At 202 N. St. Mary's Street in San Antonio you can find this piece of history. This has been the site of St. Mary’s since the early years as a state when they started holding services in 1857. The current church was built in 1924 to replace the older church which had been destroyed in a flood in 1921. The THC marker number is 15600.
Marker Text:
After the Texas War for Independence, numerous immigrants, notably from
Ireland, Germany, and the Eastern United States, arrived in San Antonio.
The need to minister to these non-Hispanic Catholics prompted the Rt.
Rev. John M. Odin, first Bishop of Galveston, to establish a separate
church for them. In 1852 land at this site was purchased from the
heirs of Ambrocio Rodriguez, a veteran of the Battle of San Jacinto. In
1855 Bishop Odin authorized a building project, undertaken by the Rev.
J.M. DuBuis, who became first pastor of St. Mary's Parish and later
second Bishop of Galveston. A stately Gothic church building was
constructed and opened for worship in mid-1857, serving both English and
German-speaking congregations. (In 1869 St. Joseph's Church assumed the
ministry for the German Catholics.) On July 1, 1884, the oblates of
Mary Immaculate accepted responsibility for St. Mary's, with the Rev.
Richard J. Maloney as first oblate pastor. The old church building was
also the site of a seminary, an early free parochial school, the
publication of a major Catholic newspaper, and the founding of the St.
Vincent de Paul Society. In 1921 flood irreparably damaged the church
building. This Neo-Romanesque structure was dedicated in 1924. (1985)
Location:
202 N. St. Mary's Street, San Antonio, Tx. 78205
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