St. Joseph Parish, Gardner

St. Joseph Parish

St. Joseph Church
Coordinates: 42°34′09″N 71°59′42″W / 42.56917°N 71.99500°W / 42.56917; -71.99500
Location 358 Pleasant Street
Gardner, Massachusetts
Country United States
Denomination Roman Catholic
Website Parish website
History
Founded December 6, 1908
Founder(s) Polish immigrants
Dedication St. Joseph
Administration
Diocese Worcester
Province Boston
Division Cluster 11
Clergy
Bishop(s) Most Rev. Robert Joseph McManus
Pastor(s) Rev. Thomas M Tokarz

St. Joseph Parish - designated for Polish immigrants in Gardner, Massachusetts, United States.

Founded December 6, 1908. It is one of the Polish-American Roman Catholic parishes in New England in the Diocese of Worcester.

History

The first Polish settler, who came to Gardner was Jan Kulczyk. April 2, 1892 landed in New York, and the next day he arrived to Gardner. Later other Polish immigrants arrived: Jan Kijek, Peter Piascik, Paul Cychol, Francis Wiski, and Roman Kulczyk.

In 1903, members of the Polish settlement in Gardner began to organize associations and interest groups.
The first such organization was the Polish National Alliance was founded in 1903. A few years later the idea of creating a community of fraternal aid.
After many meetings and deliberations, the St. Joseph Society[1] was founded on March 2, 1906.
Since September 11, 1906, paying its members of the Society five U.S. dollars a week for help to the sick or handicapped.

On May 5, 1907, a committee made up of Eugene Pliskowski, Stanley Hryniewicz, Roman Kulczyk, and Matthew Kodys, bought a parcel at 358 Pleasant St.
After obtaining permission from Thomas D. Beaven, bishop of Springfield, to establish the St. Joseph Parish and received the consent of the Polish priest, December 6, 1908 the Polish settlers in Gardner, welcomed Fr. Julius Rodziewicz, as the first pastor, who came to them.
December 6, 1908, St. Joseph Parish was canonically established, and Fr. Julius Rodziewicz celebrated his first Mass. in the Holy Rosary Church.

Pastors

References

Bibliography

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/10/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.