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St. Rosalia Church (Brooklyn)

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Church in New York, United States
Church of St. Rosalia
St. Rosalia Church (Brooklyn) is located in New York CitySt. Rosalia Church (Brooklyn)
40°37′36″N 74°0′13″W / 40.62667°N 74.00361°W / 40.62667; -74.00361
Location6301 14th Avenue
Brooklyn, New York
CountryUnited States
DenominationRoman Catholic
Websitebasilicaofreginapacis.org
History
Statusclosed
Founded1902
Founder(s)Rev. P. Sapienza
DedicationSaint Rosalia
Architecture
Architectural typeparish church
Completed1905
ClosedJune 2016
Administration
DioceseBrooklyn
ParishParish of St. Rosalia-Regina Pacis
Clergy
Bishop(s)Most Rev. Nicholas DiMarzio
Pastor(s)Rev. Msgr. Ronald T. Marino

The Church of St. Rosalia (Italian: Chiesa Cattolica Italiana Romana di St. Rosalia) was a parish church in the Borough Park neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York. The parish was founded to serve the needs of Italian Catholics in the area by the then-Bishop of Brooklyn, Charles McDonnell, in 1902. It was placed under the patronage of Saint Rosalia, the patron saint of Palermo, Italy, a region from which many of the Italian-born parishioners hailed. The founding pastor was P. Sapienza, who conducted the first Masses in a converted three-story clapboard house on 62nd Street near 13th Avenue. Within a few years, a small permanent church was constructed to serve the congregation. The parish came to be considered the "Mother Church of Italian immigrants" of the diocese.

In 1923 Angelo Raffaelle Cioffi, a native of Cervinara in the Italian Province of Avellino, who had emigrated to the United States in 1907 as a seminarian, was appointed pastor of the parish by Thomas Edmund Molloy, then Bishop of Brooklyn. He stayed in the parish until his death in 1979.

In 1972, the parish obtained an organ built in 1928 by the Skinner Organ Company, which had originally served a Congregational church in Connecticut.

Shrine Church of Regina Pacis

At a Sunday Mass in May 1942—during the course of World War II, Cioffi urged his congregation to build a shrine dedicated to Mary, under her title of Queen of Peace, for the safe return of the men of the parish and country from the battlefields of the war and for a just and lasting peace. The parishioners accepted the challenge and vowed to erect the church. A building fund was then established which included plans for the projected shrine, as well the construction of a new convent, and the enlargement of the parish school. The Shrine of Regina Pacis was completed and dedicated in August 1951.

Within a week, a pair of gold crown created from the jewelry of the faithful to honor the image of the patroness of the shrine had been stolen. The theft made national headlines. Very shortly, the objects were returned through the mail, leading the pastor and others to declare it a miracle.

Closure

With the passing of the years, the Italian population of the area came to be replaced by members of other ethnic groups, most noticeably Spanish and Chinese. By 2016 most of the services had moved to the shrine church, now a minor basilica, and the Diocese of Brooklyn had determined that the expenses of running the original church were not sustainable. The decision was made to close St. Rosalia Church permanently and to move its operations to the basilica. This was done in June of that year and many of the church furnishings were transferred to other churches. The marble altar of the church and its main image of St. Rosalia were moved to the basilica, along with its vestments and memorial plaques.

In March 2018, the current pastor, Ronald T. Marino, announced that the site was to be sold as an empty lot, leading to the assumption that the church was to be demolished. Residents of the neighborhood united to oppose the demolition of the church. It was demolished in mid 2018.

