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A church building supports and shelters a community
of believers. It is a structure of mortar and stone that lives and
breathes through the people who gather to worship and call the place
home. The parish church archives the history of the generations who
came before us and those who will follow. It is where we are baptized,
confirmed, married, and buried. This is where we form friendships that
last a lifetime and where we support one another on our journey. We
live our ordinary lives in an extraordinary manner, one day at a time,
walking in the faith of our fathers.
A church is the repository of hopes and dreams and pain and sorrows
belonging to each one of us, past, present and future. During a span of
one-hundred fifty years, St. Mary of the Assumption parish built three
different church buildings. The churches were constructed over time to
meet the needs of a growing parish in the expanding city of Mentor,
Ohio.
In 1797, the first settlers arrived in Mentor from New England. They
bought their land from the Connecticut Land Company. These pioneers
packed their possessions and traveled many weeks by horses and covered
wagons to their new home. The Western Reserve was considered to be a
prime area. This fertile and level land was a welcome contrast to the
rocky New England countryside they left behind.
The settlers arrived ready to fashion their homes and farms out of the
Ohio wilderness. Soon dirt roads and farms were scattered throughout
the area called Mentor. Life was filled with back breaking work for all
members of a family. Some early settlers were wood cutters who cut
trees for the wood burning engines on the railroad. There was a
railroad in Mentor on Station Street. The majority of families farmed
their land.
As early as 1819, Mentor Library Company opened the first subscription
library in the Western Reserve. In 1820, four-hundred sixty people
lived in Mentor.
In 1855, the people of Mentor Centre incorporated as Mentor Village and
the Mentor Village School District was formed. The settlers of this
area believed in education for themselves and their children. Today
there are towns peppered along the shore of Lake Erie that reflect their
New England roots. These cities all have their churches, libraries,
parks, schools, and centers of local government that the early settlers
deemed important to a civilized society.
The people of Lake County formed their religious communities and built
churches that represented the various faiths. The history of St. Mary
of the Assumption is intertwined with the history of Painesville and
Willoughby Catholic communities. Lake County was considered mission
territory within the Cleveland Catholic Diocese.
Travel back in time to 1840 when the first Catholic families in Mentor
walked to Painesville to attend Mass in someone's home. Before 1850 it
was normal for a priest to visit the area four times a year.
In 1850 the Diocese of Cleveland appointed a resident pastor to
Painesville and the first Catholic church in the area was a converted
carpenter shop. Mentor Catholic families walked to Painesville to
attend Mass until 1857.
From 1857 until 1864 Mass was celebrated in Mentor in the home of
William Casey of North Center Street. Ten families made up the original
Catholic community in Mentor. In 1864, Mentor became a mission church
under the care of St. Paul's Church in Euclid, Ohio. Reverend Anthony
T. Martin traveled on an open, hand operated section car provided by the
men who worked for the railroad system. Father Martin came from Euclid
to Mentor monthly to minister to the families. In 1865, the combined
population of Mentor Village and the Township was approximately 1,600
people.
The 1868, under the direction of Father Martin, plans for the
construction of the first St. Mary Church in Mentor were begun. The
location was planned for South Center Street. It was to be a plain
structure to measure twenty by forty feet and constructed of native oak
and ash trees.
The trees were cut on the farms of George Dickey and Robert Murray and
hauled to a saw mill in the area. This lumber was sun-dried for about
five months and then delivered by horse and wagon to Malin's Mill in
Painesville to prepare it for construction. A historical note is that
in 1876, James A. Garfield purchased the same Dickey farm. It became
known as Lawnfield.
Building of the first St. Mary church began in the early fall of 1868
and was completed in December of the same year. The seating capacity
accommodated ninety six people. The total cost was approximately
$1,200.
The parish numbered twelve families. The financial burden was
significant to these people who had limited material means but possessed
a strong commitment to the future of St. Mary of the Assumption parish.
In 1875, Father Martin's monthly visits were discontinued due to poor
transportation from Euclid, Ohio. Mentor was assigned to the pastor of
the Painesville parish until 1898 when the Mentor Catholic community was
transferred to the care of the Willoughby parish.
