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St. Landry Catholic Church

Coordinates:30°32′34″N92°4′45″W / 30.54278°N 92.07917°W /30.54278; -92.07917
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Historic church in Louisiana, United States
United States historic place
St. Landry Catholic Church
St. Landry Catholic Church is located in Louisiana
St. Landry Catholic Church
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St. Landry Catholic Church is located in the United States
St. Landry Catholic Church
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Location1020 N. Union St.,Opelousas, Louisiana
Coordinates30°32′34″N92°4′45″W / 30.54278°N 92.07917°W /30.54278; -92.07917
Area1.4 acres (0.57 ha)
BuiltCompleted April 1909
ArchitectT. G. Chachere; Owen & Diboll[1]
Architectural styleRomanesque Revival
NRHP reference No.82004675[1]
Added to NRHPMay 3, 1982

St. Landry Catholic Church is a historicRoman Catholic church inOpelousas, Louisiana. It is dedicated to SaintLandry of Paris (Bishop c. AD 650).[2][3] The current church building, inGothic andRomanesque Revival style, was completed in 1909.[4]The church and cemetery were placed on theNational Register of Historic Places in the United States on May 5, 1982.[1] By 1792, the church had been renamed from the original title, "Parish Church of theImmaculate Conception of the Post of Opelousas".

History

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In the days of the early 18th century, the area of what is now known as Opelousas was settled by a number of Catholics, many of whom were fromNova Scotia and had no established parish in which to worship. Although there was no official church yet, there was abaptismal ritual which was recorded on May 16, 1756, by Father Pierre Didier, at the home of Jacques Courtableau[2] (now located inWashington, Louisiana).

The early records of the church, which were saved by Fr. José [Joseph] de Arazena, the fourth pastor of the church of Opelousas from 1785 to 1789, mentions aCapuchin, Friar Valentin, as the first resident priest in 1764.[2] By 1766 (some historians agree that a church building had been built by the end of 1765), a cypress church had been built along the Opelousas River (today Bayou Courtableau), and it became the parish church between 1766 and 1770.[5] It was rebuilt in 1774 just north of present-day Bayou Carron. The records also show that the church was originally called the "Parish Church of theImmaculate Conception of the Post of Opelousas".[2]

Worship at the present site was not begun until the year 1798, when the construction of a wood-frame building was completed, and the parish name was changed to "The Church of St Landry". There is no actual record of the original location of the church, but it is believed, according to Fr. Michael Bernard Barriere, pastor from 1813 to 1817, that the church was located just south of present-day Washington, Louisiana, on the “Bayou.”[6] He noted that: "During the year 1798, the present church was moved from the bayou (he spells it "Baillou") [from] the locality called 'Ponte a M. Tesson.'"

Michel Prudhomme donated a section of land of 120arpents (100 acres),[7] 3x40 arpents in width/length, and M. Tesson donated a section of 1 by 14 arpents (0.84 by 11.83 acres). The land donated by Mrs. Tesson was located between the present site of the church and Bayou Tesson, also known as the Gully, to the west. The donation of land was made on October 16, 1796. Later the land donated by Tesson was sold to the Marguilliers and was known as the "Church Addition". AMarguillier is a churchwarden: churchwardens were a group of layman who were in charge of the church property and money. They governed the church and even controlled the salary of the priests in many cases. Michel Prudhomme is buried in thenave of the present church. Michel Prudhomme's French Colonial home, built around 1790, still stands near the church, and is on the National Register of Historic Places.

By the mid-19th century, the old wooden structure that was built on in 1797, was in dilapidated condition. It had lasted about fifty years. On an official visit by the Bishop William Louis Dubourg, a recommendation was made that a new church be built. If possible, a brick structure was to be erected. Finally, on March 4, 1828, the new brick church was consecrated by Bishop Rosati, of St. Louis, Administrator of Louisiana. The church measured 60 × 40 ft (18 × 12 m), and was later expanded to 100 feet (30 m) wide by Fr. Gilbert Raymond. Fr. Gilbert and his brother, Fr. J. Francois Raymond, were in charge of the parish for thirty-five years. They started a school for boys which was known as St. Mary's Academy for Boys (1855). Fr. Gilbert’s next step was affording the girls the same opportunity of acquiring a solid, Christian education. After purchasing a piece of land, the Academy of the Immaculate Conception was established in 1856.

