NRHP Reference # 75002086 Opened 1785 Added to NRHP 3 November 1975 | Built 1785 Address St Inigoes, MD 20684, USA Area 8,094 m² | |
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Similar St Ignatius Church, St Thomas Manor, St Francis Xavier Church a, St George's Episcopal, Christ Episcopal Church |
St. Ignatius Roman Catholic Church is a historic Roman Catholic church located at St. Inigoes, St. Mary's County, Maryland. It and its adjacent cemetery are situated on about two acres of land that are enclosed within a late-19th century iron fence. The church was constructed between 1785 and 1787, with the sacristy added in 1817. The church walls are 21 inches thick, of brick laid in Flemish bond. Atop the roof is a small wooden belfry that in 1933 replaced a larger one in this same location.
Contents
- First Catholic parish in English speaking North America
- Colonial relics
- Stained glass depiction of local Indian chief in battle
- References
St. Ignatius Roman Catholic Church was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975.
First Catholic parish in English speaking North America
It is a direct descendant of Maryland's first Roman Catholic Chapel at St. Mary's City, whose communicants formed the first nucleus of American Catholicism. The Parish, then connected to the one in St. Mary's City Maryland also fell under the umbrella of the first establishment of religious freedom in America, by George Calvert and his sons who established the new colony as a refuge for persecuted Catholics.
Colonial relics
The church contains artifacts from the original "The Ark" and "The Dove" sailing ships, which bore the first settlers to the Maryland colony in 1633-34.
Stained glass depiction of local Indian chief in battle
The church also has a very old stained glass depiction of the local paramount Indian Chief in battle with rival Indians. That Chief later converted to Christianity and was a member of the parish in the 1640s.