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The parish continued to use that facility until the property was bought by the State of Ohio for a new interstate and a new church was built in 1960 on the parish picnic grounds at its current location in Parma. [1] [2] The Eparchy of Parma was established in 1969 and St. John's Church became the cathedral.
In 1947, Saints Peter and Paul Ukrainian Catholic Church in Cleveland, Ohio, purchased 10 acres (4.0 ha) of land [a] in then-sparsely populated Parma, Ohio. [2] The $32,000 ($400,000 in 2023 dollars) school was dedicated on May 31, 1951, and opened the following November 15. [3]
St. Nicholas Church in Coventry, Ohio As of 2014 [update] , the Byzantine Catholic Eparchy of Parma pastorally served 9,020 Eastern Catholics in Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri and Ohio in 28 parishes and 5 missions with 36 priests (diocesan), 16 deacons, 6 lay religious (6 sisters), 2 seminarians.
Founded in 1892 as the first church for Hungarian immigrants in the United States. Church dedicated in 1922. No longer a parish [143] Conversion of St. Paul: 1369 E. 40th St, Cleveland Constructed as an Episcopal church in 1876, dedicated as a Catholic church in 1946, converted from a parish to a shrine in 2008 [144]
Opened in 1868; present church, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, was completed in 1888. St. Andrew Kim Korean Community 3171 Struble Rd, Cincinnati (Colerain Township) Parish established in 1994. [28] Current church built as a home and/or protestant church in 1940. [29] St. Ann 2900 Galbraith Rd, Cincinnati
Byzantine Catholic Eparchy of Parma website 41°24′14″N 81°41′34″W / 41.403883°N 81.692668°W / 41.403883; -81. This article about a Ruthenian Catholic place of worship is a stub .
Ohio became a major site of ethnic Ukrainian and Ruthenian immigration in the 1870s. By the 1880s, Cleveland and Tremont were sites of major Ukrainian communities. Parma and other Ohio towns were further populated by Ukrainian diaspora fleeing in the wake of the First World War and subsequent incorporation of Ukraine into the Soviet Union. [1]
In 2013, Parma formed a sister-city relationship with Lviv, Ukraine [31] and is home to Ohio's largest Ukrainian community, the majority of whom are foreign born, with more than twice the number of any other city. [32] Parma is the seat of the Ukrainian Catholic Eparchy of Saint Josaphat in Parma, which was established by Pope John Paul II in 1983.