Saint Dominic Church (Columbus, Ohio)

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Saint Dominic Church
Saint Dominic Catholic Church (Columbus, Ohio) - exterior.jpg
Saint Dominic Church (Columbus, Ohio)
39°58′29″N82°58′25″W / 39.97475°N 82.97352°W / 39.97475; -82.97352
Address455 North 20th Street
Columbus, Ohio, 43203
Denomination Catholicism
Associations Black Catholicism
History
Founded1889
Consecrated 26 November 1916
Architecture
Architect(s)John Comes and John Kauzor
Architectural type Roman Basilica
Years builtOctober 1914-November 1916
Administration
Diocese Roman Catholic Diocese of Columbus
Clergy
Bishop Earl K. Fernandes

Saint Dominic Church is a Black Catholic parish church of the Diocese of Columbus in the Mount Vernon neighborhood of Columbus, Ohio. The parish was founded in 1889 and the current Roman Basilica-style church was completed in 1916. In 1957, neighboring Saint Cyprian Church was merged into St. Dominic, as well as the Community of Holy Rosary-Saint John in 2024. [1]

Contents

History

Founding

The 1891 combined school and church building which was torn down in 1990. Saint Dominic Church and School (Columbus, Ohio).jpg
The 1891 combined school and church building which was torn down in 1990.

In the spring of 1889, Fr. Thomas O'Reilly was appointed by John Watterson to organize a Catholic congregation in the northeastern section of the city of Columbus. The previous year, three lots had been purchased at the intersection of Devoise and 20th Streets. [2] The first Mass for the parish was said in Benninghoff Hall on September 1, 1889, at an altar donated by the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur, with an overflow congregation standing in the rear of the chapel and in the stairwells. Later that month a parochial school was organized in a vacant portion of a nearby public school, serving the 125 pupils of St. Dominic's, with Sisters of St. Joseph from Baden, Pennsylvania teaching. [3] [4] This resulted in controversy due to anti-Catholicism in the area, which then in turn prompted Washington Gladden, a prominent Congregationalist minister, to speak out in favor of the Catholic school. [3] [5] [6] That following November, the parish began to fundraise for a new building housing both a chapel and classrooms, the cornerstone of which was laid by James Hartley on August 17, 1890. [7] [8] On February 2, 1891, Bishop Hartley dedicated the completed building and said Mass there, allowing the schoolchildren to vacate the public school building. [3] [9] [10] In 1895 a Queen Anne-style pastor's residence was constructed and six years later a convent was constructed for the sisters serving in the school. [11] [3] [12]

Construction of current church and merger with St. Cyprian

The high altar and tabernacle of the 1914 church. Saint Dominic Church (Columbus, Ohio) - altar and tabernacle.jpg
The high altar and tabernacle of the 1914 church.

In October 1914, ground was broken for a new dedicated church building with D.W. McGrath serving as contractor and the cornerstone laid on May 9, 1915, by Bishop Hartley. [13] [14] [15] Work began on the superstructure designed by John Comes and John Kauzor of Pittsburgh the spring of 1915. [16] The church was dedicated by Hartley on November 26, 1916, with Bishop Peter Muldoon of the Diocese of Rockford preaching the sermon for the Mass. [17] The exterior of the church is built out of Bedford stone, the interior columns out of polished granite, and the altars and altar rails from Carrara marble. [3] [17] The cost of the construction of the church, school, rectory, and convent totalled $140,000. [3] The same year as the completion of the church, the Sisters of St. Joseph were recalled back to Pennsylvania and were replaced by Sisters of Charity of Nazareth. [3]

Due to the moving of the Pennsylvania Railroad's facilities in the area, many families moved away in the late 1910s and early 1920s, and decline in the population of the parish continued through the following decades. in 1924 the parish school had an enrollment of 375, a number which dropped to 206 by 1943. [3] The parish school also operated a high school department from 1925 to 1926, as well as from 1937 to 1944. [18] From 1954 to 1957, the parish was administered by the Congregation of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. [19] Beginning in the early 1940s, the congregation became predominantly African-American, a trend that continued when neighboring Saint Cyprian Church—founded for black Catholics in 1912—was merged into St. Dominic in 1957. [20] [21] [22] Previously, the parish had been made up of Irish and then Italian immigrants. [21] The Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament, who had taught at St. Cyprian, took over the school at St. Dominic and the Sisters of Charity moved to the newly opened St. Matthias school. [22] [23] During this time, the church hosted conferences concerning the welfare of black Catholics, as well as the Catholic Interracial Council of Columbus. [24] [25] [26] A fire at the 75-year-old school building caused $20,000 of damage in July 1960, but the damage was repaired and the school rededicated by auxiliary bishop Edward Hettinger in October. [27] [28]

Demographic change; School merger and closure

Black schoolchildren practicing drawing inside St. Dominic, 1970. Regina Boyd, Linda Anderson and Pearl Henderson sketching the interior of St. Dominic's Church.jpg
Black schoolchildren practicing drawing inside St. Dominic, 1970.

