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Photography by John and Kathleen DeMajo
MATER DOLOROSA CATHOLIC CHURCH |
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THE HISTORY OF MATER DOLOROSA PARISH
After the American domination
of 1803, there was a movement to subdivide the many plantations upstream from
the city. The Fabourg Saint Marie, Saulet-Faucher, Bouligny, Greenville, and
the town of Lafayette all developed during that era. On the old McCarty
plantation, which was in a great curve of the river, the town of Carrollton was
established in 1933. Transportation was established through the Carrollton
Railway (now part of the St. Charles Street Car Line) which enabled the
development of Carrollton. At the other end of the McCarty plantation, a new
canal, dug by the German immigrants, provided a direct route to the waterways
which brought in settlers.
Since the nearest church was
St. Patrick’s, Father Augustin DeAngelis, a priest from the DesAllemands area came to Carrollton to minister to
the people. His assistant, Father Rossi became the first official part-time
pastor of the area. In 1847, Archbishop
Blanc called upon Father Ferdinand Zeller to become permanent pastor of the new
Carrollton parish church. Operating from a house used previously by Fr.
DeAngelis, Fr. Zeller set up a temporary church and began services for the
French, Germans and Irish of the area.
In 1848, Father Zeller began
construction of a wood frame church with a seating capacity of 200. The project
was deterred by the outbreak of a Cholera epidemic and it was completed in
September of 1848. In 1849, the parish was incorporated, under State laws, as
the Congregation of St. Mary’s Roman Catholic Church of Carrollton.
As the parish developed, the
Sisters of Charity set up an orphan asylum in the area. This institution was
heavily dependent on the church. Around 1866, The Franco-Prussian War had caused a great deal of conflict in the
parish. The plans of the German parishioners, to form a German church, now came
to a head and a separate German church was established. In the school that had
been established, the nuns taught only girls while the boys were taught by the
Christian Brothers. After a German
church and school was set up, a storm destroyed the German school in 1882. By 1897, the German church population had
fallen so severely that thought was given to merging the two parishes again. In that era, the German church was taken over
by the Josephite priests renamed St. Dominic Church. In 1897, Archbishop Chapelle appointed Rev. John Francis Prim to
be pastor of a new church to again unite the French and German parishes into
one. The new church was to be called Mater Dolorosa.
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