Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

St. Patrick's Roman Catholic Church (Madison, Wisconsin)

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NRHP Reference #
  
82000657

Phone
  
+1 740-852-0942

Architect
  
John Nader

Opened
  
1889

Added to NRHP
  
16 September 1982

St. Patrick's Roman Catholic Church (Madison, Wisconsin)

Location
  
404 E. Main St. Madison, Wisconsin

Address
  
61 S Union St, London, OH 43140, USA

Architectural style
  
Romanesque Revival architecture

Similar
  
Saint Raphael's Cathedral, Saint Patrick's Church, St Augustine Church, Our Lady of Loretto Roman C, Church of St Thomas the Apostle

St. Patrick's Roman Catholic Church is a historic Catholic church near Capitol Square in downtown Madison, Wisconsin. It was built to serve the former parish of St. Patrick, which was merged with the nearby parishes of St. Raphael and Holy Redeemer to form the new Cathedral Parish of St. Raphael after the old Saint Raphael's Cathedral was destroyed by arson in 2005.

Contents

In 1972, the church was designated a landmark by the Madison Landmarks Commission. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982 for its architectural significance.

Architecture

St. Patrick's is a rectagular Romanesque Revival church marked by a 100-ft tower on the right side of the front facade. Fr. Knox, the first pastor, commissioned the design from local architect John Nader; Nader had also designed St. Mary's (later Holy Mother of Consolation) church in Oregon, Wisconsin, where Knox had previously served.

The tower is topped with a narrow shingled dome, restng on eight small triangular pediments that link it to the octagonal wood frame structure below it, each side of which is lit with an oculus. The foundation is built of local sandstone, whereas the superstructure is built of cream-colored brick with stone trim and decorative brickwork. Each bay, separated by plain pilasters with stone caps, features a round-arched window.

The interior of the church has a plaster ceiling in a shallow, curved vault. The window bays are demarcated by half-vaults from the wall and ribs on the ceiling, connected with small pendentives. The current interior was installed during the 1957 renovation, including the predella and altar, communion rail, and parts of the side altars, done in three types of marble.

History

The parish was established to serve the largely Irish community living east of Capitol Square. St. Raphael's purchased two lots on east Main Street in 1886, and on May 24, 1888, the new parish of St. Patrick was formally established and took ownership of the land. Irish-born Fr. Patrick Knox was made pastor, and he set about the task of organizing the congregation and raising funds to build the new church, which was dedicated on Saint Patrick's Day of 1889. Archbishop Michael Heiss of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee was in attendance. In 1907, a Catholic school was opened, staffed by the Sinsinawa Dominican Sisters.

Although the church was renovated in 1957 and expanded its facilities in 1958, suburbanization, enrollment growth at the University of Wisconsin, and the growth of the state government were already depopulating the isthmus neighborhoods. The decline in parish and school rolls hastened with the opening of St. Peter's parish in 1967. In 1977, the school was closed and sold to the Salvation Army, and the former convent converted into a religious education center, then a service center for Catholic Charities USA.

By the 2000s, the priest shortage was making it difficult for the Diocese of Madison to keep its churches staffed. The merger of the three downtown parishes was announced in October 2007 and executed on July 1, 2008, part of the ongoing major realignment of parishes in the diocese.

References

St. Patrick's Roman Catholic Church (Madison, Wisconsin) Wikipedia