Name
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Image
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Location
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Parish founded
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Church built
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Architect
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Parish defunct
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Description/Notes
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Annunciation
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|
18 Greenwood Pl.
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1885
|
1901
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Albert A. Post
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2009
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The first of what would ultimately be three Roman Catholic parishes on Buffalo's Upper West Side, Annunciation was founded at a time when the neighborhood was only just beginning to urbanize, and in turn its foundation led to the coalescence of a sizable Irish-American community in its environs.[3] With time, the parish's ethnic constitution evolved from Irish-majority to Italian to Hispanic. Merged in 2009 with the neighboring parishes of Our Lady of Loretto and Nativity under the new name Our Lady of Hope, which continues to meet in Annunciation's former home.[20] The former parochial school building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2008.[54]
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Holy Angels
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348 Porter Ave.
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1852
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1859; enlarged 1874 and 1894
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unknown
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2020
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One of Buffalo's earliest Catholic parishes, established by the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate to serve as the parish church connected to the new Catholic College of Buffalo, a seminary for the training of priests. The building was repeatedly enlarged and altered over the years: the transept, sanctuary, and choir were added in 1874, the chapel on the west side of the building facing Fargo Avenue in 1894, and the interior was redesigned in 1898 and again in 1953, with hand-carved Stations of the Cross imported from Switzerland and new stained-glass windows depicting the Mysteries of the Rosary and Marian apparitions, respectively, added at those times. The parish population began to decline in the 1960s, and,[3] citing financial difficulties, the Diocese of Buffalo closed the church in July 2020 and merged the parish with Holy Cross on Maryland Street and Our Lady of Hope on Greenwood Place.[55]
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Holy Apostles SS. Peter & Paul
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|
807 Clinton St.
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1909
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1909
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Schmill & Gould
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2007
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Parish initially served an East Side Polish-American community employed principally in the factories of the Larkin Soap Company as well as in the stockyards. Colonial-style church was reconstructed after severe damage caused by a December 1921 fire; was the only wooden building in Buffalo in use as a Catholic church at the time of the parish's dissolution[3] due to merger with St. Valentine, St. Stephen, Precious Blood, and SS. Rita and Patrick.[6] Currently headquarters of Peaceprints Prison Ministries.[56]
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Holy Family
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1901 South Park Ave.
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1902
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1908
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Lansing & Beierl
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2010
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Parish founded due to rapid population growth in South Buffalo connected with the opening of the Lackawanna Steel Plant just south of the city line.[citation needed] Described as one of the finest examples of Romanesque Revival church architecture in Buffalo; the interior murals (the work of Danish artist Holvag Rambusch) depict scenes from the Book of Kells and the Lindisfarne Gospels, reflective of the traditionally Irish-American ethnic makeup of the congregation, while the sanctuary windows came from the Tiroler Glasmalerei company of Innsbruck.[3] Merged with St. Ambrose and St. Agatha under the auspices of the diocese's "Journey in Faith and Grace" consolidation program to form the new Our Lady of Charity parish;[18] the building still hosts two Sunday masses a week as well as midweek Masses on Monday and Friday.[57]
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Holy Name of Jesus
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|
1947 Bailey Ave.
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1887
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1905
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Cyrus K. Porter & Son
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2005
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Parish served a community of German-Americans, bilingual in English and their native language[7] and largely employed by the railroads that crisscrossed this part of the East Side; original wood-framed church was repurposed for use as parochial school upon completion of the present building and served as such until construction of present school building (1913). Church is in Gothic style, built of St. Lawrence granite and undressed ashlar; steeple atop tower at north end of main façade was removed c. 2009.[58] Interior is intimately proportioned and features a stained glass window in the loft depicting the Holy Family.[3] Parish was one of the first to be dissolved in the diocese's "Journey in Faith and Grace" consolidation program. Now home of New Life Harvest Church of God in Christ.[59]
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Immaculate Conception
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|
150 Edward St.
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1849
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1900; expanded 1925
|
Max Beierl[3]
|
2005
|
Land donated to diocese in 1839 by heirs of prominent citizen Louis LeCouteulx de Caumont ([1]) for establishment of an English-speaking parish for the city's Irish-American community; that parish (Old St. Patrick's) was instead sited downtown whereupon property reverted to ownership of LeCouteulx's heirs per terms of donation; diocese regained ownership in 1849 whereupon parish was finally established.[3] Small wood frame church was replaced with larger brick building in 1856 and in turn with present Gothic-style building.[7] Church closed in 2005 due to declining enrollment simultaneously with, but unrelated to, diocese's "Journey in Faith and Grace" parish consolidation program.[60] Now undergoing conversion to Assembly House 150, a "for-profit design and building studio that will help foster a new crop of buildings in the city".[61] Building is a contributing property to the National Register of Historic Places-listed Allentown Historic District, established in 1980.[36]
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Immaculate Heart of Mary
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|
375 Edison Ave.
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1946
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1947
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unknown
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2009[62]
|
Parish founded to serve the residents of the new Langfield Homes, a public housing project that was erected in the 1940s in the Far East Side on some of the last remaining vacant land in the city[63] and intended as housing for workers in World War II-related industries and, later, for returning veterans and their families. Modernist-style building originally served function of both worship space and social hall;[3] school building next door built in 1950.[64] A rather short-lived parish by diocesan standards; by 2006, three years before the parish's merger with neighboring St. Aloysius Gonzaga in Cheektowaga as part of the final phase of the diocese's "Journey in Faith and Grace" consolidation program, parish population had dwindled to only 160 families.[65] Now Greater Faith Bible Tabernacle, a Pentecostal church with a mostly black congregation.[66]
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Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary
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|
228 Albany St.
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1898
|
1901
|
Albert A. Post
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2009
|
Parish founded due to continued population growth on Buffalo's Upper West Side; congregation was initially made up largely of members of newly minted Irish-American middle class relocated from cramped and squalid environs of the First Ward, Buffalo's traditional Irish enclave; as the 20th century wore on, the congregation, along with the neighborhood as a whole, became Italian-majority and later Hispanic. Church is built of Medina sandstone and "controls its corner site with its Gothic exuberance", with notable trefoil patterns in the tracery of the windows above the entrances.[3] Interior once contained an 1853 Hall & Labaugh organ, among the oldest of any church in Buffalo, originally owned by a parish in Yonkers and reinstalled in Buffalo in 1911.[67] As part of diocese's "Journey in Faith and Grace" program, merged with Our Lady of Loretto and Annunciation to form the new Our Lady of Hope parish, which meets in the latter's former church.[20]
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Our Lady of Loretto
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|
158 15th St.
