Savannah Priory

Benedictine Priory
Monastery information
Other names Savannah Priory
Order Benedictine
Established 1877
Mother house Saint Vincent Archabbey,
Latrobe, Pennsylvania
Diocese Savannah
People
Founder(s) Abbot Nullius Leo Haid, O.S.B.
Abbot The Right Rev. Douglas R. Nowicki, O.S.B.
Prior The Rev. Frank Ziemkiewicz, O.S.B,
Architecture
Functional Status monastery
Completed date 1963
Site
Location 6502 Seawright Drive,
Savannah, Georgia 31406
United States
Coordinates 32°0′34″N 81°5′33″W / 32.00944°N 81.09250°W / 32.00944; -81.09250Coordinates: 32°0′34″N 81°5′33″W / 32.00944°N 81.09250°W / 32.00944; -81.09250

The Benedictine Priory of Savannah, more commonly referred to as Savannah Priory, is a small American monastery of Benedictine monks located in Savannah, Georgia.[1] The priory was founded in 1877, and is a dependency of Saint Vincent Archabbey in Latrobe, Pennsylvania, and thereby belongs to the American-Cassinese Congregation.[2] It currently operates the Benedictine Military School for boys.

History

First mission

In 1866, the Catholic bishops of the United States had met in Baltimore for the Second Plenary Council held there to continue providing order to the Catholic Church, which was still newly established in the nation. One of the decrees which resulted from that assembly was to call on all the bishops of the country to establish an outreach to the newly emancipated African-American slaves. In keeping with this mandate, William Hickley Gross, C.Ss.R., at that time the Roman Catholic Bishop of Savannah, invited the Benedictine monks of St. Vincent Abbey in Latrobe, Pennsylvania, to contribute priests to this mission in his diocese.<ref name=BC /[3]

In response to his invitation, Abbot Boniface Wimmer, O.S.B., the founder of Benedictine life in the United States, sent two German-born monks to Savannah in 1874. The monks quickly began missionary work amongst newly freed slaves, opening St. Benedict Parish in the city that year, and a parochial school the following year.[4]

Soon after settling there, the monks were able to obtain some parcels of land on the Isle of Hope, off the coast of Savannah, where they opened the first monastery in the Southern United States. Within a year, however, all the members of the monastic community had died of yellow fever.[4]

Second mission

In 1877, the abbot sent a new group of monks to Georgia, under the leadership of Dom Oswald Moosmueller, O.S.B., to continue the mission to the former slaves. The monks bought 713 acres on Skidaway Island. At this site (now believed to be preserved, not part of a golf course, and is currently undergoing archaeological research) they built a new monastery and school. Unfortunately, in less than ten years, the project was abandoned as a failure because the monks could not attract enough interest among the African American community in their enterprise.[4]

Savannah Priory

The ten monks of the mission, now operating under the authority of Belmont Abbey in North Carolina, made the decision to move to Savannah, where they established a monastery at 31st and Habersham Streets, adjacent to Sacred Heart Parish, which they then served. Recognizing the need for a Catholic boys' school, they established Benedictine College in 1902, later the Benedictine Military School, next to the church. In 1963, both the priory and the school moved to their current location on the southside of Savannah.[4] Shortly after moving to the new location, the monastic community chose to return to the authority of St. Vincent Archabbey in Latrobe.

Current status

Today the community consists of eight monks, half of whom serve on the staff of the school, while the others serve in various parishes of the city.[4]

See also

References

  1. "Geographic Database". Order of St. Benedict.
  2. "Directory". The American-Cassinese Congregation.
  3. "About Us: History". Benedictine Military School.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5
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