Saint John Church (Middletown, Connecticut)

Saint John Church is a Roman Catholic church and parish in Middletown, Connecticut, part of the Diocese of Norwich.

Saint John Church
Saint John the Evangelist Roman Catholic Church & Parish
Saint John Church in 2002
41.566479°N 72.651886°W / 41.566479; -72.651886
Location19 St. John Square
Middletown, Connecticut
CountryUnited States
DenominationRoman Catholic
Websitewww.saintjohnchurchmiddletown.com
History
FoundedSeptember 30, 1843
Founder(s) Irish Immigrants of Middletown
Dedication Saint John
DedicatedSeptember 05, 1852
ConsecratedSeptember 10, 1886
Administration
ParishSaint John
DeaneryMiddletown Deanary
DioceseNorwich
ProvinceHartford
Clergy
Bishop(s)Most Rev. Michael Richard Cote
Priest(s)Rev. George J. Richards, J.C.L. (in-residence)
Pastor(s)Rev. James Thaikoottathil
Laity
Organist(s)Ms. Joanne Swift
RCIA coordinatorMrs. Jeanne Renison
St. John Roman Catholic Church
Built1843 (1843)
ArchitectPatrick Charles Keely
Architectural styleGothic Revival
Part ofMain Street Historic District (Middletown, CT) (ID83001275)
Designated CPJune 3, 1983

History

Interior of St. John's

In the early 19th Century, immigrants from Ireland moved in large numbers to Middletown. By 1830 there were enough families there to form a vibrant and close-knit Irish community that desired its own place of worship. In 1841, two acres of land were purchased on the current site of the Church was purchased. Most of the future parishioners of St. John's worked across the river in the brownstone quarries of Portland and the owners of the quarries donated large blocks of brownstone to help build the first church.[1][2]

Mother Church of the Diocese

Since St. John's was built back in 1843 and the Diocese of Norwich was not created until August 06, 1953 by Pope Pius XII the Church is the oldest Church in the Diocese (as it actually pre-dated it) and is lovingly known as the Mother Church of the Diocese. The Archdiocese of Hartford, in fact, had ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the Church until 1953.[1][2]

Buildings

Interior of St. John Church

The imposing 1843 Irish influenced ecclesiastical Gothic Revival church building was designed by architect, Patrick Charles Keely and it was built by local Irish immigrants that were led by prominent local builder Barzialli Sage. The original church that was completed in 1843 was just a small church building and the existing spire for the Church was erected in 1864. There has been three renovations to the exterior of the building. The 1864 building is now the sacristy for St. John's and the current church was finished in 1852. The Church can hold up to one thousand worshipers. The interior walls of the Church were frescoed by William Borgett, a local artist and there have been several interior renovations over the years.

The building is listed as significant contributing property of the City of Middletown Historic District.[1][2]

St. Mary Convent

During the construction of the Church, it was decided that a convent was to be built. Saint Mary Convent was finished in 1873.[2] The convent was used as a Parish Center after the Sisters of Mercy vacated the Property in the 1960s. In 2007, the former convent was demolished due to being in disrepair.

St. John Parochial School

St. John School

Saint John Diocesan Elementary School was a Catholic parochial elementary school that was operational from 1888 till 2013. The school merged with the Saint Mary of Czestochowa Diocesan Elementary School to form Saint Pope John Paul II Regional Diocesan Elementary School which still operates today were it still serves students from PreK to 8th Grade.[3]

St. John Graveyard and Cemetery

Old Saint John Graveyard

The Church maintains two cemeteries. The original graveyard is located directly behind the church and the newer cemetery is located on Johnson Street in Middletown.[2]

Yoked Parish

The Parishes of St. Sebastian and St. John have shared a Priest since 2017, so Daily Mass and Sunday Masses are held at both Parishes. The Parishes are still their own entities and are not merged into a combined Parish. [4]

gollark: yes, do so.
gollark: I only write malware *ironically*, unlike him.
gollark: Essentially, yBot is apioform.
gollark: <@319753218592866315> make Mindbreak.
gollark: You should also do it. I don't trust them.

References

  1. "Saint John's Church". City of Middletown. Retrieved 3 December 2019.
  2. "Main Street Historic District". City of Middletown. Retrieved 3 December 2019.
  3. Staff, Press (25 January 2013). "St. Mary and St. John schools in Middletown to combine". The Middletown Press.
  4. "Home". Saint John Roman Catholic Church. Retrieved 4 December 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.