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Monastery on Mt. Elliott. St. Bonaventure Monastery was established in 1882, one of a number of late 19th century Roman Catholic institutions established in Detroit. [3] At the time, the Capuchin friars wrote to then-Bishop of Detroit Caspar Borgess, seeking permission to establish a community of the Order in his diocese.
10400 Stoepel St., Detroit [3] St. Moses the Black Parish 1125 Oakman Blvd. Detroit [4] St. Peter Claver 13305 Grove St, Detroit Chapel ceiling collapsed in 2018 [5] [6] St. Suzanne - Our Lady Gate of Heaven 1962 19321 W. Chicago Ave., Detroit St. Suzanne parish was founded in 1946. Our Lady Gate of Heaven was merged into the parish in 2002. [7]
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In 1898, the parish of St. Stanislaus was established to relieve the overcrowding in the Polish congregation of at St. Albertus. [2] A church and school were purchased for the parish from the Protestant Bethel Church, [3] and in 1900 a new elementary school was constructed. Reverend F. G. Zella was assigned as the first pastor. [3]
Catholic Churches of Detroit (Images of America). Charleston: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0-7385-3235-5. Godzak, Roman (2000). Make Straight the Path: A 300 Year Pilgrimage Archdiocese of Detroit. Editions du Signe. ISBN 2-7468-0145-0. Orson, Lawrence, (1981) Polish Detroit and the Kolasinski Affair Detroit: Wayne State University Press. 268 pages.
St. Boniface Roman Catholic Church was a Roman Catholic church located at 2356 Vermont Avenue in Detroit, Michigan. It was also known as St. Boniface-St. Vincent Roman Catholic Church . The church was designated a Michigan State Historic Site in 1983 [ 3 ] and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989, [ 1 ] but was ...
The Our Lady of the Rosary Church is a Roman Catholic church located at 5930 Woodward Avenue in Detroit, Michigan. It was originally built as St. Joseph's Episcopal Church – from 1893 to 1896 – and is a historic Romanesque Revival church complex. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 3, 1982. [1]
In the late 1850s, Belgian Catholics immigrated to Detroit and settled in the eastside neighborhoods near Gratiot and Baldwin. [3] In 1886, a parish dedicated to St. Charles Borromeo was established to minister to this congregation. [3] A wood-frame church was constructed for the parish, and quickly expanded.