|
1924
|
1951
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Chester Oakley
|
2009
|
Parish founded in response to the announcement of a new Presbyterian mission church nearby, which the Buffalo Diocese feared would make inroads among the heavily Catholic Italian community on the West Side of the city. The congregation met in the former Bethany Presbyterian Church until 1949, whereupon construction of the current building began.[3] Our Lady of Loretto merged in 2009 with Nativity and Annunciation parishes, taking on the name Our Lady of Hope, which continues in existence in the former home of the latter.[20] Church building is the final major work of noted Buffalo ecclesiastical architect Chester Oakley,[68] executed in a Modernist style with some elements of late-period Art Deco ornamentation. Occupying the building today is Destiny Church International, a Pentecostal church with a majority-Hispanic congregation.
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Our Lady of Lourdes
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|
1109 Main St.
|
1850 (as St. Peter's French Catholic Church)
|
1900
|
A. E. Minks & Sons
|
1993
|
Founded as one of the four daughter congregations of Lamb of God, Buffalo's first Catholic parish; worshiped in several sites downtown before constructing the Main Street church, whereupon they took on their ultimate name.[3] Built of Medina sandstone in a style described as "a happy blending of the Romanesque and Renaissance, the Romanesque largely prevailing" and with a relative paucity of exterior ornamentation; inside was initially similarly austere[69] but later sported mural paintings by Italian artist Carlo Antonia Nisita. Owing to the small size of Buffalo's Franco-American community, congregation never grew to match the ample size of their building as many others of the era did; much of its excess space ended up being used for social and athletic facilities open to neighborhood residents, including basketball courts, event space, and a bowling alley.[70] Parish merged with St. Matthew, St. Boniface, and St. Benedict the Moor under the name St. Martin de Porres.[42] The building is currently being remodeled by Ellicott Development into a mix of retail, restaurant, office and residential space.[71]
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Our Lady of Mount Carmel
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No image available
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41 Fly St.
|
1906
|
1906
|
unknown
|
1949
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Combination church/school building also contained living space for clergy, lacking a separate rectory;[7] served the poor Sicilian immigrant population of the Canal District, a notorious slum; nonetheless, parade and festival held annually in July on feast of parish's namesake was locally renowned tradition. Parish population peaked at about 1,000 in the 1920s[72] but then declined as those neighborhood residents who could afford better housing began to leave for the Lower West Side; natural gas explosion in 1936 brought local government's attention to poor living conditions in tenements, accelerating exodus from Canal District. Only 90 families remained in parish at the time of its dissolution, immediately following which the church along with the rest of the neighborhood was demolished in what was reputedly one of the first slum clearance schemes in the U.S.[73] The Marine Drive Apartments occupy the site today.
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Precious Blood
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|
145 Lewis St.
|
1898
|
1899
|
Albert A. Post
|
2007
|
Gothic Revival church building once contained a mural of Christ the King painted in the 1920s by ecclesiastical artist Jozef Mazur on the semidome of the apse. Parish initially comprised a community of mostly Irish- and German-Americans working in the Jacob Dold Packing Plant and similar businesses around the Buffalo stockyards, but was Polish-majority by c. 1910 as that ethnicity came to dominate the meatpacking industry.[3] The Felician Franciscan Sisters were in charge of the school, and a convent was built for them on the property in 1964.[74] The parish merged in 2007 with St. Valentine, St. Stephen, Holy Apostles SS. Peter and Paul, and SS. Rita and Patrick and vacated the building at that time.[6] Now home to an African-American Baptist congregation.[16]
|
Queen of Peace
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|
1955 Genesee St.
|
1920
|
1928
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Dietel & Wade
|
2007
|
Parish originally served a Polish-American community that, in the years immediately after World War I, had migrated north from the city's main Polish enclave in Broadway-Fillmore. Notable for its architecture; building is in Late Gothic Revival style[75] with a façade of Ohio sandstone accented with Indiana limestone and a floor plan unlike any other Catholic church in Buffalo; a cross-shaped, multipurpose structure encompassing a rectory to the west, a school building to the east, and the worship space itself extending north-to-south between them.[3] Interior once decorated with mural paintings by Jozef Mazur, now painted over.[76] Parish dissolved in wake of the diocese's "Journey in Faith and Grace" parish consolidation program; was purchased in 2009 and is now a mosque and Islamic community center; Jesuit-run parochial school on site remained open for some time thereafter.[77]
|
Queen of the Most Holy Rosary
|
|
1040 Sycamore St.
|
1913
|
1917
|
Władysław Zawadzki
|
1993
|
Parish was established by the Buffalo Diocese as a pretext to acquiring the church building formerly belonging to Holy Mother of the Rosary at a foreclosure auction; they were a renegade "independent Catholic" church that, due to longstanding disagreements within the congregation of St. Adalbert, seceded in 1895 not only from the parish but from the Diocese itself; they later aligned with the Polish National Catholic Church. Current building was constructed after Holy Mother of the Rosary won its church back in a subsequent lawsuit.[3] Architecturally, the building is an example of Zawadzki's signature quasi-French Renaissance style[78] with some Gothic Revival elements added.[79] After the parish's 1993 merger with St. Adalbert's Basilica, the building was purchased by Darul Uloom Al-Madania Islamic Seminary for use as its girls' school, known as Darul Rasheed; ironically, they also own the original Holy Mother of the Rosary building too, which is now their mosque.
