Showing posts with label zip11238-Adelphi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label zip11238-Adelphi. Show all posts

Saturday, January 21, 2012

St. Teresa of Avila, Sterling Place



Effective November 1, 2018, the parish of St. Teresa of Avila has been merged into the parish of the Co-Cathedral of St. Joseph. 
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The church of St. Teresa of Avila is located on the northeast corner of Classon Avenue and Sterling Place.  Its postal address is 563 Sterling Place, Brooklyn NY 11238, telephone 718-622-6500.



Any photo may be enlarged by clicking on it.



Yes, the cornerstone of this church was laid in 1874.  For more of the church history, please see this link.




The parish had two school buildings, one here on the southeast corner of Sterling Place and Classon Avenue.




               

On the north side of St. John's Place are the auditorium, the second school, and senior apartments.  The B45 bus connecting downtown Brooklyn with Crown Heights provides frequent service, eastbound on St. John's Place, westbound on Sterling Place.
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The school in the above photo, at 541 St. John's Place, as of December, 2018, houses a training center for court officers in the New York State Court system. "The facility will contain five new classrooms, a conference room, offices and a multipurpose gym," according to an announcement by the Supreme Court Officers Association. By January, 2024, the Court Officers Academy is in three buildings. The third and smallest is a dormitory for trainees who would have difficulty reaching this location on an early morning drive.

The training facility is named after New York State Court Officers Capt. William Thompson, Sgt. Thomas Jurgens, and Sgt. Michael Wallace, who died on 9.11.2001.
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I received this inquiry in February, 2013:

Both my parents graduated from St. Teresa's school in the 1920 - 1930 era . (mother Kathleen Campbell - father - Howard Nicols).  My grandmother lived across the street at 568 Sterling Place.  I grew up on Carroll St. in St. Ignatius parish and attended St. Francis of Assisi school.

 I had a yearbook type magazine about growing up in St. Theresa's parish in particular, and in Brooklyn in general.  I lent this to a friend and never got it back.  Do you know of this book and where, if possible, I can get a copy.

Any help would be appreciated.  Gail Nicols Tumulty  gtumulty(at)comcast.net
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I wasn't able to post a comment on your site because none of those profiles seem to apply to me, and I wasn't sure what to do....

Wonderful, wonderful website!  Occasionally I look around the internet for pictures or stories about St. Teresa of Avila church and school, and that is how I came about your site. 

I graduated from St. Teresa of Avila in June 1958 and my mother in February 1927 when the girls school (Sterling and Classon) was only three stories plus the basement.  My mother's brother graduated from the boys school (St. John's and Classon) probably the next year. 

I tried to respond to Gail who left the inquiry earlier this month about a “yearbook type magazine” and the e-mail was returned to me.  I had copied and pasted it, of course changing the (at) to @  so it was accurate.  Can you please check and see if the e-mail address she provided just this month is the same as what appears on your site. 

I don’t know where she can get another book, other than Googling it or writing to the author or alumni association, etc., but I might have to what she’s referring, and I also have the St. T’s 1924 Golden Jubilee book and the 1949 Diamond Jubilee book.  If there was something in particular she wanted, I could scan it and e-mail it to her.

Many thanks for your efforts!  Great job!

Helen Sauer Mirande
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From the editor:
Posting a comment on this blog has become a bit complicated.  It does work, but with these hurdles:
1) I have chosen to require that Blogger (Google's free tool) send me the comments first for approval.  That has weeded out some spam, for example, a car repair firm in Brooklyn!
2) Blogger now requires some identification from the person placing the comment. Again, that keeps down trolls.
3) Blogger continues to hide the email address of the person commenting, making it difficult to reply to any inquiry!
These safety precautions are reasonable, but they somewhat hinder conversation.




St. Joseph Co-cathedral, Pacific Street



St. Joseph parish, Prospect Heights, is located at 856 Pacific Street, Brooklyn NY 11238, telephone 718-638-1071.  The website is linked here. The parish was established in 1850 by Archbishop John Hughes of New York.  The diocese of Brooklyn was created in late 1853.  "Diocese of Immigrants" shows an older church here with one steeple.  The cornerstone of this church is dated 1912.


The above interior photo was taken in early 2012, before the extensive renovations.


This banner appears adjacent to the apse, along the Dean Street side of the church.  Any photo may be enlarged by clicking on it.



The former school, built around 1920, is a senior residence at 683 Dean Street.  The church apse may be seen to the east.


