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St. Pius X is a Roman Catholic church in Fairfield, Connecticut in the Diocese of Bridgeport. The present Colonial-style church was designed by J. Gerald Phelan. [1]
St. Mary of Czestochowa Parish (Polish: Parafia św. Marii Częstochowskiej w Middletown) is a Catholic church parish in Middletown, Connecticut that was founded for Polish immigrants. The St. Mary of Czestochowa Church is a church building at 79 South Main Street in Middletown. The parish was founded in 1903.
St. Pius X Church, or St. Pius X Parish or other variations, may refer to: St. Pius X Church, St. John's, Canada; Iglesia de San Pío X (Todoque), La Palma, Spain; St. Pius X Church (Fairfield, Connecticut), United States; Saint Pius X Catholic Church in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
Bishop Benedict Fenwick of Boston in 1829 purchased an existing Episcopalian church in Hartford to create Holy Trinity, the first Catholic church in the state. By the 1840's, the population in the region had grown sufficiently to move Fenwick to petition the Vatican for a diocese for Connecticut and Rhode Island .
St. Pius X Seminary - Operated from 1912 to 1969; run by the Franciscan Friars of the Atonement. St. Charles Seminary (Staten Island) - Operated from 1948 to 1966; run by the Missionaries of St. Charles Borromeo. Wadhams Hall Seminary College - Operated from 1924 to 2002; run by the Diocese of Ogdensburg.
A new brick church building in Romanesque style with a seating capacity of 650 was dedicated on Thanksgiving Day, November 27, 1894. [2] In 1956 the second St. Thomas Church was demolished began and the parish hall used as a chapel. The new St. Thomas Church was dedicated by Bishop Lawrence Shehan of Bridgeport on February 24, 1957. [3]
And originally, when the Catholic Church was first being organized in the United States, Trumbull was part of the territory of the Archdiocese of Baltimore, established in 1789 by Pope Pius VI, which, as the first Catholic diocese in the United States, comprised, at the time, the entire territory of the young and growing nation.