St Mary High School - Marian Yearbook (Marion, OH)

 - Class of 1951

Page 15 of 104

 

St Mary High School - Marian Yearbook (Marion, OH) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 15 of 104
Page 15 of 104



St Mary High School - Marian Yearbook (Marion, OH) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 14
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St Mary High School - Marian Yearbook (Marion, OH) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 16
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Page 15 text:

REVEREND PHILIP DONOGHUE Dwyer, Thomas Dwyer, Timothy Quinlan, Pierce Keating, Patrick Kelly, James Loudrigan, David Hogan, Patrick Hogan, Thomas Hogan, William Lawrence - men who prayed and whose prayer was shot through with zeal and determination to build up a parish that would maintain a resident pastor. Dreams became reality with the appointment of Father McSweeney, though his time had to be divided between Marion and Bellefontaine. A concern more immediate to these early parishioners than a church building was the possession of consecrated ground where Catholics could be buried. Father McSweeney, on June 8, 1858, bought property worth 5337.50 from the Marion Cemetery Association. This was used until 1891. Father's pastorate came to an end in 1859 when he was replaced by Father Coppinger. The ill health of the latter forced his stay with the Marion flock to be brief. In 1860 Father Coveney was named to succeed him. Within a year he had broken ground on REVEREND JOSEPH QUATMAN Prospect Street for the long-hoped-for church. In 1862, a proud congregation knelt within its walls and, grateful of heart, thanked God as the prayers of dedication were read. ln the post Civil War year of 1866 Father John A. Mackey was appointed to live in Marion as the first full-time resident pastor. To call his flock to church, Father bought and installed a bell. Its peals brought well-wishers to pray for young brides and their tall manly husbands. It tolled in sorrow after each visit of the angel F l

Page 14 text:

ln the days when wagon trains were filing laboriously across American plains and men turned eager faces toward mountains where buried gold might be hiding, Marion, Ohio, DW was a quiet little town iust pulling out of its adolescent days and growing from 12,000 per- sons into cityhood. Tradition has it that the Faith was brought to Marion in the heart and soul of Timothy Fahey who, one can imagine, was a restless Irishman until he succeeded with I the help of others in making it possible to bow REVEREND JOHN MACKEY down his head before even a makeshift altar where bread and wine had become Body and Blood of Christ by the power of a priest of God. The celebration of the first Mass in Marion is attributed to Father Burgess in the year 1849. Once begun, the Holy Sacrifice continued to be offered by the priests from adjoining towns, but only at irregular intervals and under great hardships. Father Grogan's name has come down from those days. Though the faithful had no building in which to house their God, nevertheless, He received a warm welcome in the lowly homes of these REVEREND PETER MCMAHON first Marion Catholic families. i . ,bu fl g fri. W V ' 5' Within four years, on September 22, 1853, ' ' ' s-V', A jg to be exact, Timothy Fahey donated a plot of W K Qroundi Purchased from Eber Baker, to be used L ' Y- for a permanent church. In the meantime early ,lg ' A ' 5 ,' 5 1 A ' Catholic settlers athered re ularl in the Old W , g , 9 9 Y . 1.212 - y Huber Shop on Mill Street near Main in an attempt to give God decent worship. Into this factory room came Anthony Flaherty, John Lawrence, Nicholas Lawrence, Conrad Conners, Jeremiah Darmody, John Kelleher, Edmond 4 i



Page 16 text:

of death. And daily it sent out a sharp remind- er for Catholics to begin the day with the offering of a morning Sacrifice. But Father Mackey's improvements went far beyond the purchase of a bell. On September 26, 1868, he bought from Enoch Hock property fronting Main Street and worth S2,700. Father Peter McMahon and Father Philip Donoghue followed as pastors in 1870 and REVEREND WILLIAM M. CAREY 1871 and completed the history of the founda- tion of St. Mary Parish. A new era was to open in 1875. Father Joseph Quatman C1875-18805 looked out over his congregation and was concerned about the welfare of the little children whose big eyes stared seriously into his own. He responded to their silent accusation and directed his energies to establishing a Catholic school to protect their Faith and at the same time to make good Americans of them. Begun in 1875, the school was completed the following year. Four Sisters of Charity, Mother Seton's Sisters, came from Cincinnati to staff the little school. They enrolled in that first year about a hundred boys and girls in the first five grades. After five years of untiring service to Marion Catholics, Father Quatman was followed by Father William M. Carey, whose ill health, however, caused his replacement on February 24, 1881, by Father Burns. The Catholic popula- tion by now had outgrown its little church. Again men dreamed dreams. Their little square church had been useful, but now they would build for beauty and inspiration in Gothic architecture. On October 14, 1894, the cornerstone was laid. But the kind-faced Irish priest left for an assignment in Glendale, Ohio - he was to see no more than the beginning, but a good beginning, for in 1883 a priest's rectory was built, and a new cemetery purchased for S3,500.

Suggestions in the St Mary High School - Marian Yearbook (Marion, OH) collection:

St Mary High School - Marian Yearbook (Marion, OH) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

St Mary High School - Marian Yearbook (Marion, OH) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 32

1951, pg 32

St Mary High School - Marian Yearbook (Marion, OH) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 23

1951, pg 23

St Mary High School - Marian Yearbook (Marion, OH) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 81

1951, pg 81

St Mary High School - Marian Yearbook (Marion, OH) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 16

1951, pg 16

St Mary High School - Marian Yearbook (Marion, OH) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 87

1951, pg 87


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