St. Benedict Cathedral (Evansville, Indiana) Explained

St. Benedict Cathedral
Location:1320 Lincoln Ave.
Evansville, Indiana
Denomination:Roman Catholic Church
Founded Date:1912 (parish)
Dedication:Benedict of Nursia
Dedicated Date:March 18, 1928
Status:Cathedral/Parish
Functional Status:Active
Architect:Edward J. Thole (Cathedral)
Style:Lombard-Basilica
Completed Date:1928
Construction Cost:$230,000
Capacity:1,000
Spire Quantity:One
Spire Height:130feet
Materials:Brick
Diocese:Evansville
Bishop:Most Rev. Joseph M. Siegel
Rector:Rev. Godfrey Mullen, OSB
Embedded:
St. Benedict's Catholic Church, Rectory, and School
Nrhp Type:cp
Nocat:yes
Embed:yes
Partof:Lincolnshire Historic District
Coordinates:37.97°N -87.5406°W
Architect:Frank J. Schlotter (school)
August Gehlhausen (rectory)
Added:October 2, 1989
Partof Refnum:89001426

St. Benedict Cathedral is a Roman Catholic cathedral in Evansville, Indiana, United States. It is the seat of the Diocese of Evansville. The cathedral, rectory and original school building are contributing properties in the Lincolnshire Historic District on the National Register of Historic Places.

History

St. Benedict Parish

St. Benedict Parish was established in 1912 to take care of the Catholics who lived east of the downtown area. The pastoral care for the parish was given to Benedictine Monks from St. Meinrad Abbey.[1] A two-story brick building was constructed to serve as a combination church and school. It was designed by local architect Frank J. Schlotter in the Neoclassical style.[2] It was built by local contractor, and parishioner, Michael J. Hoffman. An assembly hall was located in the basement, classrooms were located on the first floor, and the church sanctuary was on the second floor. After the present church building was completed in 1928, the second floor was converted into classroom space. A Modern movement addition was completed in 1953.

A two-story, brick, American Foursquare convent was built for the teaching sisters in 1913. A rectory for the resident clergy was completed in 1921 for $25,000.[2] The two-story brick structure was designed by August Gehlhausen in the Colonial Revival style. It features a two-story, full length, front porch.

The present church building was completed in 1928 in the Lombard-Basilica style.[3] It was designed by local architect Edward J. Thole of the architectural firm of Thole & Legeman. Parishioner Michael Hoffman again served as the contractor. The church features ceilings that are 65feet high, a baldachin over the altar and a seating capacity of over 1,000 people.[3] Zettler Art Glass Company of Munich, Germany produced the stained glass windows. The altars are composed of Italian marble. The campanile rises 130feet.[2] The church was dedicated on March 18, 1928, by Abbot Athanasius Schmidt, OSB.[1]

The interior of the church was renovated after the liturgical reforms of the Second Vatican Council. The baldachin was moved forward about 25feet and the former high altar was dismantled and a new altar was created. Two of Evansville's bishops were ordained and installed in St. Benedict's before it became a cathedral; Francis R. Shea in 1970 and Gerald A. Gettelfinger on April 11, 1989.[1]

St. Benedict Cathedral

On October 21, 1944, Pope Pius XII established the Diocese of Evansville.[4] Assumption Church, Evansville's oldest Catholic parish, was chosen as the first cathedral. The property was sold to the city of Evansville who demolished it in 1965 for the new civic center. Holy Trinity, Evansville's second-oldest parish, served as the Proto-cathedral from 1965 to April 11, 1999, when St. Benedict's was consecrated as the third cathedral for the Evansville Diocese.[1]

Pastors/Rectors

The following priests have served as pastor of St. Benedict Parish. Since 1999 they have also served as cathedral rector:[1]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cathedrals of the Diocese of Evansville. Diocese of Evansville. 2015-06-30.
  2. Web site: [{{NRHP url|id=89001426}} Lincolnshire Historic District]. National Park Service. 2014-11-20. Joan C. Marchand. with
  3. Web site: Parish History. Historic Evansville. 2011-09-26.
  4. Web site: Diocese of Evansville . Catholic-Hierarchy . 2011-09-26.