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Pope Leo I (c. 400 – 10 November 461), also known as Leo the Great, [1] was Bishop of Rome [2] from 29 September 440 until his death. He is the first of the three Popes listed in the Annuario Pontificio with the title "the Great", [ 3 ] alongside Popes Gregory I and Nicholas I .
St. Joseph 120 Hoboken Rd, East Rutherford: Holy Rosary 365 Undercliff Ave, Edgewater: St. Leo 324 Market St, Elmwood Park: Assumption 29 Jefferson Ave, Emerson: St. Cecilia 52 W Demarest Ave, Englewood: Established 1858 [9] [10] St. Anne 10-04 St. Anne St, Fair Lawn: Our Lady of Grace 395 Delano St, Fairview: St. John the Baptist 239 Anderson ...
Saint Leo the Great Parish, within the Roman Catholic Diocese of San Jose, California St.Leo's Roman Catholic Church , Elmwood Park, New Jersey Chapel of St Leo, Żurrieq , Malta
In 1881, Pope Leo XIII erected the Diocese of Trenton, taking southern and central New Jersey from the Diocese of Newark. [3] The pope designated the Church of St. Mary of the Assumption as its cathedral and appointed Michael J. O'Farrell of New York as the first bishop of Trenton. At this time, the diocese had 68 churches, 23 parochial schools ...
In 1881, Pope Leo XIII erected the Diocese of Trenton, taking southern New Jersey from the Diocese of Newark. [10] The Camden area would remain part of the Diocese of Trenton for the next 56 years. Bishop Francis Kenrick dedicated the St. Mary's Church in Pleasant Mills on August 15, 1830, the fourth Catholic church in New Jersey and the first ...
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.
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The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Newark announced in September 2007 that it would combine Bayonne's four remaining Catholic elementary schools — Our Lady of Mt. Carmel (Bayonne, New Jersey), Saint Andrew, Saint Vincent and Saint Mary, Star of the Sea — into a single school in response to 10 years of declining enrollments in the schools.