References

  1. ^ "Church of St. Rosalia–Regina Pacis". The NYC Organ Project/American Guild of Organists.
  2. "Pope Benedict XVI Elevates Brooklyn Church To Minor Basilica". The Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn. Archived from the original on 14 April 2013. Retrieved 24 November 2012.
  3. ^ "Our History". Basilica of Regina Pacis. Archived from the original on May 16, 2021. Retrieved May 5, 2020.
  4. Teutonico, J (November 15, 2011). "Regina Pacis: One Of NYC's Most Magnificent Churches". Brooklyn Eagle. The Brklyner. Retrieved May 5, 2020.
  5. "GOLD CROWNS STOLEN FROM CHURCH SHRINE ARE RETURNED: Church Gets Stolen Gems in Mail; Pastor Hails Recovery as Miracle". The New York Times. June 9, 1952. Retrieved May 5, 2020.
  6. Zielinska, Antonina (October 25, 2017). "Legacy of St. Rosalia Church Lives on in the Community". The Tablet. Retrieved May 5, 2020.
  7. "Bulletin" (PDF). St. Rosalia-Regina Pacis Parish. March 4, 2018.
  8. Mcshane, Julianne (March 22, 2018). "Praying for protection: Devout Dyker parishioners try to save Italian church from destruction". Brooklyn Paper. Retrieved May 5, 2020.
  9. McGoldrick, Meaghan (3 October 2018). "New School Slated for Site of St. Rosalia Church". Brooklyn Reporter. Brooklyn Reporter. Retrieved 18 November 2020.
Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn
Bishops
Ordinaries
John Loughlin
Charles Edward McDonnell
Thomas Edmund Molloy
Bryan Joseph McEntegart
Francis Mugavero
Thomas Vose Daily
Nicholas Anthony DiMarzio
Robert J. Brennan
Auxiliary bishops
Gerald Barbarito
Anthony Bevilacqua
John Joseph Boardman
Frank Joseph Caggiano
Ignatius Anthony Catanello
Raymond Francis Chappetto
Octavio Cisneros
Joseph Peter Michael Denning
Raymond Augustine Kearney
Charles Richard Mulrooney
George Mundelein
Edmund Joseph Reilly
Paul Robert Sanchez
Guy Sansaricq
John J. Snyder
Joseph Michael Sullivan
René Arnold Valero
Bishops who served as priests in the diocese
Vincent DePaul Breen
Edward Bernard Scharfenberger
Churches
List
List of churches in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn
Cathedral
Cathedral Basilica of St. James, Brooklyn
Co-cathedral
Co-Cathedral of St. Joseph, Brooklyn
Basilicas
Basilica of Our Lady of Perpetual Help, Brooklyn
Basilica of Regina Pacis, Brooklyn
Parishes
Church of St. Francis of Assisi and St. Blaise, Brooklyn
Church of the Holy Innocents, Brooklyn
Holy Cross Church, Queens
Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal, Queens
Our Lady of Mount Carmel
Our Lady of Victory Church, Brooklyn
Queen of All Saints Church, Brooklyn
St. Adalbert, Queens
St. Barbara's Church, Brooklyn
Saint Benedict Joseph Labre Church, Queens
Saint Cecilia's Catholic Church, Brooklyn
St. Michael's Church, Brooklyn
St. Sebastian Church, Queens
St. Stanislaus Kostka Church, Queens
Transfiguration, Queens
St. Matthias Church, Queens
Former parishes
Church of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary, Brooklyn
St. Blaise's Church, Brooklyn
St. Monica's Church, Queens
Education
Seminary
Cathedral Preparatory School and Seminary, Queens
High schools, Brooklyn (diocesan and independent)
Bishop Loughlin Memorial High School
Cristo Rey Brooklyn High School
Fontbonne Hall Academy
Nazareth Regional High School
St. Edmund Preparatory High School
Saint Saviour High School of Brooklyn
Xaverian High School
High schools, Queens (diocesan and independent)
Archbishop Molloy High School
Cathedral Preparatory School and Seminary
Christ the King Regional High School
Holy Cross High School
Monsignor McClancy Memorial High School
St. Francis Preparatory School
St. John's Preparatory School
The Mary Louis Academy
High schools, former
Bishop Ford Central Catholic High School, Brooklyn
Bishop Kearney High School
Catherine McAuley High School
Dominican Commercial High School
St. Agnes High School
St. Joseph High School, Brooklyn
Stella Maris High School
Miscellany
Other
DeMarco v. Holy Cross High School
Holy Cross Cemetery, Brooklyn
New Evangelization Television
St. Charles Cemetery
St. Vincent's Catholic Medical Center
The Tablet
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