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Neogothic/Romanesque church built in 1916. Holy Cross is the original Roman Catholic parish in Kaukauna, with a previous church building on the site built in 1873 and the Grignons included among its early members. [49] 24: Hortonville Community Hall: Hortonville Community Hall: January 23, 1981 : 312 W. Main St.
The next church to be constructed in the Green Bay area was St. John the Evangelist. Founded by Reverend Samuel Mazzuchelli in 1831; it is the longest continuously used church in Wisconsin. [3] In 1833, the new Diocese of Detroit assumed jurisdiction over the area. St. John Nepomucene Parish in Little Chute was founded in 1836. [6]
Little Chute and some surrounding area was largely settled by Catholics. By the early twentieth century it was the largest Catholic Dutch community in the United States. [26] Little Chute remained a Dutch-speaking community—known locally as "speaking Hollander"—into the twentieth century.
Even as the U.S. Catholic population has jumped to more than 70 million, driven in part by immigration from Latin America, ever-fewer Catholics are involved in the church’s most important rites.
Part of the Catholic Community of St. Alphonsus, Holy Cross and St. John the Evangelist Parishes Holy Family 304 Prairie St, Reeseville: Part of the Western Dodge County Catholic Churches [87] Holy Family 4825 N. Wildwood Ave, Whitefish Bay: Founded in 1949, church dedicated in 1969 [88] Holy Trinity 315 Main St, Kewaskum
The 1866 Greek Revival Guild Hall (a.k.a. 1866-1867 Methodist Church) now houses a local theater troupe. The 1866 (or 1871?) vicarage is now styled Queen Anne. The Neo-Gothic church was demolished in 1998. [6] [25] [26] [27] 21: St. Peter's and St. Joseph's Catholic Churches: St. Peter's and St. Joseph's Catholic Churches: November 10, 1980
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In 1846, Catholic residents of Beloit, Wisconsin, founded St. Thomas the Apostle Parish, the first parish in that city. [10] Wisconsin achieved statehood in 1848. That same year, the first Catholic church in Madison, St. Raphael, was founded. [11] Pope Pius IX established the Diocese of Lacrosse and the Diocese of Green Bay in 1868. [6]