Holy Cross Monastery and Church
Holy Cross Monastery and Church | |
Location | Cincinnati, Ohio |
---|---|
Coordinates | 39°6′26.75″N 84°29′54.64″W / 39.1074306°N 84.4985111°W |
Architect | John Foley and Louis Piket & Sons [1] |
Architectural style | Neo-romanesque |
NRHP reference No. | 78002078[1] |
Added to NRHP | September 13, 1978[1] |
Monastery information | |
---|---|
Full name | Monastery of the Holy Cross |
Order | Passionists |
Established | 1873 |
Disestablished | 1977 |
Diocese | Cincinnati |
Controlled churches | Church of the Holy Cross |
People | |
Founder(s) | The Rev. Father Guido Matassi, C.P. |
Architecture | |
Functional status | closed |
Architect | Louis Piket & Sons |
Style | Italian Renaissance Revival |
Groundbreaking | 1843 (observatory), September 1899 (new monastery) |
Completion date | June 1901 |
Holy Cross Monastery and Church is a registered historic building complex in Cincinnati, Ohio, listed in the National Register on September 13, 1978.
Founding
Between 1873 and 1977, the Holy Cross Monastery was a Roman Catholic monastery atop Mt. Adams in Cincinnati, which served a parish of the same name. It was founded by the Passionists, who were first brought to Mt. Adams in 1871 by John Baptist Purcell, the Archbishop of Cincinnati, to run Immaculata Church, founded in 1860.[2]
The first Passionist pastor of Immaculata Parish, Guido Matassi, C.P., immediately saw that the rectory of the parish would be inadequate to their needs as a semi-monastic community. By chance, the building which used to house the Mitchel Observatory (later the Cincinnati Observatory), located only two blocks away from Immaculata Church, was being abandoned due to the effects of industrial pollution.
The terms of the will of the donor of the property which had housed the observatory, however, required the return of the property to his heirs. When Matassi approached them about purchasing the property, they demanded a price which he would not pay. With the encouragement and support of Sarah Peter, daughter of an early Governor of Ohio and a noted convert to Catholicism, the city stepped in and purchased the property from the heir. The following year Matassi signed a 99-year lease with the City of Cincinnati for a building and a property atop Mt. Adams. The Passionists remodeled the structure and added a third floor.
The Church and Monastery of the Holy Cross
The first Church of the Holy Cross, made out of wood, was finished in 1873, standing next to the monastery, but in 1895 it was replaced by a large, permanent structure. It served mostly Irish immigrants.
In 1899 the monastery was condemned as unsafe, and a new edifice was built in the same location. It was dedicated on June 9, 1901.
Decline of the monastic community
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, thousands of Roman Catholic priests across the United States left the priesthood and religious life. The governance of many Catholic religious Orders became more democratic—including Holy Cross Monastery.
By the mid-1970s, several members of the Passionist community were trying to decide if they wanted to continue as priests or leave the priesthood or religious life altogether. No new candidates were joining the congregation. The regional Passionist superiors made the decision to close it in 1977 and the building sold two years later.
Holy Cross Parish was merged with Immaculata Parish, also located atop Mt. Adams. The combined parish has since been known as Holy Cross-Immaculata.
External links
Notes
- ^ a b c d "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. June 30, 2007.
- ^ "The Passionists Purchase an Observatory" (PDF). Holy Cross-Immaculata Parish. 2009.
- Passionist Order
- National Register of Historic Places in Cincinnati
- Italian Renaissance Revival architecture in the United States
- Italianate architecture in Ohio
- 19th-century Christian monasteries
- Roman Catholic monasteries in the United States
- Roman Catholic congregations established in the 19th century
- 1873 establishments in Ohio
- 1977 disestablishments in Ohio
- Religious organizations disestablished in the 20th century