Around 1910, Mentor became the summer retreat of the rich and famous of
Cleveland. Wealthy businessmen constructed large homes with all the
amenities of the ear for their families. They brought their wives,
children, and servants out of the city for the summer to enjoy the
countryside. Mentor's fertile farms fed them and local drivers
transported them to their estates.
In 1911, electricity was introduced in St. Mary's church on S. Center
Street. The cost was $84.50. By 1914, there were sixteen families in
the parish. During the summer the little wooden church, built in 1868,
overflowed with people who couldn't even get inside for Mass. People
would stand outside looking in the windows.
In 1922, Father William P. Thorpe, an assistant priest in Willoughby,
was given complete care of the Mentor Catholic community. Father Thorpe
purchased 2 1/4 acres of land on the northeast corner of Hart Street and
Mentor Avenue in 1923. The cost was $20,000. St. Mary's former rectory
and administrative offices were located in the house that was on the
property purchased by Father Thorpe. In 1973, the same house was moved
across Mentor Avenue and placed next to the school and continued to be
the rectory for the parish until May, 2007. A barn was also located on
the property purchased by Father Thorpe. The barn was torn down and
well preserved lumber from it was saved to build a new church in 1933.
Finally in 1927, Archbishop Joseph Schrembs of Cleveland designated the
Mentor territory a parish and appointed Father William Thorpe the first
resident pastor of Mentor. There were fifty families who were members
of the parish at this time.
Mentor was growing and transportation improved with the interurban cars
that traveled on tracks from Cleveland to Ashtabula along Route 20. The
automobile shortened travel time when the weather cooperated. In 1930,
the combined population of Mentor Village and Mentor Township was 3,542
people.
In 1933, in spite of the hardships of the Depression, Father Thorpe
began construction of a desperately needed larger Catholic church in
Mentor. he obtained a loan of $25,000 from the Ladies Catholic
Benevolent Association and ground was broken in September, 1934. To
minimize the costs of construction, Father Thorpe dispensed with the
general contractor and assumed the entire responsibility himself. He
received invaluable assistance from parishioners and the architects and
many subcontractors. Reclaimed lumber and brick were used in building
the new church. Final dimensions were 80' x 35' with a side addition
and a rear addition. The seating capacity was three-hundred people.
The cost of the new church was $19,440. This building is presently
occupied by National City Bank and is located across the street from the
current St. Mary of the Assumption church.
In 1937, Father Thorpe was transferred and Father Daniel O'Shea
succeeded him. Father O'Shea retired in 1940 due to failing health and
Father Michael Moriarty replaced him. Father John Farrell was appointed
pastor in June 1942.
Under Father Farrell's direction, a mortgage of $25,000 was retired and
twenty-one acres of land, where our present church and school reside,
were purchased and paid for during his administration.
Father Farrell was transferred in 1950 and Monsignor George Whitehead
was named pastor. The population of Mentor Village and Township was
almost 10,000 people.
An old farmhouse owned by T.G. Hart and originally located on the land
purchased by Father Farrell, was remodeled and furnished as a convent
for four Ursuline nuns who would arrive to teach in the parish school.
In the Fall of 1952, across the street from the parish church, St. Mary
School opened its doors with eight classrooms and 113 children.
In the 1950's the church basement was used for many spaghetti dinners
and fish frys. St. Mary of the Assumption parish conducted massive
clothing drives to benefit the needy in post-World War II Europe. The
church basement was the collecting and sorting area of the mountains of
clothing that were prepared for shipping overseas.
Monsignor Whitehead died in 1953 and Monsignor Thomas Murphy became
pastor until 1956. At this time, the population of Mentor and St. Mary
of the Assumption parish was growing. Monsignor Murphy had increased
the number of Sunday Masses, but the parish church built in 1934 and
accommodating three-hundred people at one time, had become inadequate.
Due to the increase of new families, the school was unable to
accommodate more children at this time.
