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St. Vincent De Paul Catholic Church (Cape Girardeau, Missouri)

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Built
  
1853

Opened
  
1853

Added to NRHP
  
12 April 1982

NRHP Reference #
  
82003131

Area
  
4,900 m²

St. Vincent De Paul Catholic Church (Cape Girardeau, Missouri) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Location
  
131 South Main St., Cape Girardeau, Missouri

Architect
  
Thomas,Waryng Walsh; Lansman,John

Architectural style
  
Greek Revival, Other, English Perpendicular

Similar
  
St Peter the Apostle Catholic, Cathedral of St Mary of the An, St Agnes Cathedral, Rosemary Berkel and Harry L, Show Me Center

St. Vincent De Paul Catholic Church is a historic church at 131 South Main Street in Cape Girardeau, Missouri.

Contents

Architecture

The church was built in the English Perpendicular Gothic Revival style using red brick with sandstone trim on a foundation of sandstone. It was designed by Irish-born architect Thomas Waryng Walsh.

History

St. Vincent De Paul is situated on the site of Louis Lorimier's Red House. In 1821, priests began making periodic visits to settlers in the area. By 1833, the land where the church stands today had been secured, and by 1836 Cape Girardeau had its first permanent priest, Reverend John Odin. The cornerstone for the church was laid in April 1838 by Bishop Rosati of St. Louis. The church was named for the Vincentian fathers who founded it as well as St. Vincent's College. This church was destroyed by a tornado in 1850. The present church was constructed on the original foundations of the first church, with construction beginning in 1851 and finishing in 1853. The church tower has been struck twice by lightening and destroyed in 1912. The church was added to the National Register in 1982. It is located in the Courthouse-Seminary Neighborhood Historic District.

References

St. Vincent De Paul Catholic Church (Cape Girardeau, Missouri) Wikipedia


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