [6] In Jersey City, Saint Peter's Church was dedicated in 1831.
St. John's Church is a historic Roman Catholic parish church located within the Archdiocese of Newark at 22-26 Mulberry Street in Newark, Essex County, New Jersey, United States. St. St. John's Church is the state's third-oldest Catholic church.
The Church of St. John the Evangelist (commonly called St. John's Church) is a parish of the Roman Catholic Church in the City of Orange Township, Essex County, New Jersey, within the Archdiocese of Newark. It is noted for its Gothic Revival style church (building), a prominent local landmark located at 94 Ridge Street.
An 11-year-old sixth-grader was suspended for a day and a half at St John the Apostle Catholic School in Virginia Beach after he waited two hours before reporting that his friend had shown him a ...
St. James Cathedral Diocese of Kearney: 1912–1917 [26] St. James Church Diocese of Rockford: 1908–1970 [27] St. John's Pro-Cathedral Diocese of Altoona: 1901–1923 [28] St. John the Apostle Cathedral Archdiocese of Oregon City: 1845–1862 [29] St. John the Evangelist Church: Diocese of Indianapolis: 1878–1906 [30] St. John the Evangelist
The St. Jude relic now on tour comes to North Jersey on Thursday, Dec. 7 with a stop at Church of the Assumption on Jefferson Ave., Emerson. The relic tour's next stop is St. Joseph Roman Catholic ...
In 1820, Bishop John Connolly of New York sent Reverend Richard Bulger to Paterson to serve as first resident priest in New Jersey. [5] In 1821, Bulger established St. John the Baptist Church, the first church of any denomination in Paterson. [8] Waves of Irish and German Catholic immigrants flooded into the area during the mid-1800s.