This is St. Joseph's Polish Catholic Church in North Denver. The church is just a couple of blocks away from another Catholic Church., Holy Rosary Catholic Church, and a couple of blocks away from a Russian Orthodox Cathedral, reflecting the ethnic make up fo this community at one time. Today, the neighborhood is largely Hispanic, but this church still offers Masses in Polish in addition to English. the school next to it was flying a Polish and US flag on the day that I went by. The church was built in 1902.
A blog dedicated to photographs of churches and church architecture in the Rocky Mountain West.
Showing posts with label Slavic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Slavic. Show all posts
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
Holy Transfiguration of Christ Orthodox Cathedral, Denver Colorado
This is the Holy Transfiguration of Christ Cathedral in North Denver. This Cathedral is a Cathedral of the Orthodox Church in America, a church which traces its origin to the Russian Orthodox Church after the Russian Revolution. The particular neighborhood this church is in must have been heavily Slavic at one time, as there is a Catholic Church which was built for a largely Polish population all within a couple of blocks, with a third Catholic Church nearby.. Recently I observed a Polish flag, flying with the US flag, on a Catholic school in the neighborhood, but are the area is largely Hispanic today.
There are two bodies that descend from the Russian Orthodox Church in the US today, and I frankly don't quite understand the relationship between the two, but this Cathedral in Denver reflects part of Denver's Russian Orthodox community. The church dates to 1898.
Friday, March 11, 2011
Holy Rosary Catholic Church, Denver Colorado
This church in North Denver is just off of Washington Street and just north of I70. I didn't realize it at the time I took the photograph, but St. Joseph Polish Catholic Church and Holy Transfiguration Russian Orthodox Church are within a three block distance of this one. Had I known that, I would have added them to the photographs as well.
This church was originally in a southern Slavic neighborhood of Denver and was built for the South Slav population there (explaining, I suspect, why there would be a Polish Catholic church just a block away). I am sure that this is no longer the population base of the church, but it is interesting to note that. The church was built in 1918, just after World war One.
A nice history of this parish can be found here.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)