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Sacred Heart
|
|
200 Emslie St.
|
1875
|
1915
|
Schmill & Gould
|
1973
|
Parish originally served German-American community that had gathered in the Hydraulics neighborhood; worshiped initially in various temporary locations then built a church on Seneca Street in what later became the midst of the Larkin Soap Company's factory complex. Larkin purchased original church in 1912 to facilitate expansion of their operations, whereupon it was vacated by the congregation.[3] Present church built of brick and Ohio sandstone[7] in the Late Gothic Revival style with an imposing tripartite clerestory; complex also included a school, rectory, and Franciscan convent surrounding a courtyard.[80] After parish dissolution, served variously as home to a Ukrainian Orthodox church and Witness Cathedral of Faith; now vacant.[81] School and rectory demolished in 2008 and 2017 respectively; convent and church still extant as of 2019 but at risk of demolition by neglect.[82]
|
St. Adalbert Basilica
|
|
208 Stanislaus St.
|
1886
|
1891
|
Raymond Huber
|
2011
|
Second Polish Catholic parish in Buffalo, founded due to overcrowding at St. Stanislaus. Originally envisioned as center of master-planned community including a park, home for the aged, and immigration house; plan abandoned when original church burned down. Infighting among parishioners in 1880s and '90s led to high turnover of pastors and schism leading to foundation of "independent Catholic" parish Holy Mother of the Rosary, later affiliated with Polish National Catholic Church.[3] First church in the United States to be named a basilica (1907). Present church sports Romanesque and Byzantine influences and was largest in Buffalo at the time of its construction. Interior decorated with murals by Jozef Mazur[83] completed in 1925, many of which were removed in a 1976 renovation, as well as stained glass by Franz Mayer & Co. of Munich.[84] Parish merged with St. John Kanty and is now used by them as an oratory.[85]
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St. Agatha
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|
65 Abbott Rd.
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1909 (as All Souls)
|
1956
|
Mortimer J. Murphy
|
2010
|
Parish originally known as All Souls; founded to serve the Italian-American community that had coalesced in the western part of the Triangle neighborhood near the railroads where many of them worked, though by 1917 it had become Irish-majority.[86] Original wood-frame church at the corner of Germania and Mystic Streets suffered damage in June 1920 when the floor caved in under the weight of the parishioners at a particularly well-attended Sunday Mass; the congregation was temporarily disbanded pending repairs and was renamed St. Agatha upon its reopening the following year. Austere design of the 1956 combination church/school is owed to the fact that the parish was traditionally small and did not have the need for, nor the financial resources to support, a large and extravagant building such as many parishes in Buffalo had at the time.[3] Merged with Holy Family and St. Ambrose to form the new Our Lady of Charity parish,[18] who later sold the building to developer Sam Savarino. As of 2018, the building is proposed to be converted into apartments, offices, or educational or performing arts space.[19]
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St. Agnes
|
|
194 Ludington St.
|
1882
|
1905
|
Esenwein & Johnson
|
2007
|
The first of what were ultimately three parishes in the neighborhood of Lovejoy, initially serving a mixed German and Irish community attracted to the area by availability of jobs on the railroad; Irish parishioners seceded in 1898 to found Visitation parish. Congregation became majority-Italian after World War II. Church is Romanesque Revival in style[3] and one of few ever to have been designed by the otherwise prolific local firm of Esenwein & Johnson. Stained glass installed 1919-1921 was the work of Otto F. Andrle; six mural paintings by D'Arcangelo Studios once adorned the interior, five of which were removed in 1985. Parish merged with Visitation and St. Francis of Assisi to form the new St. Katharine Drexel parish, which meets in the latter's former home on North Ogden Street.[34] Now a Buddhist temple owned by the International Sangha Bhiksu Buddhist Association.[87]
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St. Ambrose
|
|
260 Okell St.
|
1930
|
1950
|
Foit & Baschnagel
|
2010
|
Established from the southern part of the territory of Holy Family parish; the modest frame church constructed on the site was not replaced with a permanent structure until 1950, due to the economic hardship of the Great Depression and supplies rationing during World War II.[3] The building was designed in a Modernist style and is most notable for its stained glass, created in 1992 by local artist Russell Vacanti; its imagery was inspired by the reforms of the Second Vatican Council and deals with themes such as socioeconomic justice, gun violence, drug abuse, interfaith relations, and others not typically seen in stained glass art. Merged with Holy Family and St. Agatha under the auspices of the diocese's "Journey in Faith and Grace" consolidation program to form the new Our Lady of Charity parish;[18] the building still hosts two Sunday masses a week, as well as Saturday evening vigil and midweek Masses on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.[57]
|
St. Ann
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|
651 Broadway
|
1858
|
1886
|
Brother Charles Halfmann, from drawings by Francis Himpel
|
2007
|
Founded at what was then edge of Buffalo's urbanized area under correct assumption that new church would be catalyst for outward expansion of city's East Side German community; by turn of century was largest German parish in diocese and among largest Catholic churches in the U.S.;[88] its school was also largest in Buffalo at the time, with 1,500 students.[7] Construction of current church began 1878 and lasted six years; was designed by assistant pastor who was also amateur architect, based on sketch drawn by a New York architect whose original design was rejected as too costly. Gothic Revival design described as most European of any church in city; walls 7 feet thick, built of steel-reinforced Lockport dolomite. West tower shorter than east due to inability of ground to support its weight; spires once rose over 200 feet above street, removed 1964 after damage due to wind storm. Interior contains stained glass by F. X. Zettler Studios of Munich, altar imported from Germany featuring painting of Saint Anne, large fresco paintings by Leo Frohe;[3] Johnson & Son pipe organ sold for scrap in 1966.[89] Parish began to share ministry team and pool resources with St. Mary of Sorrows and SS. Columba-Brigid in 1992 as part of reorganization of "central city" parishes[26] but challenged outright merger with the latter as part of subsequent consolidation; latter decision reaffirmed by diocese in 2013 and by Vatican's Apostolic Signatura in 2017,[90] though building's 2013 nomination as a Buffalo city landmark[11] forestalled diocese's original plan to demolish it.