During the year of 1870, Fr. Gilbert Raymond purchased another piece of land for the creation of a school for the black children of the parish. This school was known under the name of St. Joseph's School. In 1971, the schools were combined to formOpelousas Catholic School.

In 1895, Fr. John Engberink was assigned from as past of St. Landry. He set out to build a new church building. This was a great undertaking and would prove to be a great asset to the worshipers of the parish of St. Landry. The work of removing and clearing away of the old church was started in 1902. A temporary church, which had been completed and occupied in 1900, was used until the new church was erected. The new rectory was occupied at the same time. The old bricks of the previous structure were preserved and used in the foundation of the present church.

The actual work on the new church was started in September, 1903. The foundation resting on a bed of concrete 6-by-1-foot wide/deep (1.83 m × 0.30 m), starting 7 feet (2.1 m) below the surface of the ground, was built four feet above the surface and given considerable time to harden, before the walls were started. The construction of the walls began in the winter of 1908-09 and was completed and occupied, the first Mass being said on the first Friday of April 1909. The cornerstone had been laid August 8, 1908. The size of the church was very large, being 189 by 94 feet (58 m × 29 m) wide in thetransepts, and 74 ft wide (23 m) in the body of the church. Theseating capacity was about 2000. The church had been the second-largest church in the South for many years[2] and is the second-oldest parish in thediocese. The interior of the church was not completed until the early 1920s because of a lack of funds.

When in 1919, Monsignor Albeit Benedict Colliard was made pastor, after the death of Fr. Engberink, he took on the task of completing the church. Msgr. Colliard paid off the large debt incurred in building the church and addedstained-glass windows. When the church was first built there was only a flat roof on the tower, however, Msgr. Colliard added the steeple in 1940.

In 1920, due to the fact that Black parishioners were restricted to two pews in the back of the church, they established their own parish roughly a block away, known asHoly Ghost Catholic Church.

Monsignor Colliard died on May 7, 1950, at the age of 69 and is buried in the St. Landry Catholic Cemetery. Monsignor Broussard was the next pastor of the parish. Arriving in 1950, he remained until 1972. While here, Msgr. Broussard reestablished a boys' school. As a builder he moved the academy, which is now Opelousas Catholic School, from south of the church to due east of the church, had a new two-story rectory constructed north of the church, and then in 1963 had the interior of the church redecorated andair conditioned.

The church and the church cemetery were placed on theNational Register of Historic Places in the United States on May 5, 1982.

To this date there have been 33 pastors and countless assistants who have served the people of this parish. Monsignor Russell J. Harrington is the current pastor, with John W. Miller, Sammy Diesi, and Dwayne Joubert as hisPermanent Deacons.[4]

FatherJoseph Verbis Lafleur, who is a candidate for sainthood within the Catholic Church, became a parish priest of this church.

The patron saints of the church parish are Saint Landry the Confessor and Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception.

References

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  1. ^abc"National Register Information System".National Register of Historic Places.National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. ^abcde "The Mother Church of Acadiana", JStor.org, 2010, webpage:Jstor-226.
  3. ^Harper, John N. (November 4, 2013).""There are four saints named Landry in Catholicism. Who was ours?"".Daily Advertiser.
  4. ^ab[1]"Home - St. Landry Catholic Church", 2010, webpage:SLCC-home.
  5. ^Harper, John N. (1993).The Mother Church of Acadiana: The History of the St. Landry Catholic Church in Opelousas, Louisiana (1st ed.). Rayne, LA: Hébert Publications. pp. 5–9.ISBN 979-8-218-20664-2.
  6. ^ It is customary, in the Louisiana area, to name abayou by appending a proper name similar to naming a lake, such as "Bayou Smith" (or Lake Smith) rather than "Smith Bayou".
  7. ^Anarpent is anold French measure of land, equivalent to about 0.85 acre.

External links

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