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533 Erie St. Founded in 1875, church dedicated in 1876 [61] St. Lucy 3101 Drexel Ave. Founded in 1958, church dedicated in 1933 [62] St. Mary by the Lake 7605 Lakeshore Dr. Founded in 1849 for German immigrants. Church dedicated in 1853 [63] St. Patrick: 1100 Erie St. Church built in 1925 with Neogothic/Art Deco design by Barry Byrne; listed on ...
The only church in the diocese was St. Peter's, which was deeply in debt. [7] Henni in 1845 founded St. Francis Seminary, allowing the seminarians to stay in his residence. He also brought several orders of nuns and priests to Milwaukee. [8] In 1846, Henni completed Old St. Mary's Church in Milwaukee, the second Catholic church in Milwaukee. [9]
St. John the Baptist Catholic Church (Johnsburg, Wisconsin) St. John Vianney Catholic Church; St. Joseph's Catholic Church Complex (Waukesha, Wisconsin) St. Mary's Roman Catholic Church (Port Washington, Wisconsin) St. Patrick's Roman Catholic Church (Adell, Wisconsin) St. Patrick's Roman Catholic Church (Racine, Wisconsin)
St. Paul's Episcopal Church (Milwaukee, Wisconsin) St. Peter's Evangelical Lutheran Church (Milwaukee, Wisconsin) St. Sava Serbian Orthodox Cathedral (Milwaukee) Saint Stephen Evangelical Lutheran Church of Milwaukee; Salem Evangelical Church (Milwaukee, Wisconsin) Second Church of Christ, Scientist (Milwaukee) St. George Melkite Catholic Church
The additional churches are: All Saints in Waterford, Blessed Sacrament in Erie, Our Lady of the Lake in Edinboro, Our Lady of Mercy in Harborcreek Township, St. Boniface in Greene Township, St ...
Diocese puts Monsignor John Hagerty, headmaster at Cathedral Prep in 1980s, on list of those "under investigation" for child sexual abuse.
The Diocese of Erie (Latin: Dioecesis Eriensis) is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory, or diocese, of the Catholic Church in western Pennsylvania in the United States. It is a suffragan diocese of the metropolitan Archdiocese of Philadelphia. The Diocese of Erie was founded on July 29, 1853. Its mother church is St. Peter's Cathedral in Erie.
This is a list of notable former Catholic priests. Both religious and diocesan priests, and bishops, are included. Most persons on this list can fit into one of the following categories: Left the priesthood but remained Catholic (voluntary laicization) Left the priesthood and the Catholic Church altogether (voluntary laicization)