Английская Википедия:Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary (Washington, D.C.)
Шаблон:Infobox church The Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary is located in the Congress Heights neighborhood of Washington, D.C. It is a parish church of the Archdiocese of Washington.
Location
Assumption Church is located in Southeast, Washington, D.C. It is near St. Elizabeths and the Barry Farm.
History
Origins
The first Mass was said at the Church of the Incarnation on 600 Alabama Avenue in 1916. Pastor John Horstkamp acquired property on Martin Luther King Jr. Ave. (then known as Nichols Ave.) and built a multipurpose hall at the location of the present day Assumption Church. Church of the Incarnation in moved to in the early 1900s.[1] The cornerstone of the current structure was laid by John. M. McNamara, Auxiliary Bishop of Baltimore in March 1933. The church was dedicated in fall of the same year. Cornerstones for Assumption School, Convent and a new rectory were laid in 1950.[1]
Pastors
- Rev. Greg Shaffer (2016–present)
- Rev. Mark Ivany (2012-2015)
- Rev. William Montgomery (2010-2012)
- Rev. Roy Campbell (2008-2010)
- Rev. Charles Green (2004-2008)
- Rev. Scott Woods was assigned as administrator during a period of hospitalization of Rev. Green
- Rev. Ansgar Laczko (1992-2004)
- Rev. Brian Vaughn (1991-1992)
- Rev. Francis Walsh (1986-1991)
- Rev. Thomas P. Kelly (1979-1986)
- Rev. Thomas A. Kane (1972-1979)
- Rev. Raymond P. Cahill (1969-1972)
- Rev. George V. Joyce (1967-1969)
- Rev. Charles E. Roach (1936-1966)
- Rev. Joseph M. Moran (1934-1936)
- Rev. Francis X. Cavanaugh (1931-1933)
- Rev. William Carroll (1922-1931)
- Rev. John E. Horstkamp (1916-1922) [1][2]
School
Assumption School operated from at least 1969 to 1983 providing primary education through eighth grade.[1] Sisters of the Holy Cross staffed the school until the 1970s.
Pope Francis Outreach Center
In the 1960s during a time of racial and economic tension, Pastor Joyce established the "Helping Hand Program," which expanded to the Outreach Program under his successor Pastor Cahill.[2] Pastor Ivany recruited donors to convert the old Convent to house the growing outreach center.[2] Today, volunteers at the Pope Francis Outreach Center continues to perform corporal works of mercy, feeding the hungry and distributing clothing to residents of Ward 8 in need.[3]
Missionaries of Charity
In the late 70s, Pastor Kane welcomed the Missionaries of Charity to the parish. The sisters run a house for homeless single mothers and a soup kitchen in the neighborhood nearby.[4] In 2005, one of the sisters in the community was abducted from the convent but released with minor injuries the same day.[5] Mother Teresa visited the parish during travel to Washington, DC.[6]
Architecture
Donald S. Johnson, Sr. was the architect.[1]
Art
The stained glass windows were installed in 1933.[2] Pastor Ivany commissioned paintings of saint on the back wall of the church including: Martin de Porres, Josephine Bakhita, Mother Teresa, and Pope John Paul II.[2]
Music
The pipe organ is an M. P. Möller Opus 6152 (ca. 1932) featuring two manuals and 23 registers.[7]
References
External links
- Английская Википедия
- Congress Heights
- Roman Catholic churches completed in 1933
- Roman Catholic churches in Washington, D.C.
- Romanesque Revival architecture in Washington, D.C.
- 20th-century Roman Catholic church buildings in the United States
- African-American Roman Catholic churches
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