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St. Stanislaus Seminary

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Built
  
1840

Opened
  
1840

Added to NRHP
  
22 September 1972

NRHP Reference #
  
72001491

Area
  
4 ha

St. Stanislaus Seminary 1bpblogspotcomdrsACX1RqfUTUiTUali3AIAAAAAAA

Location
  
700 Howdershell Rd., Florissant, Missouri

Architectural style
  
Greek Revival architecture

Similar
  
St Stanislaus Kostka C, Old St Ferdinand Shrine, St Francis Xavier College

St. Stanislaus Seminary is a former Society of Jesus (Jesuits) seminary in Florissant, Missouri. It was the longest continuously operated Jesuit novitiate in the United States.

Contents

Working life

The seminary was founded in 1823 as some log buildings and a large farm to feed the missionaries. It was named for Stanislaus Kostka. The main building, now known as the Old Rock Building, was built in 1840 from limestone quarried by the Jesuits. Pierre-Jean De Smet was based in St. Stanislaus Seminary for some years. Another early student was Peter Joseph Arnoudt.

The seminary was closed in 1971 due to a lack of religious vocations. Two years earlier, it had already transferred its collegiate program to Saint Louis University. Most of what was left of the property, 35 acres (140,000 m2), was sold to The Missouri District of The United Pentecostal Church International, and the property now houses Urshan College and Urshan Graduate School of Theology. The Old Rock Building and 4 acres (16,000 m2) of land remained Jesuit property until 2003.

Museum

In 1973, the seminary became the Museum of the Western Jesuit Missions, but closed again in 2001, the museum moving to Saint Louis University to become part of the Museum of Art there.

The property

The property was largely self-sufficient in its day. The current building was built by the seminarians and brothers with limestone from the banks of the Missouri River, and it has walls 3 feet (0.91 m) thick. The wooden parts came from walnut, logged from the property by the Jesuits, and the bricks were also made on site. The seminary fed itself with an orchard, a chicken ranch, a cattle barn, wheat fields, vineyards, a butcher shop, a creamery and a bakery. The former farm property is now owned by Saint Louis County, who leases it to the Missouri Department of Conservation as a conservation area.

References

St. Stanislaus Seminary Wikipedia