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History of St. Joseph's Church
In the 1840's, the United States was still a young
country attracting immigrants from every corner of the earth.
In
Lancaster County, the German, Swiss, Italian and Irish flocked to the
area to escape famine or religious persecution in their homelands.
German and Irish Catholics attended nearby St. Mary's Church. The
non-English speaking Germans, who had begun to out-number the Irish at
St. Mary's, wanted to worship in their native tongue. So, in
1849, they
petitioned Archbishop Francis Kenrick, of Philadelphia, to organize a
German parish in Lancaster.
Land on a hill southwest of St. Mary's was purchased for $260 and
construction of a church was started. The street on which the
property
faced was named Saint Joseph Street at that time.
The first church built for the parish was small, seating
about 400. By 1871, a steady stream of German Catholic immigrants
had
settled in Lancaster and, in 1885, a new, larger church was under
construction to accommodate the large congregation.
It is believed the Germans were drawn to the area around the church
because it reminded them of the small Bavarian and Hessian villages of
their homeland. These immigrants were an important source of
labor for
nearby mills and factories. Eventually, the area became known as
Cabbage Hill because of all the backyard gardens that grew the staple
of the German diet.
Today, the liturgy is no longer celebrated in German, and Cabbage Hill
is home to a diverse group of nationalities. Many parishioners
can
still trace their roots to the early days of the parish.
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