Assumption Chapel

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Coordinates: 45°27′21″N 94°24′51″W / 45.45583°N 94.41417°W / 45.45583; -94.41417

Assumption Chapel Cold Spring.jpg

Assumption Chapel, also known as the Grasshopper Chapel, is a Roman Catholic church situated on the outskirts of Cold Spring, Minnesota. It was constructed in 1877, in petition for relief from the Grasshopper Plagues that devastated Midwest farmland between 1873 and 1877.

History[]

Plagues[]

The first chapel built on this site was known as Maria Hilf, which means "Mary's Help" in German. At the time of its original construction in 1877, much of the Midwest was suffering from locust plagues. The plagues began in the summer of 1873, when Rocky Mountain Locusts laid claim to a territory spreading from southern Wyoming over Nebraska and the Dakotas all the way to Iowa and Minnesota.[1]

The first year the grasshoppers came looking for food and found it in the plentiful wheat fields, where they laid eggs. The newly hatched grasshoppers were wingless for the first six to eight weeks of life, but their work was no less devastating. Until they could fly, they crawled along and feasted on the tender new growth of crops. When their wings grew strong enough, they flew off for another field. This cycle would continue from 1873 to 1877, bringing widespread destruction to a part of the country primarily dependent on an agricultural economy.

Large black clouds made up of thousands of grasshoppers moved from field to field, from county to county.[1] One historian reported that "grasshoppers, sixty to eighty per square yard, could devour one ton of hay per day each forty acres they covered."[2] The grasshoppers ate everything and anything: crops, fruit trees, wooden fork handles, even clothing.[1] In her book On the Banks of Plum Creek, Laura Ingalls Wilder records her eyewitness accounts of the plight of these plagues. She relates how they could not even keep grasshoppers out of the milk pail while milking.[3] She tells how some men headed to the eastern side of the state to find work on unaffected farms.[3]

The farmers who stayed to fight the plague resorted to desperate measures. Some used smudge pots to keep the grasshoppers in flight. Others set their doomed crops on fire in order to kill the fledgling grasshoppers. Many farmers resorted to catching them by hand or in buckets. People started building makeshift "hopper dozers". These machines consisted of pieces of sheet metal smeared with tar, which would be dragged over infested fields. The grasshoppers would get stuck in the tar and be wiped off and burned at each end of the field.[1] However, the grasshoppers devastated crops at a speed that no human invention could compete with.[1]

The number of grasshoppers and the destruction they brought with them grew each year. By the spring of 1877, grasshopper eggs covered approximately two thirds of Minnesota.[2] Each year, the Minnesota State Legislature appropriated more and more funds to assist its distressed citizens with the purchase of seed and even the necessities of food and clothing.[2] People began to lose their faith in man-made interventions. They turned to spiritual means to relieve the devastation caused by the plague. Minnesota governor John S. Pillsbury declared April 26, 1877 a statewide day of prayer.[4] That night and the following day the weather shifted and the rain which fell soon turned to snow.[1] The people thought this could be the event to impede the grasshoppers' destructive advances, but when the storm passed they were as plentiful as ever.

The chapel[]

In Stearns County, about a month after the Statewide day of Prayer, newly ordained Father Leo Winter, OSB, was assigned to the Parish of St. James in Jacobs Prairie with the mission of St. Nicholas some eight miles away.[2] In the midst of the plague, Father Winter encouraged the people to continue their prayers of supplication.[2] Father Winter felt that they should petition the Virgin Mary to intercede for them to God for relief from the grasshoppers.[5] Father Winter talked over the idea with fellow parishioners. They decided to build a chapel in Mary’s honor and to offer Masses of Thanksgiving every Saturday.[2]

The parishioners of the two parishes agreed. They would build a chapel "to honor the mother of God, to take refuge in her as their intercessor and be freed from the ravages of the grasshopper plague."[5] Two farmers donated seven acres halfway between the two parishes of St. James and St. Nicholas.[2] Construction on the Chapel began July 16, 1877.[2] Laura Ingalls Wilder recorded that the grasshoppers left suddenly that month.[3]

All told, the chapel cost a total of $865 and was completed in less than a month.[2] The day after completion, August 15, 1877, Father Winter consecrated the altar and celebrated the first Mass.[2] According to a document signed and notarized with six witnesses, by the time the second mass was offered on September 8, 1877, no grasshoppers remained.[2]

Legacy[]

There has not been a grasshopper plague in Minnesota or the Midwest at large since 1877.[2] The masses in Maria Hilf continued as promised, and the farmers began to harvest successful crops the next year. The original chapel was destroyed June 28, 1894, by a tornado.[2] The wooden chapel was picked up and smashed into a grove of trees. The destruction was complete--except for a statue of the Virgin Mary, which stood unharmed in the rubble.[2] The hill would stand vacant for fifty-eight years.

Description[]

Stone inscription above chapel door, reading "Assumpta est Maria"

In 1952, in honor of the centennial of the diocese of Saint Cloud, the Chapel was rebuilt. The current chapel stands sixteen by twenty-six feet, the approximate size of the original building.[2] It was constructed of rough granite, much of which was donated by the Cold Spring Granite Company.[5] The inside of the Chapel is simple and has no pews, only an altar. The chapel walls are made of polished agate and carnelian granite.[2] The Chapel features four stained-glass windows. Above the altar stands the wooden statue that had been carried in procession through the Cold Spring community at the time of the Chapel's original consecration. The most telling feature and testimony to the history of the chapel is the stone carving above the door. It is inscribed "Assumpta est Maria" ("Mary has been taken up"), referring to the new name given to this reconstructed chapel. Mary is pictured, and at her feet, bowing in submission, are two grasshoppers.

Today[]

This new chapel was dedicated on October 7, 1952.[2] Today, in continuation of the Chapel's tradition of petitioning for good harvests, there is an annual August 15 Mass celebrated on the Hill. Also, since 1990, for nine consecutive weeks in May and June, Mass is celebrated on Thursday evenings; a novena for the intention of a safe planting season and a good harvest. The surrounding parishes take turns celebrating the mass.

See also[]

  • Roman Catholic Marian Churches
  • German American Demographics

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f Atkins, Annette (1984). Harvest of Grief. St. Paul, MN: Minnesota Historical Society. ISBN 9780873514798.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Voigt, Robert J. (1993). The Story of Mary and the Grasshoppers. Cold Spring, MN.
  3. ^ a b c Wilder, Laura Ingalls (1965). On the Banks of Plum Creek. New York: Harper & Row Publishers. ISBN 9780060885403.
  4. ^ "Assumption Chapel" accessed April 5, 2011.
  5. ^ a b c Gross, Stephen John (April 2006). "The Grasshopper Shrine at Cold Spring, Minnesota: Religion and Market Capitalism among German-American Catholics" (PDF). The Catholic Historical Review. 92 (2): 215–243. doi:10.1353/cat.2006.0133. S2CID 159890053.
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