In 1970, St. Dominic School was consolidated with the parochial schools of the then-separate neighboring parishes of Holy Rosary and St. John, and the Sisters of the Blesed Sacrament ceased teaching at the St. Dominic campus. [22] [29] The consolidated school was named Pope John XXIII School, and the St. Dominic school building housed grades 4–6. [30] Due to declining enrollment and staffing cuts, Pope John XXIII School closed following the 1983 school year. [31] This closure, along with white flight and a lack of success in Catholic outreach to the predominantly-black neighborhood, all lead to declining attendance at the church in the following years. [32]

During the pastorate of Fr. Thomas Petry, from 1987 to 1999, cultural adaptations such as African dress and Gospel music and jazz settings of the Mass were introduced, and the church hosted Vespers commemorating Martin Luther King Jr. as well as Juneteenth celebrations. [33] [34] [32] [35] Black Catholics from other areas of Columbus, including the suburbs, chose to travel to St. Dominic for Mass. [36] [37] Despite hopes of refurbishing the closed parish school building for alternate use in the late 1980s, the building was torn down in 1990. [32] [38] Aaron Diehl, an award-winning American jazz artist, grew up playing the organ at St. Dominic in the early to mid-1990s, beginning at the age of 7. [39] A 2018 natural gas explosion across the street from the campus caused $200,000 of damage to the church and rectory, prompting the demolition of the rectory the following year. [40] [41] [42] [43] In 2024, the neighboring, also predominantly-black parish of Holy Rosary-St. John was merged into St. Dominic by Earl K. Fernandes, with St. Dominic serving as the sole worship site of the combined parish. [44] [1] Holy Rosary and St. John had been merged in 1979, and Holy Rosary Church sold. [45] As of July 8, 2025, Fr. Jude Esua Fongouck is the administrator of the parish. [46]

