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St. Josaphat's in Chicago

St. Josaphat
Church
Saint Josaphat Church.jpg
St. JosaphatChurch is located in the US
St. JosaphatChurch
St. Josaphat
Church
Coordinates: 41°55′25.1″N 87°39′46.8″W / 41.923639°N 87.663000°W / 41.923639; -87.663000
Location Chicago
Country United States
Denomination Roman Catholic
Website St. Josaphat's Parish
History
Founded 1884 (1884)
Founder(s) Polish immigrants
Dedication St. Josaphat
Dedicated  ()
Consecrated  ()
Architecture
Functional status Active
Heritage designation For Polish Kashubians immigrants
Architect(s) William J. Brinkmann
Architectural type Church
Style Romanesque Revival
Groundbreaking 1899 (1899)
Completed 1902 (1902)
Construction cost $125,000 (1902)
Specifications
Materials Brick

St. Josaphat (Polish: Kościół Świętego Jozafata and in Kashubian as Kòscół Swiãtégò Jozafata) is a historic church of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago located at 2311 North Southport Avenue in Chicago, Illinois.

It is a prime example of the so-called 'Polish Cathedral style' of church in both its opulence and grand scale. St. Josaphat's two massive Romanesque belltowers are a hallmark view of the Lincoln Park skyline.

The congregation dates back to 1882, when a 13-member committee of Chicago's Kashubian Polish community formally approached the Resurrectionist Father Vincent Barzynski, then Chicago's preeminent Polish priest, for his assistance in establishing a Kashubian parish. Prior to this most of the Kashubian families had been attending Mass at Saint Michael's Parish, a "German" parish which they preferred to Father Barzynski's own "Polish" parish of Saint Stanislaus Kostka. The current combination church-school building, an imposing brick edifice, was dedicated on May 22, 1884.

The parish attracted Polish settlement in this area of the Lincoln Park neighborhood of Chicago, most of them hailing from Cassubia along the Baltic Sea. This concentration led to the neighborhood being referred to as Kaszubowo by local Poles.

By 1980, roughly half of Saint Josaphat's 450 families self-identified as Polish American, with 30% self-identifying as Mexican American. In the twenty-first century, Saint Josaphat's now serves an overwhelmingly young, white, urban professional congregation in a newly prosperous, gentrified neighborhood. The renovated church, with its traditional Catholic architecture, is popular for weddings, with over 65 a year.


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