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St. Joseph's Catholic Church (Wapakoneta, Ohio)

St. Joseph Catholic Church and School
St. Joseph's Catholic Church in Wapakoneta, light.jpg
Front and side of the church
St. Joseph's Catholic Church (Wapakoneta, Ohio) is located in Ohio
St. Joseph's Catholic Church (Wapakoneta, Ohio)
St. Joseph's Catholic Church (Wapakoneta, Ohio) is located in the US
St. Joseph's Catholic Church (Wapakoneta, Ohio)
Location 309 S. Perry St., Wapakoneta, Ohio
Coordinates 40°34′4″N 84°11′43″W / 40.56778°N 84.19528°W / 40.56778; -84.19528Coordinates: 40°34′4″N 84°11′43″W / 40.56778°N 84.19528°W / 40.56778; -84.19528
Area 1.8 acres (0.73 ha)
Built 1899
Architect DeCurtins; John and Joseph Hemmert
Architectural style Romanesque Revival
MPS Cross-Tipped Churches of Ohio TR
NRHP reference # 79003453
Added to NRHP July 26, 1979

St. Joseph's Catholic Church is a historic Roman Catholic church in Wapakoneta, Ohio, United States. Built in 1910, this church is home to an active Catholic parish, and it has been declared a historic site because of its well-preserved Romanesque Revival architecture.

One of the first two Catholic priests in northern Ohio was John William Horstmann, a native of Osnabrück who had settled in the village of Glandorf to the north. Starting in 1832, he made monthly journeys of 50 miles (80 km) to Stallotown to the south. As Wapakoneta lies midway between these communities, he often visited with and celebrated Mass for its few Catholic families. After four years of these travels, he established a parish at Petersburg, approximately 4 miles (6.4 km) south of Wapakoneta.

By 1839, the Catholic community in Wapakoneta had grown to the point that it could be created a separate parish, and the members built a small frame church on the southeastern corner of the intersection of Pearl and Blackhoof Streets near the city's downtown. Although no resident pastor served the parish in its earliest years, membership grew during the 1840s and 1850s, and a priest was first assigned to the church in 1857. The expenses of maintaining even a small church caused the parish to be deep in debt during its earliest years, but it prospered greatly under the pastorate of Joseph Gregory Dwenger, later Bishop of Fort Wayne. Since 1850, the parish has been served by priests from the Congregation of the Precious Blood.

By the late 1850s, the parish's membership had grown significantly, and the original church had become too small; consequently, a larger brick structure was built to the east of the original building in 1858. Among its most distinctive elements were a massive single tower, four bells, and a large pipe organ. In later years, elderly parishioners remembered the organ and bells favorably: purchased for $2,200 and $1,700 respectively, they were seen as equal to any instruments of the twentieth century and as worthy of installation in the present church building respectively. This church was replaced in turn by the present structure in the early twentieth century. Construction of this Romanesque Revival building began under the direction of the DeCurtins family in 1910, and it was dedicated on October 8, 1911. A brick building supported by a stone foundation, the church includes architectural features such as two towers and a large rose window at the front, underneath which worshippers may enter the building through several large arched doors.


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