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By Christine May
A hundred years is a long time. That is why a Centennial is a very
special event. From April 12 through 19, Sacred Heart Parish will be
celebrating its Centennial. Father Michael A. Morris, Pastor of Sacred Heart,
sees this celebration as a time of rejoicing rejoicing over the
glories of the past, the blessings of the present, and the hopes of the
future.
Special parish committees have been hard a work for many months
planning the week-long celebration. Centennial chairman Phil Coletti says that
Sacred Hearts 100th anniversary will be a special time for
those who presently belong to the parish as well as a happy homecoming for
former parishioners. Events of the week will include receptions, musical
programs, a banquet and ball, and a Solemn Pontifical Mass.
The main celebration will be the Centennial Mass of Thanksgiving
and Celebration on Saturday, April 19 at 5:30 p.m. Archbishop Thomas A.
Donnellan and the priests who have served the parish will concelebrate. For
these official rites, they will be joined by the clergy of the archdiocese and
visiting priests. The Sacred Heart Liturgical Choir will be assisted by the
choir of Central Presbyterian Church and the Southern Brass Quintet. The
Knights of Columbus, Fourth Degree, will form as honor guard for the
procession.
Sacred Heart's centennial celebration officially begins April 12
at 6:30 p.m. with a reception at the parish center for first-edition
subscribers to SPIRES AT THE HEART OF THE CITY the centennial history of
Sacred Heart. SPIRES AT THE HEART OF THE CITY is a special book,
claims Phil Coletti. Hundreds of photographs in color and black and white
document the past of our parish and provide a chronicle of our contemporary
church community.
It is the story of humble beginnings in a little wooden
church on Marietta Street. It is a pictorial essay on the architecture of the
familiar twin-spired structure on Peachtree. SPIRES AT THE HEART OF THE CITY is
about Sacred Heart people pioneers, parish councils, choirs, and
priests. It is about children. Nineteenth century altar boys and choir girls.
School children in knickers and First Communion finery. And it is about the
generation of young people that hurries Sacred Heart into the twenty-first
century.
Sunday, April 13, is forecast as a special opportunity for
fellowship. From 2:30 to 5:30 in the afternoon, there will be a homecoming
party. Sacred Heart parishioners past and present will share a heartwarming
occasion which features old-fashioned entertainment and a picnic fare.
SPIRES AT THE HEART OF THE CITY reflects the life of Sacred Heart
parish and its people over the span of an eventful century. Excerpts from the
pages of this record provide an introduction to the full story of Sacred Heart
as it reviews the past with joy and previews the future with hope.
1880-1980: The History Of The Parish
The year 1880 was an eventful one for Catholics in Atlanta, a city
of 37,409 souls. The bishop of the thirty-year old Diocese of Savannah
purchased property on the northeast side of Marietta Street and the southwest
side of Alexander Street. On February 28, 1880, he inaugurated the parish of
Saints Peter and Paul, now known as Sacred Heart Parish.
A forty by sixty foot frame church building capable of seating 300
was erected on the east side of Marietta Street. More than fifty families made
up the new parish and the congregation numbered over 250. A parochial school
conducted by the Sisters of Mercy stood on the corner of Jones and Marietta
Street.
The first pastor, Father Patrick H. McMahon, saw the new parish
through its first decade. He was succeeded by Father J.S. McCarthy in 1889. In
1890 Father Joseph F. Colbert became pastor.
In 1897 the Marist Fathers began their long association with the
parish when Bishop Thomas A. Becker entrusted Saints Peter and Paul to their
care. The bishop specified that the parish covered all the north of
Edgewood Avenue and to the east of the railway running parallel to Marietta
Street. This included all of North Atlanta at the time, as well as the
mission territory which composed an area of about 9,500 square
miles of North Georgia.
By 1897 a new church was needed for the community. A lot was then
purchased at Peachtree and Ivy. The new church was dedicated on May 1, 1898 and
the parish renamed Sacred Heart of Jesus. Sacred Heart Church was consecrated
on June 9, 1920.
Over the one hundred years there were a number of pastors who
served Sacred Heart Parish. The first Marist Father, Reverend William Gibbons,
was succeeded by Father John Gunn who later became Bishop Gunn of Natchez. In
1965 the Marist Fathers completed sixty-eight years of responsibility for
Sacred Heart. Monsignor Joseph Moylan became the new pastor and diocesan
priests resumed the care of the parish. Then, in turn, came Father Joseph Ware
and Father John Mulroy. Father Michael A. Morris became pastor in 1973.
A Place For Worship
When Father William Gibbons and his assistant, Father John Guinan,
undertook to move their 340 member congregation from the little frame building
on Marietta Street, they selected the junction of Peachtree and Ivy as the site
of the new Catholic church. The time was 1897, and some members of the
congregation thought the property was so far out of town that it would never
serve any useful purpose. The prevailing opinion, however, was that the
location was in a prominent residential area destined to grow.
A young Atlanta architect, W.T. Downing, received the commission
to design the new house of worship. At the age of 32, Downing had already won
international recognition as a master of domestic architecture. He had built
many fine homes for an exclusive clientele in Atlanta and had contributed
notably to Atlantas commercial architecture. The Sacred Heart of Jesus
was Downings first church.
Reflecting the French origins of the Marist Fathers who
commissioned the structure, the Church of the Sacred Heart is in the French
Romanesque style. The architect incorporated the ideal aspects of the
Romanesque, evident in the towered façade, the interior gallery level,
the three-aisled nave, the side chapels and the ribbed barrel vaulting. The
French Romanesque character of the church is most notably in the constant
repetition of rounded arches, visible from every perspective in the exterior
and interior design of Sacred Heart.
During the Bicentennial Year, the United States Department of
Interior and the Georgia Department of Natural Resources recognized Sacred
Heart for the artistically significant architecture of the church
building. On May 13, 1976, the Church of the Sacred Heart was entered in
the National Register of Historic Places.
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