St. Joseph Cathedral | |
---|---|
39°57′48″N 82°59′41″W / 39.96327°N 82.99465°WCoordinates: 39°57′48″N 82°59′41″W / 39.96327°N 82.99465°W | |
Location | 212 E. Broad St. Columbus, Ohio |
Country | United States |
Denomination | Roman Catholic Church |
Website | www |
History | |
Founded | 1866 |
Architecture | |
Architect(s) | Michael Harding Robert T. Brookes |
Style | Gothic Revival |
Completed | 1878 |
Specifications | |
Capacity | 700 |
Length | 185 feet (56 m) |
Width | 92 feet (28 m) |
Materials | Ashlar |
Administration | |
Diocese | Diocese of Columbus |
Clergy | |
Bishop(s) | Most Rev. Frederick F. Campbell |
Rector | Very Rev. Michael J. Lumpe |
St. Joseph Cathedral is a Catholic cathedral located in Columbus, Ohio, United States which serves as the seat of the Diocese of Columbus.
St. Joseph Parish was founded by members of St. Patrick’s Parish in Columbus in 1866 to alleviate overcrowding. Its pastor, the Rev. Edward M. Fitzgerald, began to plan for the church, raised money, formed a building committee and secured property on Broad Street and Fifth for $13,500. The committee chose name St. Joseph for the new church, and selected Michael Harding as architect. Contractor John McCabe began construction June 6, 1866 with John Stoddard engaged as mason. Auxiliary Bishop Sylvester H. Rosecrans of Cincinnati laid the cornerstone November 11, 1866.
In 1867, Father Fitzgerald became Bishop of Little Rock and Bishop Rosecrans succeeded him as pastor of St. Patrick’s. On March 3, 1868, Pope Pius IX established the Diocese of Columbus and named Bishop Rosecrans as its first bishop. He selected St. Joseph’s as the cathedral for the new diocese.
Bishop Rosecrans named Robert T. Brookes to succeed Harding as architect and altered the original design of a brick structure to stone to befit its elevated status as a cathedral. Because of this, workers demolished the existing foundation walls rebuilt them deeper. Retired General William Rosecrans, older brother of Bishop Rosecrans, came to Columbus to assist with some of the design plans in the summer of 1870.
Bishop Rosecrans celebrated the first Mass in the unfinished cathedral on Christmas 1872. Soon after, Cardinal John McCloskey of New York donated marble, from the same quarry used in the construction of St. Patrick's Cathedral, New York, to construct a high altar and side altars. In 1873, parish purchased the home of Joseph Gundersheimer, across Broad Street between Sixth and Seventh Streets, to house the clergy. It served until the diocese could construct a rectory attached to the cathedral.