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Holy Family Church is situated in Franklinton, the oldest neighborhood in Columbus. The Catholic population of the early 1850s consisted of only a few families, augmented for a short time by a small number of laborers who were constructing the National Road. Before 1833 Mass was celebrated occasionally in the homes of the few Catholic families.
It is the oldest Catholic church building in Ohio and home to Ohio's oldest Catholic parish which has been served by priests of the Dominican order since its foundation. [20] [21] [22] Saint Mary Church Mattingly Settlement: 6280 St Marys Rd, Nashport, OH 43830 Gothic Revival Saint Nicholas Church: Zanesville: 925 E Main St, Zanesville, OH 43701
The sanctuary of the current Holy Name Church decorated for Christmas. The altar visible in the center was acquired from Mt. Carmel Hospital in the 1980s. In 1980, the parish began a five-year restoration plan for the church, undertaking major repairs to the roof and ornate ceiling of the building, as well as repairs to stained glass windows ...
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Ready also organized the Holy Name Society, a Parent-Teacher Organization, the Council of Catholic Women, the Catholic Youth Council, and the St. Vincent de Paul Society in the diocese. [11] He created 18 new parishes and oversaw the construction of nine elementary and five high schools. [ 11 ]
By then, the growing Catholic population in Columbus necessitated a larger church building. At Father Juncker 's request, the parish was renamed “Holy Cross”. The present structure was completed and consecrated by bishop John Purcell on January 16, 1848, [ 7 ] just as Irish immigrants began to arrive in Columbus to escape the Great Famine .
Holy Family Catholic Church, which the old St. Rose Church resembled Architectural historians have divided the Precious Blood-related churches of western Ohio into four generations. Constructed in 1912, St. Rose's is a member of the fourth generation, although it resembles many third-generation churches because of its Gothic Revival ...
The Catholic population had outgrown nearby Holy Cross Church [1] and the German-speaking South End residents wanted their own parish. [2] It was in that same year, St. Mary's parish was formed with the newly ordained Fr. Francis X. Sprecht [2] as its first pastor.