St. Joseph's Church closes Tuesday after final Mass

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dslover/Sun Journal

Daryn Slover/Sun Journal
Parishioners attend Mass at Saint Joseph's Catholic Church in Lewiston on Sunday.

LEWISTON — The city's oldest Catholic church — St. Joseph's Church — will close its doors Tuesday.

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dslover/Sun Journal

Daryn Slover/Sun Journal
Monsignor Marc Caron gives his blessing to Gilbert Morrison during Mass at Saint Joseph's Catholic Church in Lewiston on Sunday morning. St. Joseph's will close its doors following the church's final Mass on Tuesday. Morrison was married to his wife Patricia at Saint Joseph's in 1962 and has been coming to the church for 48 years. He has been a collector at the church for 36 of those years.

Amber Waterman/Sun Journal

Amber Waterman/Sun Journal

The rectory next door to St. Joseph's Catholic Church will also be put on the market.

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submitted

photo courtesy of Saint Joseph's Church

An old drawing of Saint Joseph's Catholic Church and rectory.

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dslover/Sun Journal

Daryn Slover/Sun Journal
Father Anthony Dass, left, father Tony Amato, Monsignor Marc Caron, father Antoniar and father Bob Vaillancourt administer Mass at Saint Joseph's Catholic Church in Lewiston on Sunday.

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dslover/Sun Journal

Daryn Slover/Sun Journal
Monsignor Marc Caron greats parishioners following Mass at Saint Joseph's Catholic Church in Lewiston on Sunday morning.

Amber Waterman/Sun Journal

Amber Waterman/Sun Journal

Several maintenance issues with the building, such as the balcony being deemed unsafe and water damage to the church hall, contributed to the decision to close St. Joseph's Catholic Church.

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submitted

photo courtesy of Mark Labonte

Saint Joseph's Catholic Church decorated for Christmas in 1933.

Bishop Richard Malone will officiate over the final Mass, ending 152 years of history in the grand, brick building at 253 Main St.

"I would say the overwhelming sense is sadness," said Monsignor Marc Caron, who leads Lewiston's Prince of Peace Parish. "Some are grieving."

The cornerstone of the building was laid June 13, 1864, according to a parish history published in 2007. The church, designed by architect Patrick Keely of New York, opened three years later.

Today, the structure is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The building is known for its columned nave and the stained glass in almost every window, much of it hand-painted with extraordinary detail. Murals were painted in the 1920s by Monmouth artist Harry Cochran, according to the church's history.

Shrinking congregations throughout the Lewiston and Auburn churches forced the closure of St. Joseph's — as well as St. Patrick's Church, which will hold its final Mass on Oct. 27.

Bishop Malone is expected to approve the sale of both churches by the end of the year.

At Tuesday's 6 p.m. Mass, the Rev. Frank Morin, St. Joseph's former pastor, will give the homily. A banquet will follow at the Carriage House on Lisbon Street. Tickets for the banquet may be purchased for $20 each by calling the parish office at 777-1200.

dhartill@sunjournal.com

 

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Displaying comments, from newest to oldest

wingnut56's picture

If one member of every

If one member of every Catholic family in Lewiston went to Saint Josephs and put 10 bucks in the basket, this church could still open it's doors for every sermon. You good Christian people of Lewiston have no one to blame but yourselves. Dell's and Deck's should build a steeple on top of the bar.

verified

wingnut, You area wing nut,

wingnut,
You area wing nut, they would probably use the extra$10 to compensate pedophile law suits or gay legal issues instead of saving the parish

Jay Bee's picture

Keep in mind that, yes,

Keep in mind that, yes, despite economic issues, Maine actually has grown population. But it's largely in Sprawlville (a.k.a. the Turners and Buxtons of the world). And Maine is one of the least-churched states in the country. A very high rate of Mainers just don't go any more. That's as much of the story as anything else. I suspect that a disproportionate number of those are ex-Catholics, but that's just anecdotal speculation on my part.

verified

Shame on the Diocese of

Shame on the Diocese of Portland!

RpsNoMore's picture

"When I returned in June

"When I returned in June with the intentions of being here a year starting this community project, I found Rumford not even a shell of what it was in the 1980s or even whan I left in 1989 but a misty ghost without form or structure in many ways and ghost town in its vacancy and condition of buildings and properties."

The answer is less about the Republican ruse of "high taxes" than American companies shipping jobs overseas for nearly slave wages. That's partly because of greed, which isn't always good. At some point American businesses decided to go with the Republican mantra of more isn't enough, they stopped caring about living wages for employees, and rather than making a good living needed to take tens of millions for themselves.

That's the larger picture and it can be laid at the feet of Ronald Reagan, who told American that it was a doggie dog world out there and it's good to step on unions, and communities. The slide continued with NAFTA. We havce a chance to change with with President Obama. Immigration isn't the issue, the issue is what America allowed big business to do, which is nothing short of virtually destroy America's once vibrant industrial base.

Big Love's picture

You haven't seen anything

You haven't seen anything yet. Wait till cap and tax passes. Businesses won't be able to ship whatever manufacturing jobs that are still here out of here fast enough. And while you're bitchin about Republicans, try to keep in mind that Dems have run this state into the ground for better than 30 years. Maine has the worst business climate in the country. How much worse has unemployment gotten since the "porkulous package"? Maybe we need to bail out a few more union workers. You're right about one thing. NAFTA was and is a horrible idea for America. But he didn't do it alone, and I don't see fixing it anywhere on Obama's agenda.

RpsNoMore's picture

There aren't enough Priests.

There aren't enough Priests. Churches are closing. Yet, the answer for the Catholic Church is never to evaluate why it is so irrelevant to so many. No, instead, they merely reiterate the same old points and take political stances against "gay marriage."

Hello? Anyone in here with a clue?

Winterbear98's picture

wow so sad they should

wow so sad they should have stream the masses online for the people who cant make it to church so they could have donated online lI just think more could have been done to save it. ST PETERS should live stream the masses so the homebound can enjoy the mass a well they can donate to the church online we have to be more created or st peters will be next

sawingess's picture

shut them all down.

shut them all down. pedophile haven

candiceanne's picture

Having been born and raised

Having been born and raised in Maine and sticking around to care for a bury my grandparents, I watched Rumford continuosly decline. The internet article Ed McCaffrey cited in his letter to the editor was just how it has been. When I returned in June with the intentions of being here a year starting this community project, I found Rumford not even a shell of what it was in the 1980s or even whan I left in 1989 but a misty ghost without form or structure in many ways and ghost town in its vacancy and condition of buildings and properties. As I have had the opportunity to get out of Rumford to other communities I am finding that while the exodus from Rumford was evident to me through out my life, an exodus from the entire state is evident. There are growing numers of ermpy homes and commercial properties in every town I have been to but most telling, the closed churches. The people have moved out of Maine and the churches are emptied and shuttered as the towns do. Maine has always had a lot of disadvantages geographically and climactically for business and industry add in state high and local taxation impediments set up by regulators, local government and general objections of the population to new business and development. Wen a business enterprise considers establishing a bew location they take all these factors and more into consideration. Maine has removed itself from the playing field.

Jay Bee's picture

Pretty church, Doctor Dosh!

Pretty church, Doctor Dosh!

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