Church of the Sacred Heart (Freeport, Minnesota) explained

Church of the Sacred Heart (Catholic)
Coordinates:45.6626°N -94.6861°W
Location:110 3rd Avenue NE, Freeport, Minnesota
Area:Less than one acre
Built:1905–06
Builder:Paul Koshiol
Architect:Parkinson & Dockendorff
Architecture:Gothic Revival, Romanesque Revival
Refnum:91000906
Added:July 12, 1991

The Church of the Sacred Heart is a historic Roman Catholic church building in Freeport, Minnesota, United States. The church was constructed from 1905 to 1906 as the third and largest building to house a congregation formed by the community's German American settlers in 1881.[1] The property was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1991 as Church of the Sacred Heart (Catholic) for its local significance in the theme of social history.[2] It was nominated for demonstrating the central role played by the Catholic church in Freeport and many other Central Minnesota communities settled by German immigrants.

History

The Sacred Heart parish was originally part of a parish in New Munich, Minnesota. The heavily German-American community of Freeport asked the Diocese of St. Cloud for a priest to form their own parish, and Father Simplicius Wimmer arrived in response. Freeport's first church building was a wood-frame structure built in 1882, measuring 70feetby36feetft (byft), with a rectory added in 1890. The parish outgrew this building and constructed a new one in 1896, which was a brick-veneered building measuring 154feetby66feetft (byft) and seating 1,000 people. The second building was completed at a cost of $30,000 . The original wood building was donated to the parish of St. Rose and moved 5sigfig=1NaNsigfig=1 north.[3]

The 1896 building was struck by lightning in 1904 and destroyed by fire. The parish immediately organized a rebuilding effort, and even the priest pitched in. The third building was even larger and more ornate than the second building, with a total construction cost of $115,000 by the time it was finished in 1906. It required 38 boxcar loads of brick for its construction.[3]

The parish is now part of a cluster with Immaculate Conception in New Munich and St. Rose of Lima in St. Rosa, Minnesota.[4]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Koop . Michael . [{{NRHP url|id=91000906}} National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Church of the Sacred Heart (Catholic) ]. National Park Service . February 1990 . 2018-06-10. With
  2. Web site: Church of the Sacred Heart (Catholic) . Minnesota National Register Properties Database . Minnesota Historical Society . 2009 . 2018-06-11.
  3. Book: Alan K. Lathrop. Churches of Minnesota: An Illustrated Guide. limited. 55. University of Minnesota Press. 2003. 0816629099.
  4. Web site: Welcome to our Tri-Parish Community . Tri-Parish Community . 2018-06-11.