Father Joseph Dreher was appointed pastor in 1956. Under his direction,
festivals and bazaars were expanded to raise funds for an eight
classroom addition to the school which included the construction of an
auditorium-gymnasium.
The auditorium had a seating capacity of 650 persons and besides filling
the needs of a cafeteria, a gym, and a meeting hall for various parish
groups, it became a church on Sundays and Holy Days. By 1957, the
Catholic population of our parish had increased to 1,350 families.
It wasn't long before Sunday Masses were again providing standing room
only. Crowds lined the aisles and halls for each Mass even though there
were eight Masses celebrated every Sunday. A new church seemed the only
answer.
In 1960, the combined population of Mentor village and Mentor Township
was 21,650 people. In 1963, Mentor Village and Mentor Township
consolidated to become the City of Mentor.
Under Father Dreher's guidance, a drive for pledges from the
parishioners was organized and tithing was encouraged within the
parish. After eight years of planning and securing funds, the current
St. Mary of the Assumption church was completed and dedicated in 1964.
The cost of construction was $400,000. Originally there were 23 rows of
pews made of red oak. the glass for the windows was imported from
Germany and was prepared by the John Winterich Company. The cross above
the main altar is nine feet long and made of Japanese mahogany. The
image of Christ is six feet long and carved from linden wood. The new
church seated 1,200 people.
In 1964, there were 1,800 families in the parish. There were 950
students in the day school, 550 public school elementary students, and
250 high school students attending religion classes.
Father Dreher served as pastor until 1966 and Father Albert Karper
became pastor until 1967. He was followed by Monsignor Michael Ivanko
was was pastor until August, 1971. In 1970, the population of Mentor
was 36,912 people.
Father Nicholas Novosel was appointed pastor of St. Mary of the
Assumption in 1971 and served until 1977. The two school buildings were
connected by an enclosed hallway at this time. The rectory, built in
1915, was located on the north side of Mentor Avenue, next to what is
currently the National City Bank building. In 1973, the rectory was
moved to the south side of Mentor Avenue and placed next to the school
building. The old church and property was sold to National City Bank.
At this time, the parish festivals offered grand prizes of a television,
a speed boat, Cadillac, and a new house. The house was built by the
people of the parish. This continued for a few years until worker
burnout set in and festivals ceased for a while.
Parishioners recall Thanksgiving Day Mass being an annual event for the
parish. Children dressed as pilgrims and everyone gathered in the gym
after Mass for coffee and donuts. It was necessary to have forty dozen
donuts to feed everyone.
Father Wildred Smith became the pastor of St. Mary of the Assumption in
March, 1977. The Diocese of Cleveland decreed a change in parish
boundaries for Lake County during this year. St. Mary's original
boundaries extended north to Lake Erie, south to Chardon St. Mary, east
to Heisley Road, and west to Immaculate Conception Parish in Willoughby.
The new decree gave northern parts of St. Mary of the Assumption parish
to St. Bede the Venerable parish; western and northern parts were given
to St. John Vianney parish; southern areas were given to Divide Word
parish. After the boundary changes were in place there were 1,225
families in St. Mary of the Assumption parish.
In the 1980's, the Kindergarten was moved from the church basement to
the Sunshine room in the school. School classrooms were increased to
meet the needs of student enrollments.
At this time, the program titled "Christ Renews His Parish" was
established at St. Mary parish. "Renewal" enriched the spiritual needs
of the people. the program formed bonds of friendship that strengthened
individual commitment to the parish.
In 1988, St. Mary's Adoration Chapel was dedicated. Parishioners
committed to a specific hour to spend in prayer on a regular basis in
the chapel. This spiritual practice, continuing today, blesses the
individual and the entire parish.
The population of Mentor continued to grow and numbered 48,960 people in
1990. The number of families in the parish climbed to 1,720 after the
boundary changes of 1977. In 1992, Farrell Hall was added on to the
school and dedicated in honor of Father John Farrell who purchased the
land where our present church and school are located.