References

  1. 1 2 "Decree of Suppression for Holy Rosary and Saint John" (PDF). columbuscatholic.org. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2025-01-09. Retrieved 2025-10-15.
  2. Schlegel, Donald (2005). "Parish Histories of 1903 and 1907 -- Columbus - St. Dominic Parish" (PDF). Barquilla de la Santa Maria BULLETIN of the Catholic Record Society-Diocese of Columbus.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Catholic Church. Diocese of Columbus (Ohio) (1918). Diocese of Columbus : the history of fifty years, 1868-1918. Cornell University Library. Columbus, Ohio : [Diocese of Columbus].
  4. The official Catholic directory for the year of Our Lord. Boston Public Library. New York : P.J. Kenedy. 1897.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  5. "St. Dominic Parish". The Catholic Columbian. 7 September 1889.
  6. "St. Dominic's School". The Catholic Columbian. 14 September 1889.
  7. "St. Dominic's Building Fund". The Catholic Columbian. 9 November 1889.
  8. "The cornerstone of St. Dominic's school building will be laid on the 17th Inst., the third Sunday of August. The Bishop will officiate and preach the sermon on the occasion". The Catholic Columbian. 2 August 1890.
  9. "St. Dominic's School". The Catholic Columbian. 16 August 1890.
  10. "Dedication of St. Dominic's". The Catholic Columbian. 7 February 1891.
  11. Ferenchik, Mark (6 March 2019). "Church rectory razed, upsetting some". The Columbus Dispatch .
  12. "St. Dominic Rectory Supper". The Columbus Dispatch. 1895-11-23. p. 2. Retrieved 2025-10-16.
  13. "Ground Broken for St. Dominic Church". The Catholic Columbian. 9 October 1914.
  14. "New St. Dominic's Church". The Catholic Columbian. 12 February 1915.
  15. "Cornerstone Laying for St. Dominic's New Church". The Catholic Columbian. 16 April 1915.
  16. "Detailed Description of St. Dominic's Church at Twentieth and Devoise Sts., Columbus, Ohio". The Catholic Columbian. 14 May 1915.
  17. 1 2 "Beautiful St. Dominic's Dedicated to Service of God Last Sunday". The Catholic Columbian. 1 December 1915.
  18. Schlegel, Donald (May 2007). "A Survey of Catholic Secondary Education in Franklin County, PARISH HIGH SCHOOLS, St. Dominic High School, 1925/26 and 1937- 1944" (PDF). Journal of the Catholic Record Society of Columbus.
  19. "About". St. Dominic Church. Retrieved 2025-10-16.
  20. "CONTENTdm". ohiomemory.org. Retrieved 2025-10-15.
  21. 1 2 Mason, Debra (18 November 1988). "Woman loved mankind -- her good deeds set her on the path to sainthood". The Columbus Dispatch . pp. 5b.
  22. 1 2 3 Mooney, Margaret (16 September 2025). "A Story of St. Cyprian Parish in Columbus Part I -- The Bishop and the Saint" (PDF). Barquilla de Santa Maria Bulletin of the Catholic Record Society of Columbus.
  23. "Combine Eastside Schools". The Catholic Times. 1958-08-15. p. 1. Retrieved 2025-10-16.
  24. "Negro Welfare Sessions Here October 9-10-11". The Catholic Times. 1951-10-05. p. 1. Retrieved 2025-10-16.
  25. "Paul J. Lynch, Catholic Interracial Council, Columbus, Ohio". The Catholic Times. 1953-03-27. p. 3. Retrieved 2025-10-16.
  26. "Article clipped from The Catholic Times". The Catholic Times. 1956-04-27. p. 1. Retrieved 2025-10-16.
  27. "Two-Alarm Blaze Hits St. Dominic's School". The Catholic Times. 1960-07-22. p. 1. Retrieved 2025-10-16.
  28. "St. Dominic Without Doors". The Catholic Times. 1960-10-28. p. 1. Retrieved 2025-10-16.
  29. Lynch, Amos (1975-08-02). Columbus Call & Post 1975 Aug 2. Columbus Metropolitan Library. P.W. Publishing Co.
  30. Lynch, Amos (January 1980). Columbus Call & Post 1980-01 to 1980-12. Columbus Metropolitan Library. P.W. Publishing Co.
  31. Lynch, Amos (1983-06-09). Columbus Call & Post 1983 Jun 9. Columbus Metropolitan Library. P.W. Publishing Co.
  32. 1 2 3 Stephens, Steve (1 February 1989). "St. Dominic Centennial Chance to Revive Parish". The Columbus Dispatch . pp. 1C.
  33. Mahoney, Dennis (7 June 2002). "When member sews, Church reaps rich liturgy". The Columbus Dispatch . pp. 01C.
  34. Puet, Tim (9 November 2014). "Parish Music Programs bring added dimension to worship" (PDF). Catholic Times of Columbus.
  35. Ortega, Jeff` (11 June 1995). "Fest Kicks Off Juneteenth Celebration". The Columbus Dispatch . pp. 06D.
  36. Mason, Debra (15 July 1989). "Racism dispute among Catholics felt here, too". The Columbus Dispatch . pp. 11A.
  37. Brooks, Sylvia (27 August 1996). "Heart - and soul: Devoted parishoners keep lifeblood flowing through Sacred Heart Church". The Columbus Dispatch . pp. 01C.
  38. "Recycling Bricks". The Columbus Dispatch . 23 May 1990. p. 03.
  39. Joy, Kevin (9 September 2015). "Rising jazz pianist on mission to educate as well as entertain". The Columbus Dispatch . Archived from the original on 2025-10-17.
  40. King, Danae (26 June 2018). "The damage done". The Columbus Dispatch . pp. 1B.
  41. Cooley, Patrick (23 June 2018). "Shattered morning". The Columbus Dispatch . pp. 1B.
  42. Ferenchik, Mark (6 March 2019). "Church rectory razed, upsetting some". The Columbus Dispatch . pp. 1B.
  43. "St. Dominic's Rectory Threatened with Demolition – Columbus Landmarks" . Retrieved 2025-10-30.
  44. "St. John Center to continue community services". The Catholic Times. Archived from the original on 2024-05-23. Retrieved 2025-10-16.
  45. Donald Schlegel (2001). Illustrated History Of The Diocese Of Columbus Donald Schlegel 2001. p. 44.
  46. The Catholic Times (19 May 2025). "Clergy assignments include newly ordained priests". The Catholic Times of Columbus.