St. Ignatius Church (Baltimore)

St. Ignatius Church is a parish of the Roman Cathoic Church in Baltimore, Maryland, within the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Baltimore. Established and administered by the Society of Jesus, the church is dedicated to Saint Ignatius of Loyola, the founder of the Jesuits. The historic parish church, located at 740 N. Calvert St in the Mt. Vernon neighborhood, is located north of downtown Baltimore and is considered the city’s center of history and culture.

The church sanctuary
St. Ignatius Church
St. Ignatius Church
Location in Baltimore
39.2985°N 76.6133°W / 39.2985; -76.6133
Location740 North Calvert Street, Baltimore, MD 21202
CountryUnited States
DenominationRoman Catholic
Websitehttp://www.st-ignatius.net/
History
Consecrated15 August 1856
Architecture
Years built1853–1856
Clergy
Priest in chargeJames A. Casciotti, S.J.
Assistant priest(s)William J. Watters, S.J.

History

In 1852, the new Archbishop of Baltimore, Francis Kenrick, asked the local Jesuit Provincial to open a new college in response to petitions from the newly elected, anti-Catholic Know Nothing party to ban Catholic teachings from public schools in Maryland. As a result, Loyola College opened its doors in 1852 and moved to its former location on Calvert and Madison streets in 1855. St. Ignatius Church was originally built to accompany the adjoining Loyola College, at 700 N Calvert, prior to the college’s move in 1922 to an Evergreen Campus in North Baltimore.

The church opened on August 15, 1856 on the Feast Day of the Assumption of Mary. On 20 September 1857 the chapel of St Peter Claver was dedicated, where Masses were provided for the black population.[1] This congregation in 1864 obtained its own parish church, St. Francis Xavier.[2]

Major renovations were carried out in 1870, the transparent glass windows replaced with new stained glass. New pews to seat about six hundred people were added. A ceiling painting of the Assumption of Mary by Wilhelm Lamprecht was added. The following year, the newly renovated church was decorated for the public celebration of the twenty-fifth anniversary of Pius IX's election to the papacy; gaslight illuminations were installed for the occasion but could not be used because of adverse weather.[3]

In 1968 a series of protests in support of the Catonsville Nine was held at the church.[4]

After World War II the church had seen a sharp drop in the number of parishioners as many city residents moved to the suburbs. This led the church to “refashion their mission and ministry” in the 1990s to bring Catholics back to Mt. Vernon. In 1991, the church underwent a $1.7 million renovation to separate the sanctuary from the entrance to give parishioners a place to gather before and after mass.

Stained Glass windows from 1870 in Saint Ignatius Church

Architecture

St. Ignatius Church was built by Louis L. Long, a prominent Baltimore architect, from 1853 to 1856 with the assistance of Henry Hamilton Pittar. The building is in the Italianate style featuring Ionic columns, heavy modillioned cornicing and a broken pediment. The base of the building is rusticated while the rest of the exterior is brick with tall, frosted glass arched windows along with blank brick arches. The top of the church is adorned with a golden cross.

The interior of the church is modeled after the mother church of the Jesuits, the Church of the Gesù in Rome, taking on a similar late Renaissance/Baroque style. It features multicolored ornamental trimmings, Corinthian columns and stained glass windows of 17 different colors added during the 1870 renovation to replace the original frosted glass.

Ornate ornamental plasterwork tops Ionic columns originally painted by Italian immigrants. The plaster was restored to hues similar to those used in the mid-to-late 19th century during an extensive restoration of the church in 1999. This renovation, supervised by Michael V Murphy of Murphy & Dittenhafer Architects, cost $1.7 million and took six months.[5] The restoration used a gradient effect on paint colors complementing the stained glass so as to draw the eye up to the ceiling.

The Assumption of Mary painted by William Brecht

Saint Ignatius church has a free standing altar built by a South Baltimore company featuring hand-carved wood Ionic columns mirroring the external architecture. Behind the main altar, the church features a painting of St. Ignatius' mystical experience outside Rome at La Storta by Constantino Brumidi.

The church’s ceiling was painted by Wilhelm Lamprecht, a German artist, and depicts the Assumption of Mary. Two paintings are displayed on the wall of the church opposite the stained glass, both by a Mexican Jesuit priest. The paintings are of St. Aloysius Gonzaga, the Patron Saint of Youth, who died of the plague in 1591, and Our Lady of the Way, Madonna della Strata. On each side on the altar, there is a statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary and Saint Ignatius.

The entrance of the church contains a lifesize crucifix that was removed from the sanctuary after Vatican II.

The pipe organ was built and installed by W. B. D. Simmons, a Boston firm, in 1857 and was restored in 1987.[6] In 2010, it underwent of full renovation, rebuild, and restoration by Patrick J. Murphy and Associates.

St. Ignatius’ mystical experience outside Rome at La Storta by Constantine Brumidi

Community Services

Saint Ignatius Church strives to connect with the community on a spiritual, emotional, and physical level. Members facilitate ministry groups for young adults, young couples, LGBT community members, and interfaith/ecumenical dialogue. In 1991, Saint Ignatius opened a tuition-free middle school for boys in the Baltimore area. Originally, Saint Ignatius Loyola Academy was connected to the church but it moved to Federal Hill in 2011. The church also sponsors a community outreach program called "Elizabeth’s Closet" that collects and distributes maternity clothing to expecting mothers. Saint Ignatius partners with various programs in the Baltimore community to promote peace and justice.

List of pastors

  1. John Early (1852–1858)[7]
  2. William Francis Clarke (1858–1859)[7]
  3. Joseph O'Callaghan (1859–1863)[7]
  4. Anthony F. Ciampi (1863–1866)[7]
  5. John Early (1866–1870)[7]
  6. Stephen A. Kelly (1870–1877)[7]
  7. Edward A. McGurk (1877–1885)[7]
  8. Francis A. Smith (1885–1891)[7]
  9. John A. Morgan (1891–1900)[7]
  10. William P. Brett (1900–1901)[7]
  11. John F. Quirk (1901–1907)[7]
  12. W. G. Read Mullan (1907–1908)[7]
  13. F. X. Brady (1908–1911)[7]
  14. William J. Ennis (1911–)[7]
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References

Citations

  1. Diane Batts Morrow, Persons of Color and Religious at the Same Time: The Oblate Sisters of Providence, 1828-1860 (University of North Carolina Press, 2002), p. 253.
  2. Harold Mcdougall, Black Baltimore: A New Theory of Community (Temple University Press, 1993), p. 27.
  3. The Grand Demonstration, in Baltimore and Washington D.C., in honor of the Twenty-fifth Anniversary of the Election of Pius IX to the Chair of St. Peter (Baltimore, 1871), pp. 26-27.
  4. Shawn Francis Peters, The Catonsville Nine: A Story of Faith and Resistance in the Vietnam Era (Oxford University Press, 2012), pp. 166-168, 210-213.
  5. Edward Gunts, "Divine intervention at St. Ignatius Church", Baltimore Sun, December 19, 1999.
  6. Lois Zanow and Sally Johnston, Monuments to Heaven: Baltimore's Historic Houses of Worship (2011), p. 43.
  7. The Catholic Church in the United States of America 1914, p. 67

Sources

  • The Catholic Church in the United States of America: Undertaken to Celebrate the Golden Jubilee of His Holiness, Pope Pius X. 3. New York: Catholic Editing Company. 1914. Archived from the original on March 19, 2020. Retrieved March 19, 2020 via Google Books.

Further reading

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