This blog may evolve as a mixture of the history and geography of Catholic parishes in Nassau County. In no way is this blog official. Please scroll down.
Lord
The heart of the Christian community is our Triune Lord: Father, Son, Holy Spirit. Geography, history, and numbers are not the heart, but probably I will type mostly on these topics. As the internet already provides many encouraging spiritual guides and discouraging contentious forums, I intend to offer neither.
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To find a parish, enter a keyword in the search box at the top left, or look through the labels and links down the right-hand column. The posts themselves follow the Blogger format of newest items on top.
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To find a parish, enter a keyword in the search box at the top left, or look through the labels and links down the right-hand column. The posts themselves follow the Blogger format of newest items on top.
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Tuesday, February 14, 2012
St. Boniface the Martyr, Sea Cliff
St. Boniface Martyr church stands on the northwest corner of Glen Avenue and Carpenter Avenue. Its address is 145 Glen Avenue, Sea Cliff NY 11579, telephone 516-676-0676. The parish website is linked here. A very informative history page is linked here, with many, many topics. I was particularly glad to see the chronology of the principals of Saint Boniface school and All Saints, as it helps people who try to remember who-followed-whom and when.
The stained glass window at the right seems to answer the question, "Which St. Boniface the Martyr?" Apparently it is not the man martyred about 307, but rather the Englishman Boniface, Apostle to the Germans, who cut down a sacred oak, and was martyred in 754. His body was brought to Fulda.
The parish has a religious education program and is one of five parishes sponsoring All Saints Regional Catholic School in Glen Cove.
The parish office is on the south side of Glen Avenue, facing the church. Bus route N21 along Glen Avenue connects this location with Flushing and Glen Cove, generally hourly.
Monday, February 13, 2012
St. Mary, Roslyn
The church of St. Mary faces Hempstead Harbor at the intersection of Bryant Avenue and Summit Place. Any photo may be enlarged by clicking on it.
The parish address is 110 Bryant Avenue, Roslyn NY 11576, telephone 516-621-2222.
In early February, 2012, the Daily Eucharist is offered Monday-Friday in the church. Saturday evening at 5 p.m., Mass is in the Hall downstairs, and at 7:15 in Spanish in the church. Sundays, in the church at 9 and 11 a.m., in the Hall at 7:30 a.m. and 12:15 p.m. I suspect that Hall has step-free entrance from the parking lot, whereas the church entrance has many steps.
Above, the rectory is seen from the church steps.
The history of this St. Mary's parish in Roslyn is intertwined with that of St. Mary's, Manhasset, three miles to the west. The date of canonical establishment as a parish is 1871 here and 1912 for the Manhasset parish, but that is not the date of first Mass or first construction; each was a mission at some time.
St. Mary's parish is one of five which sponsor All Saints Regional Catholic School in Glen Cove, five miles north. The Sisters of Mercy taught in a parish school here for some years after 1952. I do not know where the school was.
Note that another St. Mary's exists in Roslyn, a child-healthcare agency from Bayside, Queens.
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Bus route N21 passes the church on the way from Flushing to Glen Cove. Only two or three blocks south of the church, the N20 offers service from Flushing to Hicksville.
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Bus route N21 passes the church on the way from Flushing to Glen Cove. Only two or three blocks south of the church, the N20 offers service from Flushing to Hicksville.
Labels:
drvc,
Oyster Bay deanery,
Roslyn,
Sisters of Mercy,
zip11576-Roslyn
Sunday, February 12, 2012
Hymns
For some time, the richness of the hymns sung in church has piqued my curiosity. By hymns, I include the psalms, the canticles, such as the Benedictus and the Magnificat, the ancient hymns, as the Trisagion, the hymns of St. Thomas Aquinas, those of John Wesley, and hymns of more recent times. As Google's Blogger allows posts to be updated, I don't know where this post will lead.
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For starters, today we sang a hymn by Omer Westendorf, whose life was entirely in the 20th century, with a Welsh melody. In searching for his biography, I came upon this most interesting site from Collegeville.
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For starters, today we sang a hymn by Omer Westendorf, whose life was entirely in the 20th century, with a Welsh melody. In searching for his biography, I came upon this most interesting site from Collegeville.
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
St. Jane Frances de Chantal, Wantagh
The church of St. Jane Frances de Chantal is located at 1309 Wantagh Avenue, Wantagh NY 11793, telephone 516-785-2333. Its website is linked here. The church is on the east side of the avenue, a half-mile south of Exit 28 of the Southern State Parkway. It is also a mile north of the Wantagh Railroad Station.
Archbishop Molloy established the parish in 1952. By the 1980's, the first church suffered structural problems (as I recall, wood rot at the base of the supports), and this new church was opened in 1987. For twenty years, a chapel, separated from the church by panels, existed to the left of the tabernacle. In recent renovations that chapel was made part of the main body of the church.
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A school was built in the late 1950's, but in 1992, St. Jane Francis de Chantal joined three other parish schools to create St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Regional School in Bellmore. In 2010-2011, twenty-eight children from St. Jane Frances de Chantal attended St. Elizabeth Ann Seton. Religious education students at St. Jane Frances de Chantal number about 1,000.
