St. Paul’s Roman Catholic Church
One other way of dealing with the backlog (and the sense I have of some series of posts getting repetitive) is to try to combine some posts where multiple markers are in the same place or on the same subject. I don’t have hard and fast rules about when to combine, but this is one of them, where there is a state historical marker which is for a building in the same location which is also on the National Register of Historic Places.
State Historical Marker
Virginia Q-8-V
St. Paul’s Roman Catholic Church
National Register of Historic Places
St. Paul’s Catholic Church
Location: 518 High St, Portsmouth, VA 23704
Visited: June 23, 2009, 2:55pm
Transcription of state marker: St. Paul’s Roman Catholic Church was first built by French and Irish immigrants between 1811 and 1815 and was the first Catholic congregation established in Portsmouth. Increasing membership necessitated the building of new structures in 1831 and 1851. Fire destroyed the third building in 1859; that same year the congregation began constructing a fourth structure, completed in 1868. It burned in 1897. The current Gothic Revival church here, noted for its stained glass windows, was designed by John Kevan Peebles and dedicated in 1905. It was listed on the Virginia Landmarks Register and the National Register of Historic Places in 2002.
Department of Historic Resources, 2003
Transcription of another plaque beside the state marker:
A burial ground for early parishoners and clergy of St. Paul’s Catholic Church was located on this site during the nineteenth century. Among those buried here were:
Patrick Robertson, who bequeathed the funds to purchase this property in 1810 and construct the first St. Paul’s; Rosalie and Bartholomew Accinelli, founding members of this congregation; Antonio Sylvestre Bilisoli, a founding member of this congregation who fought during the American Revolution; Rev. Francis Devlin, pastor from 1844 to 1855, who died ministering to the citizens of Portsmouth during the Yellow Fever epidemic of 1855; and Rev. Joseph Plunkett, pastor from 1855 to 1870 and during the construction of the fourth St. Paul’s.
My impressions: This is certainly a striking looking building (and given their past history, they seem lucky that it has stood for more than a century). I liked the tiny plaque in the garden beside the state marker, because it helped move my thoughts from the grand building to the fact that there were people connected to this site. It was even better because it explained why each person named was important to the history of St. Paul’s. And, since I’ve been going through markers from Portsmouth, nice to see some connections, including the mention of the Yellow Fever epidemic, which I think I first read about in a marker in Fort Nelson Park (that appeared on this blog over the holiday weekend).
Markeroni status: I’ve logged both the state marker and the location from the National Register of Historic Places, but have not submitted the other plaque transcribed here.
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