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Page 27 text:
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Plans were immediately made for the erection of the new building. Fortunately, Providence favored the Bishop in his undertaking. On May 10, 1893, Mr. James Twohy of Butte, the owner of extensive mining claims throughout the state, made a will, in which he bequeathed to Bishop Brondel the “Burke and Balaklava lodes situated northwest of Meader-ville and adjacent the Modoc Mine, Silver Bow County, Butte.” A few months later Mr. Twohy died, and in the settlement of the estate, the property, later known as the Butte and Balaklava Mine, passed into the hands of Bishop Brondel, who at his death left it to his successor. Bishop Car-roll later sold the property, and from the proceeds was enabled to begin the new college. The site having been so happily secured, the services of Mr. A. O. Von Herbulis of Washington, D. C.. who had previously designed the St. Helena Cathedral and the St. Helena School, were secured as architect for the new building. The new institution was to be five stories high with a frontage of 180 feet and a depth of fifty-five feet. On June 16, 1909, in the presence of the little student body of St. Aloysius Institute, the friends of the new and the old institutions, and the priests of the city, ground was broken for the new building. Early that same fall, on September 27, 1909, the Honorable William Howard Taft, President of the United States, laid the cornerstone of the College. After the ceremony, the President said in part: ‘‘It gives me great pleasure to participate in the laying of cornerstones of institutions of learning, whether of Church or State. We are liberal enough in this country to be willing to help along educational work of all denominations. The College you are building here will be a blessing to Helena and to the whole State of Montana. The only trouble is, we have not institutions enough of this kind in the United States. “Though not of your faith. I cannot but appreciate the good work your Church is doing in this country. I am intimately acquainted with many members of the hierarchy, and I must say that our relations have always been most pleasant. I feel at home among them. I assure you. Bishop, I regard it as an honor and a pleasure both to have made your acquaintance and to have been asked to take part in the laying of the conerstone of your college. I wish you Godspeed in the completion of the institution.” On April 16, 1910, the college structure on Capitol Hill was already a story and a half high. The work was progressing rapidly through the efforts of a corps of men employed by Mr. Peter Jungers, sub-contractor under Mr. Charles T. Gunn of Hamlin and Gunn. Already the structure 1‘agc 1 went g-nine
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Page 26 text:
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den of the domestic and culinary work of the school, the plan could not have been carried to completion. The institution was now capable of caring for both boarders and day-scholars, and the new school placed under the direction of the Reverend Joseph M. Venus as first principal. The name was changed from St. Aloysius School to St. Aloysius Institute and was opened for grammar school and first year high school work on September 8, 190G. In 1907, Professor Charles A. Scullon was appointed Prefect of Discipline and Director of School Activities. Father Venus retired to parochial work in 1909 and was succeeded by the Reverend Joseph C. Willging. The growth of St. Aloysius Institute was rapid, and the need of more room to accommodate the students was becoming more acute. The plan of the Bishop was now to create a college and junior seminary combined. The fifty-acre tract to the north of the city, known as Capitol Hill, was regarded as a suitable site for a larger institution. Half of this tract was owned by the family of former Governor Hauser; the other half, conjointly by the Great Northern Railway and Mr. George Bertine of New York City. With the assistance and generosity of the Hauser family, the Bertine Estate, Mr. Thomas Marlow, then the agent for the Bertine Estate, and Mr. James J. Hill of the Great Northern Railway, the property was transferred to the College. Mrs. A. P. Thatcher, the daughter of Governor Hauser, generously donated her interest in the property. BISHOP CARROLL BREAKING SOD ON HILLTOP Page twenty-right
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Page 28 text:
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gave promise of being one of the most beautiful buildings in the Capital City, already a city of beautiful homes and buildings. The outer walls were of red porphyry, quarried from the neighboring mountains. The selection of an appropriate name for the college was another pioblem. At the laying of the cornerstone it was thought well to name the new institution Capitol Hill College. This would well fit the history and tradition of Montana and Helena. It was soon realized, however, that the new college should not be without a celestial patron. At this time there appeared the great encyclical of Pius X, commemorating the three hundredth anniversary of St. Charles P»orromeo, the Cardinal Archbishop of Milan. St. Charles had, through the Council of Trent, originated and firmly established in the legislation of the Church the idea of the diocesan college. And thus, was named Mount St. Charles College, after him, whose life and name are all that is implied in the terms, saint, scholar, and gentleman, with the hope that those students who should enjoy the advantages of the institution might become in all things like unto their patron. The College and its naming were approved by the Holy Father in the following letter: Dal Vaticano, Sept. 23, 1910. My dear Lord Bishop: The Holy Father has heard with great satisfaction of your successful efforts in erecting a college and preparatory seminary, and it is with special benevolence that He regards your lordship’s placing it under the patronage of the great Archbishop of Milan, St. Charles Borromeo. His Holiness expresses the fervent hope that, under such patronage, the college will become a center of learning and devotion. Moreover, the Holy Father most cordially bestows His Apostolic Benediction on your lordship, on the priests and faithful of your diocese, on the faculty and pupils of your new college, and lastly on all those who cooperate with you in promoting the good of your college. Assuring your lordship of my esteem, and wishing you every blessing. I am, My dear lord Bishop, Yours very sincerely in J. C., R. Cardinal Merry del Val. On August 8, 1910, Bishop Carroll had sent a letter to all the pastors cf the diocese, to plead the cause of higher education and the aim to beget a native priesthood. The response to the letter and to the efforts that had already been put forth was most encouraging. Though the scheduled date for the opening of the institution was September 14, it was delayed thirty
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