Saint Bridget of Ireland Church

St. Bridget of Ireland Parish is a Roman Catholic congregation in Stamford, Connecticut, part of the Diocese of Bridgeport.

St. Bridget of Ireland Church
Location278 Strawberry Hill Ave
Stamford, Connecticut
CountryUnited States
DenominationRoman Catholic
Administration
DioceseBridgeport
ProvinceHartford
Clergy
Bishop(s)Most Rev. William E. Lori

History

The parish was established in September 7, 1963 by the Right Reverend Walter W. Curtis, Bishop of Bridgeport. Worship first occurred in the neighboring chapel and school. The parish supported the parochial school of St. Bridget School until its closure in 1979.[1]

The Church St. Bridget of Ireland
General information
Architectural stylemodernist
Town or cityStamford, Connecticut
CountryUnited States of America
Construction started1963
Completed1965, 1987
ClientThe Roman Catholic Diocese of Bridgeport
Technical details
Structural systemBrick-faced masonry (presumed concrete)

Building

The modernist brick church was begun in 1963 and completed in 1965.[1] Dedication of St. Bridget’s Chapel-Auditorium-School occurred on June 25, 1965.[1] The congregation continued to worship in the Chapel-Auditorium until Bishop Curtis dedicated the newly renovated church on June 14, 1987.[1] The hall was renovated and a kitchen erected in the 2000s. The “Our Lady of Strawberry Hill Shrine” was dedicated in 2003. The shrine to Padre Pio was added in 2004.[1]

List of pastors

1963–1967: The Reverend Thomas P. Guinan
1967–1972: The Reverend William A. Nagel
1972–1997: The Reverend John Jazowski
1997–present: The Reverend Gill C. Babeu

gollark: A cool picture of the portals and a bit of the power buffers.
gollark: Besides, they get paid either way.
gollark: Basically, that thing pictured is, thanks to the wonders of power creep, enough to store probably a few million itemstacks.
gollark: Meh.
gollark: This is my (built in creative mode why not) AE2 array.

References

  1. St. Bridget of Ireland – Website About Us Archived 2011-07-28 at the Wayback Machine (Accessed 20 January 2011)

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