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St. Augustine
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No image available
|
417 Michigan Ave.
|
1912[91]
|
between 1854 and 1872 (as private residence)[92]
|
unknown
|
c. 1946[93]
|
Short-lived mission established on the Near East Side to serve a small congregation of African-American Catholics that had heretofore worshiped at St. Joseph's Cathedral, from which the parish continued to be administrated. Parish also operated a school and offered manual training classes.[7] After dissolution of parish, building housed a nightclub, Club Savoy.[94] Demolished shortly after 1960 as part of the same urban renewal scheme that claimed the former St. Lucy church.[95] Site is now part of the parking lot in front of the Compass East Building.
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St. Bartholomew
|
|
335 Grider St.
|
1912
|
1930
|
George W. Stickle
|
1993
|
Parish founded in an East Side neighborhood then newly urbanizing due to construction of a streetcar line along nearby Kensington Avenue; served an initially German-American congregation.[96] English Gothic-style building constructed largely of cobblestones salvaged from then-recent repaving of Elm Street downtown; entrance portal and frontispiece are of Indiana limestone; interior decorated with handcrafted woodwork.[97] Parish population peaked at 1,000 families in 1962 but fell precipitously thereafter due to demographic changes in neighborhood; school closed 1978; parish began sharing a priest with St. Matthew in 1989;[3] merged with Blessed Trinity as part of diocesan consolidation program for inner-city parishes.[26] Now home of Ephesus Ministries, a nondenominational African-American church. Former rectory notable as site of murder of then-pastor Rev. Joseph Bissonnette, one of two Buffalo priests slain over a two-week period in 1987,[98] as well as that of Sister Karen Klimczak in 2006, ironically after its conversion to a halfway house for former prisoners named in honor of Bissonnette.[29]
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St. Benedict the Moor
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No image available
|
281 E. Utica St.
|
1874 (as St. Nicholas)
|
1893
|
Fred Mohr
|
1993
|
Parish founded under the name St. Nicholas in Cold Spring, then a well-to-do East Side German neighborhood without a Catholic parish of its own; growing Irish ethnic minority led to bilingual services by 1891. Worshiped in three church buildings each consecutively bigger to accommodate population growth, the final of which was a Gothic-style building[3] with asymmetrical spires 80 and 120 feet in height respectively; towers featured exquisite pointed-arched fenestration in various arrangements.[99] Parish became majority-black in the 1970s and was renamed in 1981 to honor prominent saint of African descent.[91] Merged upon its closure with the neighboring parishes of Our Lady of Lourdes, St. Boniface, and St. Matthew under the new name of St. Martin de Porres.[42] Church building demolished c. late 1990s;[100] site now occupied by various detached single-family homes built in 2000.[16]
|
St. Boniface
|
|
151 Mulberry St.
|
1849 (as St. John the Baptist)
|
1857
|
unknown
|
1993
|
The third German-American Catholic church in Buffalo, serving the Fruit Belt neighborhood northeast of downtown. The church was founded under the name St. John the Baptist and given the new name St. Boniface in 1857 upon the completion of its second church building, an English Romanesque-style structure whose sanctuary was centered on an altar presented to the congregation by King Ludwig II of Bavaria featuring a large oil painting of Saint Boniface. The church also purchased a rare Aeolian organ in 1939 for use in services.[101] The parish population had already begun declining by 1914,[7] and by 1970 had shrunk to fewer than 100 families, leading to the demolition of the church building in 1979. The congregation continued holding Mass in the former Parish House on Locust Street[102] until its merger with Our Lady of Lourdes, St. Benedict the Moor, and St. Matthew to form the new parish of St. Martin de Porres.[42] The site of the original church is now a vacant lot, while the Parish House has been owned since 1995 by Teen Challenge, a faith-based drug recovery organization.[103]
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St. Brigid
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No image available
|
399 Louisiana St.
|
1850
|
1860
|
Rev. Martin O'Connor[104]
|
1987
|
The first Catholic parish to be erected in the city's First Ward, a crowded area of working-class Irish industrial laborers, St. Brigid served as social center for the neighborhood and had an influential voice in community affairs, especially in labor disputes such as the one between industrial magnate William "Fingy" Conners and the city grain scoopers' union in 1899. Parish gained a sizable African-American and Hispanic contingent after the construction of the Commodore Perry housing projects[105] in 1940.[106] Church was badly damaged in a 1968 fire and razed the following year; Mass was held in a chapel in the school building until the parish's 1987 merger with St. Columba.[24] The St. Bridgid's Square (sic) shopping plaza now occupies the site of the former church.[107]
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St. Casimir
|
|
160 Cable St.
|
1890
|
1929
|
Oakley & Schallmo
|
2012
|
Parish served initially small and isolated Polish community along Clinton Street near the city line which began to grow rapidly after turn of century; original frame church replaced consecutively by larger one in 1908 and even larger current building for which ground was broken in 1926; Byzantine Revival design inspired by Rev. Anthony Majewski's travels to the Near East and desire for church architecturally unlike any other in the diocese. Brightly-colored façade features ornate terra cotta detailing by associate architect Joseph Fronczak: relief sculpture above entrance depicting Saint Casimir distributing alms to the needy, painted statues of Saints Adalbert and Hyacinth below deeply recessed rose window, Christ the King flanked by angels at top of front gable;[108] interior contains hand-carved statues of Twelve Apostles placed atop monumental columns and Botticino marble altar crowned by 65-foot arch.[3] Merged with St. Bernard as part of 2000s-'10s parish consolidation program, but building is still used as an oratory "providing for the spiritual care of... particularly those of Polish descent" within the congregation.[109] Named a Buffalo city landmark in 1977.[11]
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St. Clare
|
|
197 Elk St.
|
2007
|
1888 (as home of predecessor parish St. Stephen)
|
Fred W. Humble
|
2016
|
Parish merged with St. Teresa's upon its closure. St. Clare itself was the product of a 2007 merger between the parishes of SS. Rita and Patrick, St. Valentine, Holy Apostles SS. Peter & Paul, Precious Blood, and St. Stephen, worshipping in the church formerly belonging to the latter.[6] Building was sold in 2017 to a local sound engineer who plans to turn it into a recording studio[110] and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2018.[111]
