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St. Stanislaus continues to serve the local community, now mostly Hispanic, by offering bilingual confession and Sunday services in Spanish. In May 2007, St. Stanislaus became the home of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee's Latin Mass community, offering the Extraordinary Form (the 1962 missal of John XXIII) weekly on Sundays, at 10:00 AM. While ...
The archdiocese filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in January 2011 after it failed to reach a settlement with two dozen victims of sexual abuse by Catholic clergy." [37] In March 2023, Listecki removed the right to hear confession and give absolution from Reverend James Connell, a retired archdiocesan priest.
Founded in 1958, church consecrated in 1961. Part of Northwest Milwaukee Catholic Parishes [24] [25] St. Catherine 5101 W. Center St. Part of the Milwaukee West-side Catholic Parishes [26] St. Catherine of Alexandria 8661 N. 76th Pl. Founded in 1855. Church dedicated in 1921. Part of Northwest Milwaukee Catholic Parishes [27] St. Francis of Assisi
Almost a third of Catholic parishes in southeast Wisconsin have closed or merged in the past 60 years. Slide through the maps to see where they were.
St. Joan of Arc Chapel is a Roman Catholic chapel today located in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States, on the campus of Marquette University, in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee. It was dedicated to Joan of Arc on 26 May 1966, after it had been moved from its previous location on Long Island , New York .
The National Eucharistic Pilgrimage will stop at over 50 Catholic parishes in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee from June 18 to 26. Thousands of Catholics could take part in a pilgrimage with over 50 ...
The archdiocese has 184 parishes across 10 counties in southeast Wisconsin. Because of staffing shortages, priests in several cases serve at more than one parish, traveling between them.
Gesu, founded 176 years ago in 1849 as St. Gall's Parish, initially served English-speaking Irish Catholics from the near south and west sides of Milwaukee in what was the neighborhood of Tory Hill. [3] As the parish grew, it built Holy Name Church in 1875, and by 1887 Jesuit officials combined the two parishes into one church.