Rahul Sharma (Editor)

St. Peter's Church (Richmond, Virginia)

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Affiliation
  
Roman Catholic

Direction of façade
  
southwest

Area
  
800 m²

Phone
  
+1 804-643-4315

Status
  
Active

Opened
  
1834

Architectural style
  
Romanesque architecture

Added to NRHP
  
23 June 1969

St. Peter's Church (Richmond, Virginia)

Location
  
800 E. Grace St., Richmond, Virginia, United States of America

Location
  
800 E. Grace St., Richmond, Virginia

Address
  
800 E Grace St, Richmond, VA 23219, USA

Similar
  
Church of the Sacred Heart, Cathedral of the Sacred H, St Vincent de Paul Catholic, Church of the Sacred Heart Par, St Paul's Catholic Church

St. Peter's Church of Richmond, Virginia, United States, located at 800 E. Grace St., is the oldest Catholic Church in Richmond. From the erecting of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Richmond in 1850 until the completion of the Cathedral of the Sacred Heart in 1906, St. Peter's Church served as the cathedral and seat of the diocese. Originally, the church was predominantly Irish American. The church continues to serve a congregation of approximately 300 today.

After the Civil War, St. Peter's basement hosted the city's "colored Catholics." The 13-member congregation included Emily Mitchell (Indian-looking and born into slavery in 1824, brought from Baltimore and who later served Bishop James Gibbons), Julia Grandison (baptised in Georgia and brought to Richmond at age 9), Moses Marx (who began driving Bishop John Keane's buggy at age 12), Liza Marx (who learned to read and reminded the judge reading her mistress' will that he forgot the lines bequeathing money to Elizabeth Thompson and her next child of issue), and Julia Flippen and her children. When the congregation had increased to about 50, including children, Bishop Keane signed a deed for what became St. Joseph's Church on Shockoe Hill, also invited the Josephite Fathers from Mill Hill, London, for help in furthering that apostolate.

References

St. Peter's Church (Richmond, Virginia) Wikipedia