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St. Columba
|
|
75 Hickory St.
|
1888
|
1892
|
unknown
|
1987
|
Parish founded in what was then a majority-Irish district on the Near East Side without a conveniently located Catholic church. Held services at first in a converted tenement house before completion of permanent church, a relatively austerely decorated Romanesque-style building whose interior was centered on a marble altar topped with a Celtic cross. Over the years, the ethnic makeup of the congregation changed to Italian and then became largely Hispanic[3] after 1960, when St. Lucy's parish was dissolved and its congregation merged into St. Columba's. Long famous as home of the "Printers' Mass", which took place at 1:30AM on Sunday mornings from 1925 until 1971 for the benefit of late-shift newspaper workers.[3] Parish merged with St. Brigid's,[24] and the combined SS. Columba-Brigid continued to meet in the former's church until it was demolished after a 2004 fire.[28]
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St. Elizabeth
|
|
986 Grant St.
|
1906
|
1908
|
Max Beierl
|
2007
|
Parish served Buffalo's Hungarian-American community, the bulk of whom lived in Black Rock in vicinity of church; however, parish counted members citywide as well as in Lackawanna and Tonawanda due to the fact that it was the only Catholic church in Western New York where Mass was said in the Hungarian language. Church was built of brick and is Romanesque Revival in style,[7] with steel-truss roof and open floor plan.[3] Was still offering Hungarian-language services at time of its merger with Assumption parish as part of 2000s-'10s diocesan consolidation program.[112] Now home of Abundant Life in Christ Ministries, a Pentecostal church with a predominantly African-American congregation.
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St. Florian
|
|
567 Hertel Ave.
|
1917
|
1964
|
Joseph Fronczak
|
2007
|
Smaller of the two Catholic parishes that served the Polish enclave in the Black Rock neighborhood, the northeastern portion of which began to develop around World War I-related industries. Original combination church/school building erected 1919 was meant to be temporary, but unexpectedly slow growth in parish population kept it in use much longer than anticipated.[3] Permanent church building Modernist in style; contained stained glass windows in sanctuary depicting Polish saints which were removed upon the parish's dissolution due to the diocese's "Journey in Faith and Grace" consolidation program.[113] Now home to the nondenominational Renovation Church.[114]
|
St. Francis de Sales
|
|
575 Humboldt Pkwy.
|
1912
|
1927
|
Murphy & Olmstead with George Dietel
|
1993
|
Foundation of parish coincided with sale of defunct Buffalo Driving Park site to real estate developers; diocese correctly predicted rapid growth of new East Side neighborhood of Hamlin Park. Current building was third to house parish,[3] replacing a brick combination church/school building built in 1913 and a small temporary church built in 1912, respectively.[7] Most notable for its architecture; an Italian Romanesque design suggestive of churches in Ravenna, with Indiana limestone façade, ceramic tile roof, and 140-foot campanile overlooking Humboldt Parkway; interior bedecked in colorful mosaics executed in Guastavino tile.[115] Building has passed through various owners after closure due to reorganization of inner-city parishes; much of original stained glass was stripped in 2004 by subsequent owner in violation of local preservation law, leading to criticism of city government for lax enforcement.[116] Building was named a Buffalo city landmark in 1978 and is a contributing property to the locally-[11] and National Register of Historic Places-listed Hamlin Park Historic District.[117]
|
St. Francis of Assisi
|
|
133 N. Ogden St.
|
1908
|
1960
|
Albert A. Rumschick
|
2007
|
Founded to serve the Italian-American residents of the multiethnic neighborhood of Lovejoy,[3] who arrived slightly later than the Germans and Irish who attended St. Agnes and Visitation, respectively, but who came to demographic dominance after the Second World War. In 2007, as part of the "Journey in Faith and Grace" program, the Buffalo diocese merged Lovejoy's three Catholic parishes into one, which was given the new name St. Katharine Drexel and which continues to meet in the former St. Francis church complex.[34]
|
St. Francis Xavier
|
|
157 East St.
|
1859
|
1913
|
Max Beierl
|
2007
|
The "Mother Church of Black Rock",[118] founded several years before the village's annexation by the City of Buffalo to serve a largely German community for whom the nearest Catholic churches were miles away. Congregation grew rapidly throughout 19th century; cemetery established 1864 still extant, now enclosed by Riverside Park. Current building is Lombard Romanesque style with basilica floor plan; sports triple-arched entrance with Tuscan columns and carvings of the signs of the Four Evangelists, prominent raking corbel table under front gable;[119] tower rebuilt 1931 after structural deficiency discovered. Interior features mural paintings in sanctuary and side altars by Father Raphael Pfisterer, stained glass windows by F. X. Zettler Studios are representations of Stations of the Cross (only ones in Buffalo done in art glass),[3] organ is one of last ever built by Herman Schlicker.[120] School merged with that of neighboring St. John the Baptist parish in 1968, closed 1983; began sharing pastor with St. John the Baptist in 1995; parish dissolved as part of "Journey in Faith and Grace" downsizing program. Building listed on National Register of Historic Places in 2009[121] and is part of the also NRHP-listed Market Square Historic District.[122] Now operated as Buffalo Religious Arts Museum.[123]
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St. Gerard
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1190 E. Delavan Ave.
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1902
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1913; enlarged and tower added 1930
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Schmill & Gould
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2008
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Parish was originally German in makeup; initial church was replaced by present building for which ground was broken in 1911; building left only partially completed until 1930, when temporary roof was replaced by permanent one and bell tower was added. Church is Italian Romanesque in style with a design based on the Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls; built of Indiana limestone with niche statues of Saints Gerard and Joseph carved by local sculptor Angelo Gatti; interior decorated with 15 murals depicting the Mysteries of the Rosary, monumental Ionic arcade along sides of nave, fresco painting of the Coronation of Mary inside semidome of apse.[3] After dissolution of parish, building purchased by Catholic congregation in Norcross, Georgia whose proposal to dismantle it piece by piece and ship it there for reassembly sparked contentious debate within the local preservation community[124] especially after Preservation Buffalo Niagara came out in favor of the plan;[125] stained glass windows, altar and pews were removed, but plan was ultimately scuttled due to lack of funds.[126] Building was resold to a Muslim group in 2017 and is currently undergoing conversion to a mosque.[127]
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St. James
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3021 Bailey Ave.