The City of Mentor celebrated in 1997, its 200th anniversary of the
founding of the first settlement in 1797. A few years later, the City
of Mentor received the Ohio Lake Erie Commission Award for environmental
stewardship of Lake Erie. Mentor was the first city on the lakeshore to
receive this award.
The year 2000 chimed in the millennium celebration. Parishioners
gathered outside the church doors at 11:59 P.M. on December 31, 1999.
At Midnight, St. Mary's church bells rang out as people walked through
the church doors into the church, ringing small bells that had been
handed out to everyone. The first Mass of the new millennium at St.
Mary's was celebrated.
At this time there were 2,113 families in the parish. Plans were
announced to refurbish the school, adding classrooms once again, and
using the old gym to house a library/science center renovation. The
Weaver Activity Center was built to replace the original gymnasium built
in 1956.
To accomplish these plans for expansion, a Millennium Capital Campaign
for financial pledges began. The theme of this fund raising endeavor
was Building and Growing Together in Faith and Love.
In 2002, Father Wilfred Smith retired after twenty-five years as pastor
and on December 8, 2002, Father Thomas Elsasser was installed as pastor
of St. Mary of the Assumption parish. In this year, the Weaver Activity
Center was completed and dedicated by Bishop Martin Amos.
Vibrant Parish Life Phase I began in 2005. All parishioners were asked
to assess the current needs of the parish and envision steps for moving
into the future. The need for a gathering area close to the church and
a new Pastoral Care Center were suggestions that emerged from the
parishioner assessment. In 2006, Vibrant Parish Life Phase II began
with a capital campaign titled Vision for the Future.
Parishioners were requested to make financial pledges that would enable
the parish to move forward to accomplish our vision for the future.
Once again parishioners stepped forward, firm in their commitment and
dedication to our parish family. Construction began on the pastoral
care offices and the parish gathering center. In the future, Phase III
will refresh our church building. $2,500,000 was estimated to complete
all phases.
Parish sacramental records in 2006 show 79 Baptisms, 89 First
Communions, 77 Confirmation, and 25 marriages. There were five people
who completed the Rite of Christian Initiation as Adults in our parish.
St. Mary of the Assumption parish family reaches out to others in need.
In 2006, St. Mary's volunteers cooked and served 6000 meals to the
hungry and homeless of Cleveland. This was accomplished through the St.
Patrick's church and Franklin Circle hot meals program.
In 2006, the St. Vincent de Paul Society of our parish served
approximately 127 individuals and families. They distributed 430 bags
of food from the St. Mary's food pantry. Our St. Vincent de Paul
Society contributes funds each month to the St. Patrick's hot meals
program and Christ the King parish food pantry in the inner city.
Parishioners also volunteer at Christ the King parish tutoring program
in East Cleveland.
In 2007, the Pastoral Care Center and parish gathering center will be
dedicated by Bishop Anthony Pilla. Today there are 2,400 families in
our parish. There are over 450 students from Kindergarten through
eighth grade enrolled in our day school. There are over 200 students
enrolled in the Parish School of Religion. St. Mary of the Assumption
parish family celebrates 150 years of service and presence in the City
of Mentor and the Diocese of Cleveland.
We, the family of St. Mary of the Assumption, are the living and loving
followers of Jesus Christ. We read of Him in the Gospels and commit our
lives to His teaching. This is no small task. We refresh ourselves
through prayer and the sacraments. We bring a wondrous message of peace
and love that our world thirst for. This is our mission. We follow in
the footsteps of all those who came before us in our parish. We honor
their faith and dedication and their farsightedness. They planned for
the future of St. Mary of the Assumption. They anticipated our arrival
and the needs of the parish. We can do no less for those who will
follow us.
Informational Sources:
Catholic Diocese of Cleveland Archives Department
Mentor: A Retrospective by Janice Habinski and Ronald L. Prosek
Mentor - The First 200 Years, published by the Mentor
Bicentennial Committee/Old Mentor Foundation
Compiled and written by Angela Kovitch
Copyright, 2007. |
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