This view southeast from Atlantic Avenue shows both the church and the school.  In 2012, construction continues on the 22-acre Atlantic Yards project, of which Vanderbilt Avenue (crossing this photo) is the eastern end.
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The bulletin reported attendance at three Sunday Masses on 8.14.2016 as about 375.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

St. Martin de Porres, Bed-Stuy


In 2007, the bishop of Brooklyn created the parish of St. Martin de Porres by merging three parishes, Our Lady of Victory, St. Peter Claver, and Holy Rosary. The pastor and his assistant live at 583 Throop Avenue, Brooklyn, New York 11216, telephone 718-574-5772.  The parish website, giving the address, Mass schedule, telephone, and e-mail of each of the three churches, is linked here. For insights into the pastor, staff, parishioners, and activities, I suggest you peruse the archive of weekly bulletins.
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Above is the shrine of St. Martin de Porres, to the left of the altar in Our Lady of Victory church, Throop Avenue.


On the northeast corner of Throop Avenue and MacDonough Street stands the magnificent church of Our Lady of Victory.  The parish was established in 1868, and this church, designed by Thomas F. Houghton,  was consecrated in 1893. Francis Morrone writes, "It is a strong Gothic church of Manhattan schist with highly contrasting limestone trim."



The above view looks south on Throop Avenue from Macon Street.  The rectory is at the left. Up Macon Street to the left is the convent of the Missionaries of Charity and the former parish school.





A single click on any photo will enlarge it.  Then the original size will also be offered.





The history and architecture of this parish and church are of great interest, but the faith and zeal of the congregants are the soul of the parish.
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At this link to Flickr, Emilio Guerra has provided two photos of Our Lady of Victory church.  He also provides a helpful text from the city's Landmark Commission.  Also, one might look at page 11 of this pdf document.
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More photos, history, and a description of the organ are provided at this link to the New York Organ project.
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Bus B43 (from Ebbets Field to Greenpoint) stops in front of the church. The southbound B43 uses Tompkins Avenue.  Nearby is the Kingston-Throop station of the C train under Fulton Street.
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A mile west of Our Lady of Victory church is that of St. Peter Claver.


On the southeast corner of Claver Place and Jefferson Avenue is the church of St. Peter Claver, now one of the three churches in the parish of St. Martin de Porres.  The address is 29 Claver Place, Brooklyn, NY 11238, telephone 718-622-4647.  For the Mass schedule, please see this link.
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The cornerstone is dated 1921.  Fulton Street is a short block to the right (south). Nearby is the busy subway station at Franklin Avenue and Fulton Street (C and S trains).



On the northeast corner is St. Peter Claver Institute, with a cornerstone dated 1931.  The parish and this institute have an amazing, impressive history.  A statue of St. Peter Claver and a slave is at the corner.  To the left, one door is marked Convent, another door is marked School.


In 2011, the Brooklyn Waldorf School leased this property for 49 years.  

Three blocks northwest, on the southeast corner of Madison Street and Classon Avenue, is the former church of Nativity parish.  In 1973, the bishop of Brooklyn merged that parish into St. Peter Claver.  Another Christian congregation purchased Nativity, according to this link


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Holy Rosary, at 139 Chauncey Street, Brooklyn NY 11233, is one of three worship sites for the parish of St. Martin de Porres, established in 2007.  Please see the parish website, linked here.
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Chauncey Street is one block north of the Utica Avenue station of the A and C subway lines beneath Fulton Street.  Walk one block north on Malcolm X Boulevard, turn west, and you will see the church.
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The parish was established in 1889.  The handsome brick church dates from 1894. Holy Rosary is the easternmost church of St. Martin de Porres parish, extending about 1.5 mile from St. Peter Claver to Holy Rosary, or approximately the east-west extent of the residential neighborhood Bedford-Stuyvesant.
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It seems that a campanile was removed after 1946.  On this website, please click on the photo.


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The June 26, 2019, issue of the Brooklyn Tablet has a lengthy report on Msgr. Quinn's sainthood cause, but in many paragraphs other important topics are touched on. Please see the article HERE.


Thursday, December 2, 2010

Bishop Loughlin Memorial HS, Fort Greene

Bishop John Loughlin hoped to build Brooklyn's cathedral on this block, bounded by Clermont Avenue (left), Green Avenue (right), Vanderbilt Avenue (parallel to Clermont), and Lafayette Avenue (where Queen of All Saints church and school are). Through a go-between, he purchased the block in the 1860's and he commissioned Patrick Charles Keely to build a very large cathedral facing Lafayette Avenue.  Other pressing needs of the people of the diocese of Brooklyn took precedence, and the cathedral construction went slowly  About 1887, he asked Keely to design this house as a bishop's residence. The foundations for the cathedral were built, a chapel of St. John was built, but the project was later abandoned and Bishop Loughlin Memorial High School was constructed in an L-shape around the house, now LaSalle Hall, a residence for students.



Above is the Clermont Avenue entrance to Bishop Loughlin Memorial High School. Queen of All Saints may be seen on the north side of Lafayette Avenue, with the 1906 Brooklyn Masonic Temple to its left.



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