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1916
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between 1935 and 1951[128]
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unknown
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2007
|
Parish founded to serve mixed German/Irish community in an East Side area that was still semirural at the time but rapidly urbanizing. Ground was broken for the current building in 1926, but construction soon stalled due to lack of funding; congregation worshipped in the basement (the only completed portion of the building) until completion of present church, an unusual-looking Gothic Revival-style building with an enormous, deeply recessed portal dominating the front façade. Interior of church was renovated 1980[3] but parish population began to decline soon after; shared a pastor with St. Gerard parish for last two years of its existence.[129] After closure of church, building served for a time as a food pantry;[130] now home to a Baptist church serving the local Karen refugee community.[131]
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St. Joachim
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64 Titus Ave.
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1902
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1954
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Joseph Fronczak
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1993
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Founded in 1902 to serve a neighborhood that at the time was a small island of German-Americans amidst the vast Polish district of Buffalo's East Side, the congregation's original church on the same site burned in 1942 and, after a period spent worshiping in a temporary chapel in the basement of the parochial school, was replaced by the building seen here.[3] After the parish's dissolution, it served as home of the Free Spirit Missionary Baptist Church until 2014.[16] Now home to Baitul Mamoor Jam-e-Masjid, serving a Muslim congregation of mainly Bangladeshi origin.
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St. John the Baptist
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60 Hertel Ave.
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1867
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1927
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Oakley & Schallmo
|
2007
|
Second Catholic parish in Black Rock, founded to serve the Anglophone Irish community that heretofore had worshiped at the German-majority St. Francis Xavier; congregation grew rapidly throughout the 19th century despite 1885 foundation of Annunciation parish to which more than half of St. John the Baptist's former parish was divided out; complex continually expanded to accommodate growth and included a rectory, school, lyceum, and convent by 1914.[7] Church sports a mix of Italian Gothic[132] and Spanish Baroque Revival influences typical of the output of its architects, with exquisite terra cotta detailing both inside and out.[3] Building was named a Buffalo city landmark in 1978.[11] Parish merged with Annunciation as part of diocesan consolidation program; building's purchase two years later by Rev. Ronald Kirk as home of Witness Cathedral of Faith was controversial as congregation had recently been evicted from their previous home, the former Sacred Heart Catholic Church, as neglect of structural maintenance had led to the building being unsafe for occupancy.[133] Church is now vacant; former school is home to RiverRock Church, a congregation affiliated with the Buffalo Myanmar Indigenous Christian Fellowship.[134]
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St. John the Evangelist
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2319 Seneca St.
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1907
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1931
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Karl Schmill & Sons
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2009
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Founded by German-speaking faction at St. Teresa who petitioned bishop for establishment of new parish where services would be conducted in their language; however, rapid population growth in parish (and South Buffalo in general) in ensuing years[3] meant congregation had Anglophone majority by 1914. Church property surrounded by verdant Cazenovia Park;[7] present building of Ohio sandstone hearkens back to 14th-century Italian Romanesque style, lacking towers, spires or much exterior ornamentation. Interior contains exquisite mural paintings in apse depicting scenes from Book of Revelation, the work of artist Valdemar Kjeldgaard, as well as stained glass by Rambusch Decorating Company.[135] Building purchased in 2014 by local real estate investor intending to convert it to an event space,[136] but was resold in 2016[16] to another development group for conversion to apartments and commercial space, possibly including a craft brewery.[137]
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St. Joseph New Cathedral
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1015 Delaware Ave.
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1847 (as St. Joseph Cathedral)
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1915
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Aristide Leonori
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1976
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Intended as the new cathedral church of the Buffalo diocese, to replace the old one on Franklin Street downtown. The architect was a native of Rome unaccustomed to the considerations of design for cold climates like Buffalo's, and structural problems made themselves apparent almost immediately: the twin steeples were removed for safety reasons in 1927, and by the 1970s large sections of pews had to be roped off to protect congregants from the chunks of plaster that fell from the ceiling at regular intervals. Unwilling to pay the estimated cost of $2.2 million necessary to restore the building to a sound state, the diocese had it demolished, at which time the original St. Joseph's Cathedral reverted to its former role. Timon Towers, a senior citizens' apartment complex, occupies the site today.[138]
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St. Lucy
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No image available
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264 Swan St.
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1906
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shortly after 1914
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unknown
|
1960
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Served a working-class Campanese Italian community on the Near East Side[3] who had heretofore been attending St. Columba church on account of the distance to St. Anthony of Padua, Buffalo's only established Italian parish at the time; a former Presbyterian church that had been purchased for their use, along with two adjacent houses that served respectively as a rectory and a parochial school staffed by Sisters of St. Mary of Namur from Lockport, were replaced some time after 1914[7] by a larger building, magnificent and of Victorian style. The church, along with most of the 160-acre tract on which it stood, was demolished shortly after the parish's dissolution due to urban renewal of what was by then a blighted neighborhood. Most of its former congregants moved to other parts of the city;[139] those who didn't joined St. Columba parish.[24] The former site of the church remained vacant until 1991, when a tract of suburban-style housing was built there.[140]
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St. Luke
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1300 Sycamore St.
