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St. Patrick's Catholic Church (St. Patrick, Ohio)

St. Patrick Catholic Church and Rectory
Site of St. Patrick Catholic Church in St. Patrick, Ohio.jpg
Memorial on the site of St. Patrick's Church
St. Patrick's Catholic Church (St. Patrick, Ohio) is located in Ohio
St. Patrick's Catholic Church (St. Patrick, Ohio)
St. Patrick's Catholic Church (St. Patrick, Ohio) is located in the US
St. Patrick's Catholic Church (St. Patrick, Ohio)
Location Hoying and Wright-Puthoff Rds., St. Patrick, Ohio
Coordinates 40°22′13″N 84°17′19″W / 40.37028°N 84.28861°W / 40.37028; -84.28861Coordinates: 40°22′13″N 84°17′19″W / 40.37028°N 84.28861°W / 40.37028; -84.28861
Area Less than 1 acre (0.40 ha)
Built 1915
Architect Louis Ley
Architectural style Italianate
MPS Cross-Tipped Churches of Ohio TR
NRHP Reference # 79002836
Added to NRHP July 26, 1979

St. Patrick's Catholic Church was a Roman Catholic church in northwestern Shelby County, Ohio, United States. Located in the southwestern corner of Van Buren Township, the church sat at the intersection of Hoying and Wright-Puthoff Roads in the unincorporated community of St. Patrick.

St. Patrick parish was organized in 1862 among a primarily Irish population. Although the region was settled primarily by German farmers, the members at St. Patrick were generally laborers who had been recruited to participate in the construction of the Miami and Erie Canal through western Shelby County. Starting one year later, the parish was served by priests from the Missionaries of the Precious Blood; these priests were based in Minster, nearly five miles to the northwest. The parish built a log church in 1863; it was replaced by a frame church in 1871. Members in the vicinity of McCartyville to the northeast were created a separate parish in 1882, weakening the original parish.

By the 1910s, the old frame building had proved insufficient for the church's needs. Consequently, the parish arranged for the erection of its third and final church, a Flemish bond brick structure constructed in a transitional Italianate style of architecture. This building was based on a foundation of concrete and a gabled tile roof; the rectangular church featured a square bell tower on its southwestern corner. The interior featured frescoes and a prominent statue of Saint Patrick (the patron saint of Ireland); it was lit by multiple windows of stained glass. As a large church in a rural setting served by priests of the Society of the Precious Blood, St. Patrick's was closely connected to many other churches in western Ohio: wide areas of western Ohio that were primarily settled by Catholics feature large churches at sparsely-populated crossroads. While most of these churches are constructed in the Gothic Revival style of architecture, some of the newer churches of the region — including St. Patrick's — appear in a variety of styles; St. Patrick's was one of the few that lacked the high steeples of the Gothic Revival structures. The leading role of these churches in western Shelby County and the lands somewhat farther west has caused the region to be nicknamed the "Land of the Cross-Tipped Churches."


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