St. Mary Parish, Ware

St. Mary Parish - designated for Polish immigrants in Ware, Massachusetts, United States.

St. Mary Parish
St. Mary's Church
St. Mary Parish
Location of St. Mary Parish
Location60 South St.
Ware, MA 01082
CountryUnited States
DenominationRoman Catholic
Websitehttp://www.stmarysware.org/
History
Founded1905 (1905)
Founder(s)Polish immigrants
DedicationSt. Mary
Administration
DioceseSpringfield in Massachusetts
ProvinceBoston
DivisionRegion 8
Clergy
Bishop(s)Most Rev.Mitchell Rozanski
Pastor(s)Rev. Piotr S. Calik

Founded 1905, it is one of the Polish-American Roman Catholic parishes in New England in the Diocese of Springfield in Massachusetts.

History

On December 22, 1904, there came to this settlement two missionary Fathers. Fr. Joseph Fux M.S. and Fr. Oswald Loretan M.S.. Then Fr. Joseph Fux M.S. was named the first pastor of the local parish. The first religious service for the Poles was conducted on January 1, 1905, in the lower part of All Saints Church. The first collection for this purpose netted $300, the second campaign brought in $2,000 for the new structure. In 1907, the church structure, built in the Romano-Gothic style, was completed.

In 1923 there were three large bells purchased and installed in the central tower. In the same year the lower church was remodeled and made into eight class rooms.
The Polish immigrants of Ware at present number about 2700 people, for the most part, came from the Southern part of Poland, from the counties of Dabrowa, Tarnow, Rzeszow and Jaslo.

Pastors

  • Fr. Joseph Fux M.S. (1904-1913)
  • Fr. Oswald Loretan M.S. (1913-1926)
  • Fr. Joseph Piszczalka M.S. (1926-1927)
  • Fr. Michael Kolbuch M.S. (1927-?)
  • Fr. Walentin Kustosz (?-1981)
  • Fr. Charles Kuzmeski (? - 2005)
  • Fr. Jeffrey A Ballou (2005 - 2019)
  • Fr. Piotr S. Calik (2019-


    Bibliography

    • A short parish history the 1930 Jubilee Book. St. Mary Parish - Ware MA: the internet Polish Genealogical Source.
    • The 150th Anniversary of Polish-American Pastoral Ministry. Webster, Massachusetts: St. Joseph Basilica. September 11, 2005.
    • The Official Catholic Directory in USA
    gollark: If you were directly shining at at a radio's circuits I mean.
    gollark: I mean, maybe it could interact with some sensitive components, but I doubt it.
    gollark: ... probably not?
    gollark: You could *get* good at rock climbing, if you did lots of rock climbing. Or non-rock climbing.]
    gollark: Like I said, the transistor and diode cults are allied now.
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.