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Jeanne Françoise de Chantal lived 1572-1641. Another biography is linked here.
Monday, January 16, 2012
St. Gertrude, Bayville
St. Gertrude Parish is on the southwest corner of School Street and Bayville Avenue, with the postal address of 28 School Street, Bayville, NY 11709, telephone 516-628-1113. The parish website is linked here. Bayville is on the shore of Long Island Sound. Any photo may be enlarged by clicking on it.
In 1905, a summer mission was begun in Bayville, as part of St. Dominic's, Oyster Bay. In 1959, the bishop established St. Gertrude's parish.
The small parking lot adjacent to the church is restricted for handicapped use during Masses, according to posted signs. However, uphill on School Street, behind the church is a vast parking lot connected to the church by walkway. That lot fronts on the parish center and the pre-school, pictured above.
Labels:
Bayville,
drvc,
Oyster Bay deanery,
St. Gertrude,
zip11709-Bayville
Sunday, January 15, 2012
St. Dominic, Oyster Bay
The mailing address of St. Dominic's parish is 93 Anstice Street, Oyster Bay, NY 11771, telephone 516-922-4488. Above is the parish office on the southeast corner of Anstice Street and Weeks Avenue. The parish website is linked here.
On the west side of Anstice Street are the chapel (formerly the church) and the newer church. Weekday Mass is in the chapel at 7:30 a.m. Sundays, four Masses are offered in the church, three in the chapel.
Saint Dominic Elementary School adjoins the church on the north side of Weeks Avenue. Any photo may be enlarged by clicking on it. On 5.28.2013, Newsday reported that the elementary school enrollment is 237.
Two classroom buildings of St. Dominic High School face each other across quiet Anstice Avenue. The gymnasium can be seen to the left (north).
Labels:
drvc,
High School,
Oyster Bay,
Oyster Bay deanery,
School,
St. Dominic,
zip11771-OysterBay
Monday, January 2, 2012
Holy Family, Hicksville
Above is the parish sign facing NY Highway 106, Newbridge Road, about a mile southwest of the Hicksville railroad station. The intersection with Fordham Avenue has a traffic signal. Any photo may be enlarged by clicking on it. Photo from early 2012.
The address is 17 Fordham Avenue, Hicksville, NY 11801, telephone 516-938-3846. The parish website is linked here.
This view looks west along Fordham Avenue towards Newbridge Road. One entrance of the church, at the tower, leads to both naves, with the altar where they meet. At the right of the above photo, the white door leads to the new foyer created during the 2013 renovations. The smaller nave (in the distance) had pews for about 130 but now has chairs. The window honors the St. Ann, as shown below. (In editing, I just realized the appropriateness of this window, as Ann is Grandma to Jesus, in the Holy Family.)
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The altar now faces the longer nave, as shown below. The shorter nave is to the left of the altar.
Each photo may be enlarged by clicking on it. Note the representation of the Holy Family (Jesus, Mary, Joseph) to the right of the altar. Also, please note at the right the wise installation of a ramp for those who find the altar steps difficult. The baptismal font is at the left in this photo.
Clear glass provides light for the church and offers a beautiful view of trees. Before the construction of the school in 1960, this long nave had rooms for religious ed classes during the week. On Sunday, partitions were folded back and chairs arranged for the overflow of Sunday congregants.
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The parish was established in 1951, and a cornerstone of the smaller nave has the date 1953. As the families grew simultaneously in the Levitt homes there was a surge in population. The homes of parishioners have Hicksville, Westbury, East Meadow, and Levittown addresses. Recall that William Levitt's first houses were built near Center Lane near Hempstead Turnpike. As the years progressed, he continued to build on farmland in each direction. At some point, he was limited by the older homes in Hicksville or places where other builders had purchased land. Tax records show a 1952 construction date for homes near the church.
The altar now faces the longer nave, as shown below. The shorter nave is to the left of the altar.
Each photo may be enlarged by clicking on it. Note the representation of the Holy Family (Jesus, Mary, Joseph) to the right of the altar. Also, please note at the right the wise installation of a ramp for those who find the altar steps difficult. The baptismal font is at the left in this photo.
Clear glass provides light for the church and offers a beautiful view of trees. Before the construction of the school in 1960, this long nave had rooms for religious ed classes during the week. On Sunday, partitions were folded back and chairs arranged for the overflow of Sunday congregants.
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The parish was established in 1951, and a cornerstone of the smaller nave has the date 1953. As the families grew simultaneously in the Levitt homes there was a surge in population. The homes of parishioners have Hicksville, Westbury, East Meadow, and Levittown addresses. Recall that William Levitt's first houses were built near Center Lane near Hempstead Turnpike. As the years progressed, he continued to build on farmland in each direction. At some point, he was limited by the older homes in Hicksville or places where other builders had purchased land. Tax records show a 1952 construction date for homes near the church.
Holy Family parish school is at 25 Fordham Avenue, Hicksville NY 11801, telephone 516-938-3846. Its website is linked here. The church is to my left.
That's my school bag.
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