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1908
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1930
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Oakley & Schallmo
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1993
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Founded to serve the Polish population[7] in the northeast corner of the Broadway-Fillmore neighborhood, relatively far removed from other Polish Catholic churches at the time. Rapid growth of neighborhood in first quarter of the 20th century led to repeated cycle of construction of larger buildings to accommodate the congregation: original 1908 frame church was replaced the following year by a combination church/school, which in return was replaced by the current church. Architecture is Italian Romanesque in keeping with the firm's usual style; design based loosely on Old St. Peter's Basilica; most prominently features a glazed polychrome terra cotta frieze over the entrance depicting Biblical figures from the New and Old Testaments.[3] Interior contains four large fresco murals painted in the 1950s by Jan Henryk de Rosen and restored in 2006.[141] Parish purchased after its dissolution by local restaurateur with help from anonymous benefactor and now houses St. Luke's Mission of Mercy,[142] a charitable organization providing food for impoverished neighborhood residents inter alia.[143]
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St. Mary Magdalene
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|
1327 Fillmore Ave.
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1899
|
1907
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George A. Setter
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1978[144]
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Parish founded to serve the well-to-do Germans of the East Side neighborhood of Humboldt Park, which was then without a conveniently located Catholic church; three-story combination church/school building built 1900 on land formerly belonging to wealthy miller and landowner George Urban razed in 1906 to make way for present building. Church is built of terra cotta brick[7] and is Romanesque in style; Moorish Revival cupolas that once topped its twin towers were replaced by current ones in simpler style after a 1964 windstorm.[89] Interior once contained mural paintings by Rochester, New York-based artist Albert Prentiss Ward imitating the style of Diego Velázquez,[3] no longer extant. Now home of Antioch Baptist Church.[145]
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St. Mary of Sorrows
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938 Genesee St.
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1872
|
1901; tower added 1905
|
Adolphus Druiding
|
2007
|
Also known as the Church of the Seven Dolors. Founded in connection with St. Mary Redemptorist's parish cemetery[7] once located nearby on Dodge Street,[146] as well as due to the lack of any other Catholic church in the newly urbanizing area of Humboldt Park. Construction of current (second) church took 15 years; its Rhenish Romanesque design is exemplified by multitudinous rounded towers[3] and was inspired by that of Worms Cathedral;[147] said to be the finest example of the style in Buffalo. Façade is rusticated and of Buffalo Plains limestone. Was one of the largest German Catholic parishes in the city by 1914, with a parish population of about 5,000 and a pastor active in countering socialist political sympathies then popular among East Side German community. Current interior dates to $500,000 restoration after 1947 fire, which spared only the walls and the stained glass windows. Parish population began declining in the 1950s and '60s; in 1985, the diocese announced intentions to demolish the church due to high cost of maintenance,[148] which was prevented by its nomination as a Buffalo city landmark in 1986;[11] it's now home to a community center[149] and was also used for a time as a charter school.[150] Services were held in chapel in former rectory after sale of original church;[151] parish population continued declining and began to share ministry team and resources with St. Ann and SS. Columba-Brigid in 1992 as part of reorganization of "central city" parishes[26] before merging with the latter as part of "Journey in Faith and Grace" program.[27]
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St. Mary Redemptorist
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|
225 Broadway
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1843
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1844
|
unknown
|
1981
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Founded by the German faction of the discord-plagued Lamb of God parish, parish served for many years as the headquarters for the local chapter of the Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer, whose territory stretched east to Elmira and north to Toronto and whose itinerant priests held Masses for Catholics in rural communities too small to support their own churches. The St. Mary's complex, comprising the church, an adjacent convent, and St. Mary's Lyceum, was named a Buffalo city landmark in 1980,[11] however the church was destroyed by fire in December 1986, and the convent was demolished in 1990.[152] The site of the church and the adjacent convent are occupied today by private homes; St. Mary's Lyceum is still extant and is used as storage space by the Belmont Management Company.[153]
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St. Matthew
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|
1066 E. Ferry St.
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1908
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1928
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George A. Setter
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1993
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Parish was founded from portions of the territory of St. Mary Magdalene, St. Mary of Sorrows, St. Vincent de Paul, and St. Gerard[7] and served an East Side German congregation. Construction of permanent church began in 1910 but stalled soon afterward due to lack of funds; congregation worshiped in basement of current building, covered by a temporary roof, until work recommenced in 1927. Church is Baroque in style, built of Ohio sandstone and with a design reminiscent of Aachen Cathedral. Parish began sharing a priest with St. Bartholomew in 1989[3] and merged four years later with the neighboring parishes of Our Lady of Lourdes, St. Boniface, and St. Benedict the Moor under the new name of St. Martin de Porres.[42] Building has passed through the hands of several religious congregations and other owners since parish's dissolution[16] but is currently vacant.
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St. Monica
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|
206 Orlando St.
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1912
|
1914
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Lansing, Bley & Lyman
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1995
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Parish met for its first two years in a rented storefront[7] before completion of its permanent building in the Seneca-Babcock neighborhood, an austere and utilitarian one that housed both church and school. Congregation was mixed Irish, Polish and German; parish boundaries were drawn to reflect geographic convenience rather than to encompass a particular ethnic enclave, an unusual phenomenon in Buffalo at the time.[154] Never particularly large in size, the parish was dissolved due to demographic changes in the neighborhood and the retirement of its leader, Msgr. William A. Setlock; the flock was given the choice to join the parishes of St. Stephen, St. Teresa, or SS. Rita & Patrick and voted for the latter.[155] The former St. Monica church building was demolished in 1999[156] and is now a vacant lot.[21]
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St. Patrick
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|
39 Emslie St.
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1853 (as St. Vincent de Paul)
|
1891
|
Cyrus K. Porter & Son
|
1981
|
Founded for the community of working-class Irish industrial laborers that had gathered in the neighborhood known as The Hydraulics. Originally named St. Vincent de Paul in honor of the Vincentian Fathers, a Catholic society to which then-Bishop John Timon belonged; took on the name St. Patrick in 1858 upon the dissolution of the original parish by that name. Had a majority-black congregation in its last years and was the home parish of Ronald Walker, the first African-American Catholic deacon in Buffalo, ordained in 1980. The interior contained a series of 14 paintings depicting the life of Saint Francis of Assisi, the work of artist Marco Silvestri, and was built of Medina sandstone in the Gothic style.[157] Parish was merged with St. Rita's in 1981 due to shrinking congregation and church building was demolished the following year.[158] The friary next door remained in operation until 2018, when the diocese sold it.[159]
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St. Patrick (Old)
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|
41 Broadway[160]
|
1837
|
1841
|
unknown
|
1858
|
Buffalo's second Catholic parish chronologically, Irish-American in ethnic makeup; seceded from Lamb of God due to their desire to conduct church business in English rather than German.[3] Rev. William Whelan was a temperance advocate and preached strongly against the then-common practice of railroad contractors and other industrial workers being paid partially in whiskey. Served as procathedral for the Buffalo Diocese from its inception in 1847 until services began to be held at St. Joseph's Cathedral, whereupon the parish was dissolved and the building was donated to the Sisters of Charity and became home of St. Vincent's Female Orphan Asylum.[7] The Buffalo Central Library occupies the site today.
