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Immaculate Conception Catholic Church (Durham, North Carolina)

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Catholic parish and school in Durham, North Carolina
Immaculate Conception Catholic Church
Immaculate Conception Church in 2024
Religion
AffiliationCatholic Church
DistrictDiocese of Raleigh
LeadershipBishop Luis R. Zarama
Year consecrated1906
StatusActive
Location
LocationDurham, North Carolina, United States
Architecture
Completed1956
Website
icdurham.org

Immaculate Conception Catholic Church & Immaculata Catholic School are a Catholic parish church and parochial school run by the Order of Friars Minor in downtown Durham, North Carolina. The church and school are located in the Burch Avenue Historic District. Immaculate Conception is the oldest Catholic congregation in Durham, and the affiliated school was the city's first Catholic school.

Church

The Catholic community in Durham formed in 1867, when a group of Catholics from Lockhaven, Pennsylvania settled on land in the area.

Prior to the construction of the first church building, Catholics in Durham celebrated mass with visiting priests from Raleigh and Newton Grove at the William Thomas O'Brien House and at the home of James Lawrence. The O'Brien family were an affluent Catholic family connected to the W. Duke Sons & Company. Later, a space was rented in J.R. Gooch's store on Corcoran Street which led to protests because laws prevented liquor from being sold in close proximity to a church. In 1896, Abbot Leo Haid of Belmont Abbey, the Vicar Apostolic of North Carolina, asked Benjamin Newton Duke for financial assistance to build a church, but Duke declined. Later that year, Fr. Prendergast of Raleigh was celebrating mass at the Durham YMCA.

The first church, a white wooden church named St. Mary's, was built in 1906 on West Chapel Hill Street, located on land once owned by William T. O'Brien. A parochial school was established in 1909. The church was consecrated on January 14, 1906, with 106 members.

School

The first school, called St. Mary's School, was built adjacent to the sanctuary on Chapel Hill Street. The school was founded in 1909 by Fr. Francis O'Brien and the Sisters of St. Dominic from Newburgh, New York. St. Mary's enrollment started with nine students and ended with twenty-three in its first year. The school building was town down and a new building was constructed in the 1951. The school was later renamed St. William's School and, finally, Immaculata School.

In 2012, the U.S. Department of Education designated Immaculata Catholic School as a national blue ribbon school for academic achievements. In 2019, the school received a national green ribbon school award from the department of education for efforts to reduce environmental impact. The school was the first in North Carolina to receive AdvancED STEM certification.

Notable alumni

Notable clergy

  • Casey Cole, Catholic priest, Franciscan friar, and internet celebrity

References

  1. ^ "History of IC". Immaculate Conception Catholic Church.
  2. ^ "WILLIAM T O'BRIEN HOUSE | Open Durham".
  3. ^ Anderson, Jean Bradley (1990). Durham County: A History of Durham County, North Carolina. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press & The Historic Preservation Society of Durham, Inc. pp. 226, 227. ISBN 0-8223-1056-2.
  4. Patricia S. Dickinson (December 1983). "William Thomas O'Brien House" (PDF). National Register of Historic Places - Nomination and Inventory. North Carolina State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved 2014-10-01.
  5. "IMMACULATE CONCEPTION (SECOND) | Open Durham". www.opendurham.org.
  6. ^ "IMMACULATA SCHOOL / 721 BURCH AVE. | Open Durham". www.opendurham.org.
  7. ^ "History & Mission - Immaculata Catholic School". www.immaculataschool.org.
Roman Catholic Diocese of Raleigh
Ordinaries
Bishops
William Hafey
Eugene J. McGuinness
Vincent Stanislaus Waters
F. Joseph Gossman
Michael Francis Burbidge
Luis R. Zarama
Churches
Cathedral
Holy Name of Jesus Cathedral
Basilica
Basilica Shrine of St. Mary, Wilmington
Parishes
St. Michael the Archangel Church, Cary
Immaculate Conception Church, Durham
Immaculate Conception Church, Halifax
St. Paul's Church, New Bern
St. Raphael the Archangel Church, Raleigh
St. Catherine of Siena, Wake Forest
Chapel
Sacred Heart Church, Raleigh
Education
High schools
Cristo Rey Research Triangle High School, Durham
John Paul II Catholic High School, Greenville
Cardinal Gibbons High School, Raleigh
St. Thomas More Academy, Raleigh
Priests
Bernard Shlesinger
Casey Cole
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