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The Church of the Holy Communion is a historic Episcopal church building on Summit Street in Norwood, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States.. It was designed by J. Cleaveland Cady in Late Gothic Revival style and Shingle Style and was built in 1886.
Spanish Gothic and Moorish style church built 1922-1924 St. Aedan 800 Bergen Ave, Jersey City Church dedicated 1931, serves as the Saint Peter's University Church and a local parish church [21] St. Aloysius 691 West Side Ave, Jersey City Parish established 1897; French Renaissance style church and bell tower dedicated 1908 [22] St. Ann (Polish)
Now part of Holy Family Parish St. Ladislaus 213 Somerset St, New Brunswick Now part of Holy Family Parish St. Mary of Mount Virgin: 198 Sandford St, New Brunswick Part of Church of the Visitation Parish St. Peter the Apostle 94 Somerset St, New Brunswick Established 1829; current church built 1854-1865 [5]
Holy Spirit 705 2nd Ave, Asbury Park Our Lady of Mount Carmel 1201 Asbury Ave, Asbury Park St. Agnes: Atlantic Highlands Co-Cathedral of St. Robert Bellarmine: Freehold St. Denis Mansaquan: St. Mary of the Lakes: Medford Lakes No longer a Catholic church Our Lady of Good Counsel: Moorestown: St. Paul Princeton
The Church of the Holy Family is a Roman Catholic parish church under the authority of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York, located in Staten Island, New York City. The parish was founded in 1966 and is located at 366 Watchogue Road Westerleigh, Staten Island.
Sussex, Bergen, Morris, Essex, Somerset, Middlesex, and Monmouth counties in New Jersey became part of the Diocese of New York; The rest of New Jersey became part of the Diocese of Philadelphia. [4] St. John's Parish, founded in 1826, was the first parish in Newark. [6] In Jersey City, Saint Peter's Church was dedicated in 1831.
Holy Family Academy was a private Roman Catholic college preparatory school for young women located in Bayonne, in Hudson County, New Jersey, founded by the Sisters of St. Joseph in 1925 that closed in June 2013. The most recent building, 239 Avenue A, was dedicated in 1954.
In 1820, Bishop John Connolly of New York sent Richard Bulger to Paterson to serve as first resident priest in New Jersey to Paterson. [4] In 1821, Bulger established St. John the Baptist Church, the first church of any denomination in Paterson. [7] Waves of Irish and German Catholic immigrants flooded into the area during the mid-1800s.