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St. Rita
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|
190 Fillmore Ave.
|
1919
|
1920
|
George Dietel
|
1981
|
Founded in 1919 to serve Buffalo's Slovak-American Catholic community, who had previously worshiped with other immigrants from the Austro-Hungarian Empire at the far-flung St. Elizabeth's parish in Black Rock.[3] Parish merged in 1981 with St. Patrick's on Seymour Street; the merged parish continued using St. Rita's building.[21]
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SS. Rita & Patrick
|
|
190 Fillmore Ave.
|
1981
|
1920 (as home of predecessor parish St. Rita)
|
George Dietel[3]
|
2007
|
Short-lived parish was the result of a 1981 merger between St. Rita and St. Patrick; the congregation of St. Monica was added to the fold after the 1995 dissolution of their parish.[21] The diocese's "Journey in Faith and Grace" consolidation program saw SS. Rita & Patrick merge with St. Valentine, Holy Apostles SS. Peter & Paul, Precious Blood, and St. Stephen parishes to form St. Clare.[6] Church building is of a simple Gothic Revival design, with stained glass by local glazier Jozef Mazur[161] and an interior sanctuary decorated with stencil art, the work of Slovak artisans. The central tower is flat-roofed and steepleless[162] and topped with a cross bottony. Building is now home to Try Jesus Ministries, a nondenominational African-American congregation.
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St. Stephen
|
|
197 Elk St.
|
1875
|
1888
|
Fred W. Humble
|
2007
|
The second Catholic parish to be established in the First Ward, St. Stephen was sited in the eastern part of the neighborhood for the convenience of those who heretofore had to walk long distances to get to St. Brigid. The current Gothic Revival-style building, erected in 1888, had an open-plan interior without pillars and once contained an organ built by the Garrett House Organ Company of Buffalo.[3] Its steeples were removed c. 1932 due to concerns about their structural integrity. As part of the diocese's "Journey in Faith and Grace" consolidation program, St. Stephen's parish merged with those of SS. Rita and Patrick, St. Valentine, Holy Apostles SS. Peter & Paul, and Precious Blood, taking the name St. Clare[6] and continuing to use the building for worship until 2016, when St. Clare itself merged with St. Teresa. Building was sold in 2017 to a local sound engineer who plans to turn it into a recording studio[163] and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2018.[111]
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St. Valentine
|
|
528 South Park Ave.
|
1920
|
1923
|
George Dietel
|
2007
|
Served a small Polish-American community that had settled in the heretofore monolithically Irish neighborhood of the First Ward.[3] Merged with four other churches as part of the Buffalo diocese's "Journey in Faith and Grace" consolidation program to form the new St. Clare parish.[6] The building was purchased in 2009 by Ellicott Development,[164] who is marketing it for reuse as office or educational space.[165]
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St. Vincent de Paul
|
|
2033 Main St.
|
1864
|
1926
|
Thomas, Perry & McMullen
|
1993
|
Parish founded to serve an East Side neighborhood relatively far removed from downtown, at the time populated sparsely and largely by Germans who worked in the nearby limestone quarries. Growth was initially slow but accelerated beginning in the 1880s; congregation was majority English-speaking by 1914.[7] Present building is in a combination of the Romanesque and Byzantine styles; interior walls are faced in a combination of buff brick and salt-glazed Guastavino tile; sanctuary features mural paintings and mosaics by artist Felix Lieftuchter. Decline in parish population came with demographic changes on the Near East Side after World War II; congregation initially resisted[26] but ultimately assented to the diocese's proposal for a merger with the neighboring parish of Blessed Trinity.[3] The building was purchased by Canisius College upon the parish's dissolution and is now used by them as the Montante Cultural Center,[166] an event space.
|
Transfiguration
|
|
929 Sycamore St.
|
1893
|
1897
|
Karl Schmill
|
1993
|
Parish cleaved off the territory of St. Adalbert;[7] served Austrian Polish community that had settled in the northern part of Broadway-Fillmore district.[167] Rapid growth of parish necessitated construction of permanent church almost immediately after parish's founding; Gothic Revival design includes stained glass windows crowned with medallions in pinwheel mullion pattern, only example of such in Buffalo;[3] interior contained a number of mural paintings by Marion Rzeznik and Jozef Mazur[168] including one depicting the legendary Marian apparition over the Vistula during the 1920 Battle of Warsaw.[169] Demographic changes in neighborhood during late 20th century led to closure of school in 1985 and church building in 1990; congregation, by then down to 50 members, met for Mass in chapel of former school building for last three years of parish's existence. Planned demolition of church was forestalled by its nomination as a Buffalo city landmark and its sale to a local not-for-profit who planned to establish a Montessori preschool in the building,[170] though regulatory hurdles led to long delays in structural restoration work[171] and ultimately an arrest warrant for the new owner due to building code violations that was only rescinded after roof repairs began in 2007.[172] Building was resold to a new owner in 2017[16] but remains vacant.
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Visitation of the Blessed Virgin
|
|
198 Greene St.
|
1898
|
1899
|
Albert A. Post
|
2007
|
Second Catholic parish in the Lovejoy neighborhood, which was predominantly a German enclave but also had a sizable Irish minority who felt uncomfortable worshiping at the already established congregation of St. Agnes. Building housed both church and school and was originally four stories in height including the basement; upper-story auditorium space was removed in 1937 due to structural decay from deferred building maintenance.[3] Parish merged with St. Agnes and St. Francis of Assisi to form the new St. Katharine Drexel parish, which meets in the latter's former home on North Ogden Street.[34] The International Sangha Bhiksu Buddhist Association purchased the building in 2009[87] intending to use it a convent,[173] but sold it in 2017[16] without ever having occupied it. Currently slated to be the future home of Madinah Masjid, Lovejoy's first mosque.
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