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St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church Rectory and School

Coordinates:40°44′35″N74°11′11″W / 40.74306°N 74.18639°W /40.74306; -74.18639
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Historic church in New Jersey, United States
United States historic place
St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church Rectory and School
St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church Rectory and School is located in Essex County, New Jersey
St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church Rectory and School
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St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church Rectory and School is located in New Jersey
St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church Rectory and School
Show map of New Jersey
St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church Rectory and School is located in the United States
St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church Rectory and School
Show map of the United States
Location233 W. Market Street,Newark, New Jersey
Coordinates40°44′35″N74°11′11″W / 40.74306°N 74.18639°W /40.74306; -74.18639
Built1871
ArchitectJeremiah O'Rourke
Architectural styleGothic
NRHP reference No.80002486[1]
NJRHP No.1313[2]
Significant dates
Added to NRHPDecember 8, 1980
Designated NJRHPOctober 3, 1980

St. Joseph Plaza is an event venue inNewark,Essex County, New Jersey, which formerly servedSt. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church, aparish of theArchdiocese of Newark of theRomanCatholic Church.[3] The church was added to theNational Register of Historic Places on December 8, 1980, for its significance in architecture and religion.[4]

Architecture

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The church was a traditionalGothic Revivalbrownstone church, with a tall central nave flanked by lower aisles and transepts, oriented with the apse facing east and the three entrance doors facing west, one for each aisle and another along the nave. The nave has a steep slate gable roof. The front façade is asymmetrical, with a square bell tower with flat top on one side.[4] The interior was extensively renovated in the early 1980s, but the exterior, having been registered as a landmark, remained unchanged.[3]

History

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The congregation was established in 1859 byJames Roosevelt Bayley, first bishop of Newark.[1] The construction of theMorris Canal had bisected the parish ofSt. Patrick's Pro-Cathedral, and also attracted Catholic immigrant workers to the area, necessitating a new worship space. A two-story brick building was built to serve as the parish's church and school.[1] Fr. James F. Dalton was named its first pastor in 1868, and a stone he had brought back fromGlendalough, Ireland was laid as the cornerstone for a new stone church onThanksgiving Day in 1872.[1] Irish-American architectJeremiah O'Rourke designed the new church in the Gothic Revival style. Construction was repeatedly delayed, and it was not dedicated until April 18, 1880. A 3-story brickrectory was built in 1885. St. Joseph's School, a 4-story brick building, was constructed north of the church in 1894.[1]

The neighborhood was depopulated byurban renewal projects which cleared out residential areas and saw the expansion ofneighboring university campuses, and bywhite flight after the1967 Newark riots, accelerating a post-World War II decline in enrollments as parishioners decamped for the suburbs.[1] The congregation had declined to about 30 when the archdiocese closed the parish in 1980, the same year the complex was added to the National Register of Historic Places.[3]

A local housing non-profit, theNew Community Corporation, acquired the complex for $105,000 shortly thereafter and began redeveloping it. The church was converted into a restaurant, offices, and performance space, and the rectory into commercial offices; the school building was demolished for parking.[3] It was New Community's first commercial office venture.[3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcdef"National Register Information System – (#80002486)".National Register of Historic Places.National Park Service. November 2, 2013.
  2. ^"New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places – Essex County"(PDF).New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection – Historic Preservation Office. June 22, 2023. p. 24.
  3. ^abcdeDePalma, Anthony (April 17, 1983),"A New Life for an Old Church",The New York Times, retrieved2021-08-09
  4. ^abLi, Rox (February 1980)."National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church Rectory and School".National Park Service. Withaccompanying 14 photos
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