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History
of
St. Gregory Barbarigo Parish, Maryville, MO |
![[ St. Mary's Church ]](Assets/history.jpg) |
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1858
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The
first Church is built called Mary Immaculate, later called St. Mary’s.
The 3 priests who serve the area were James Powers, John Hennessey
and John Hogan, later Bishop Of St. Joseph, MO |
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1860 |
Small
brick church named St. Mary's is dedicated where Fr. John Powers offers
Mass. |
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1869 |
Fr.
Constantine Hergenrother starts a school where several Benedictine
Sisters from the Swiss convent of Rickenbach teach. |
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1877 |
Cornerstone
of St. Mary's basement church is laid on Oct. 13. |
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1878 |
Basement
church is blessed and completed on Oct. 13. Fr. Adelhelm, OSB, Pastor.
Fr. Anselm, OSB, became pastor in 1881 |
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1886 |
Benedictine
sisters go to Yankton,SD; Sisters of St. Francis take over school
& begin hospital |
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1881 |
Eighty
Irish families form St. Patrick's Parish with Fr. Daniel Pembroke
as pastor. Built small frame Church south of the later brick one in
1882. |
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1887 |
St.
Mary's Church is completed and blessed on Nov. 20. |
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1895 |
Hospital
built at East First St; wing added 1901; new school built south of
the St. Mary’s Church |
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1899 |
St.
Patrick's Church is completed in one year, cost $10,000, Fr. Nieman,
pastor. |
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1910
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St.
Patrick’s School started with Benedictine sisters of Atchison, KS. |
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1913 |
Fr.
Anselm leaves St. Mary’s after 32 years; Later Fr. Isidore would serve
25 years as Pastor 1931-59 |
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1928 |
Fr.
Robert Graham pastor at St. Patrick’s until his death in 1955 |
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1933 |
Fr.
Isidore bus system begins. |
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1937 |
St.
Patrick’s High School is closed |
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1958 |
Pope
John XXIII, new Pope; Vatican II proclaimed Jan 1959, Begins in Oct
1962. |
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1959 |
Fr.
Isidore moved to Nebr in July; Fr. Stack pastor of both parishes by
Bishop Cody. |
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1960 |
Sisters
of St. Francis plan new Mount Alverno High School for girls east of
Maryville. Opened 1963 |
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1961 |
St.
Mary's and St. Patrick's are combined and the parish is named for
St. Gregory Barbarigo. |
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1963 |
New
St. Gregory's School opens fall 1963. Pope Paul VI elected June 1963 |
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1964 |
Mass
in English, not Latin; high altar removed from St. Gregory’s & new
altar faces the people |
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1965 |
Old
St. Patrick’s Church torn down; |
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1970 |
Saturday
evening Mass permitted; 1977, communion in the hand allowed. |
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1970
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New
96 bed St. Francis Hospital built on South main |
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1971 |
Mount
Alverno High School closed; Maryville Treatment Center (prison) opens
1997 |
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1976 |
Deacons
Martin Schieber and Roy Seipel ordained; Fr. Frank Lackamp, Pastor |
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1982 |
New
St. Gregory's Church is constructed. The cornerstone is blessed and
laid Oct. 24. |
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1982 |
Priests
use 1967 convent as rectory; nuns move to house on S. Charles St. |
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1983 |
First
Mass celebrated in the new St. Gregory Barbarigo Church Jan 22, 1983,Fr.
Helfrey Pastor. |
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1985 |
Debt
of over $1,056,500 for Church and hall paid off, Fr. Terry Bruce pastor. |
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1995 |
Opening
of St. Gregory’s Preschool and Childcare Facility |
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1996 |
Dedication
of the Parish Center, with Gym, pre-school, kitchen; Fr. John Leitner,
Pastor |
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Stained
glass window in St. Gregory Sanctuary depicts history of parish |
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The
large window above the entrance has been designed in warm, earth-tone
colors of faceted glass. The design is somewhat abstract, symbolizing
growth in plant and human life, with “life streams” waving
through the background of the composition to emphasize religious,
academic, family life and rural aspects of life in this parish. The
center panel features a very large face of Christ the King (symbolic
of hope and victory). A cross is suggested, symbolic of redemption,
as well as the triangle representing the Trinity.
This dynamic
abstraction of God reminds us that God is ever present, and that
we must look for Him in all aspects of our lives. Curved lines radiate
from this area of the window touching an abstract figure representing
the soul--- growth in spiritual life through the Church. The buildings
shown are the old St. Mary’s and the old St. Patrick’s
Church. These represent the religious history of the parish today.
Buildings representing Mount Alverno Convent and Conception Abbey,
and the towers of Northwest Missouri State University depict the
academic aspect of life. The family is depicted by a figure group;
the industrial and farming aspects are represented by a grain elevator.
Corn and wheat, the main crops grown here, are depicted to represent
the rural aspect of life in St. Gregory’s Parish. The vertical
strips of green and gold in the bottom part of the composition again
represent the farming in this community.
This window
was designed by Dolores Veth, from Hopscroft Glass Studio, Kansas
City, Missouri. Ms Veth studied art and architecture at the University
College Division of Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri.
Basically self-taught, she began her career in stained glass in
1959.
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History
of St. Gregory School, Maryville, MO |
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Not
yet available. |
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The
Story of Our Patron Saint
Saint Gregory Barbarigo |
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Pope John XXIII canonized St. Gregory Barbarigo, the patron of our
Parish, in 1960. His feast day is June 18. St. Gregory was given to
us as our patron on October 11, 1961, when the parishes of St. Mary
and St. Patrick were combined by approval of Pope John XXIII.
St. Gregory was born on September 16, 1625, and he died in 1697. His
family lived in Venice and were held in high repute by the people
there. He was the fourth son. He excelled in his studies at an early
age and became interested in diplomacy and statesmanship. He knew
Contarine, the Venetian ambassador, and went with him on at least
one ambassadorial mission.
After he was ordained a priest in 1655, he organized care for the
plague-stricken people of Rome. In 1657, Pope Alexander VII made him
the first Bishop of Bergamo. He was a leader in promoting the reforms
of the Council of Trent. He visited parishes, organizing the teaching
of Christian doctrine and also worked with seminarians and clergy
to raise their standards. His work was so respected that in 1660,
he was made the Cardinal of Padua.
St. Gregory was extremely interested in higher education and worked
for the development of seminaries and libraries. He established a
printing press that printed pamphlets for Christians under Moslem
rule. He was active in laboring to bring about a reunion with the
Greek Church. St. Gregory took part in five papal Conclaves (for the
election of the Pope) and was a candidate in three of them. It is
recorded that his congregation thought him to be a man filled with
wisdom.
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