- Rev. Msgr. Edgar Kurt, “Parish Profile #4: Holy Cross, Holy Cross.” Dubuque: The Witness, 21 December 1986.
]]>“Holy Cross is one of several parishes that began about the same time. Bishop Mathias Loras mentions in an 1842 letter that he was called to the Sweeney home in Concord Township to minister to a dying man. While there, he was asked to bless some ground in which the man could be buried and directed the sons to prepare an oak cross. It was raised upon the hill where church and town now stand, and a monument in the cemetery commemorates that holy cross. In 1843 a log church was built. With a deed signed by President Zachary Taylor in 1849, Bishop Loras secured title to the 40 acres of land. It was the bishop’s policy to provide sufficient acreage for the pastor’s horses and cow in rural parishes of his young diocese.”
- Rev. Msgr. Edgar Kurt, “Parish Profile #4: Holy Cross, Holy Cross.” Dubuque: The Witness, 21 December 1986.
Centennial Booklet (1 document)
Centennial Holy Cross Church 1988 (2 documents)
Centennial Souvenir Church 1945 (1 document)
Earl’s Plumbing and Heating Proposal (1 compilation)
Fr. Wilke History Letter
Financial Statement (1 collection)
History (4 documents)
Letter to Parents regarding Catholic Education Fr. Augustine Bomholt ca. 1930-1940 (1 document)
Pastor Cards (1 collection)
Photographs Church Interior, Church Exterior, Way Teacher Residence, Rectory (4 documents)
Timeline Card (1 document)
- Rev. Msgr. Edgar Kurt, “Parish Profile #232: Holy Family Parish, Mason City.” Dubuque: The Witness, 14 July 1991.
]]>“Parishioners of Mason City’s second Catholic parish gathered with their founding pastor, Father Edward J. Dougherty, in the public library for their first Mass on an October Sunday in 1908. Construction of the church began the following spring and they celebrated Mass in their new church on Christmas 1909. The church was dedicated to the Holy Family the next year by Bishop John P. Carroll of Helena, Montana. He had been a companion of Father Dougherty on the Archdiocesan Mission Band.”
- Rev. Msgr. Edgar Kurt, “Parish Profile #232: Holy Family Parish, Mason City.” Dubuque: The Witness, 14 July 1991.
Anniversary 50th 1959 Booklet (2 booklets)
Annual History and Guild Summary 1969, 1987-1992 (4 compilations)
Articles of Reincorporation (1 document)
History (2 compilations)
Holy Family Church Booklets ca. 1951 (3 booklets)
Holy Family Parish in Mason City Descriptions and Photographs (2 documents)
I.C. Mission Information (3 documents)
Information Concerning Holy Family from 1937-1961 (1 compilation)
Pastor Cards (1 collection)
Pastor List (1 document)
Photographs:
Church or school with red negative (1 document)
Retouched Copy of Church (1 document)
Timeline 1908-1991 (6 documents)
“History of Holy Family Parish, Mason City,” The Witness, 4 December 1933.
Scholl, Stephanie, “Food drive tops record, but needs not fully met: Mason City volunteers carry on Thanksgiving project,” The Witness, 30 November 2008, p. 3.- Kurt, Rev. Msgr. Edgar, Parish Profile #140, The Witness, September 10, 1989.
- Kurt, Rev. Msgr. Edgar, Parish Profile #140, The Witness, September 10, 1989.
Hanus, Rev. Jerome, O.S.B., “Decree Canonically Establishing the Territorial Parish of Holy Family, New Hampton, Iowa,” The Witness, 12 May 2002, p. 2.
Remembrance of Mission, St. Therese of Lisiuex, The Reverend J.M. Stanton, St. Joseph Church of New Hampton, October 17-22, 143, from The E.M. Lohmann Co., St. Paul, Minn. (1 document)
Warranty Deed, 2004 (1 document)
Hanus, Rev. Jerome, O.S.B., “Decree Canonically Establishing the Territorial Parish of Holy Family, New Hampton, Iowa,” The Witness, 12 May 2002, p. 2.
Remembrance of Mission, St. Therese of Lisiuex, The Reverend J.M. Stanton, St. Joseph Church of New Hampton, October 17-22, 143, from The E.M. Lohmann Co., St. Paul, Minn. (1 document)
Warranty Deed, 2004 (1 document)“Holy Family Parish owes its beginning and many years of its existence to its close neighbors, the monks of New Melleray Abbey. Because the people had little funds and the monastery wished to help them have their own church, one of the monks appealed to his wealthy sister in Europe for a donation which made possible the building of a small stone church. The parish continued to be taken care of by the monks, and a larger church became necessary. So a frame church was built at the north end of the present cemetery. That church was replaced 20 years later by the present brick structure, which was dedicated to the Holy Family in 1889 by Bishop Hennessy.”
- Rev. Msgr. Edgar Kurt, “Parish Profile #17: Holy Family Parish, New Melleray.” Dubuque: The Witness, 29 March 1987.Announcement for the Witness regarding recalling New Melleray Abbey from pastoral work of the surrounding neighborhood and the appointment of Rev. Kraphfl to Holy Family, 25 December 1952 (2 documents)
Centennial 150th Liturgy (1 document)
Clergy List 1910-1972 (3 documents)
Freeman, E. Brendan, New Melleray History including Bishop Loras’s role, 2 December 1986 (6 documents)
History (2 collections – 16 documents)
Parish Quota for National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception 11 July 1953 Biskup Letter (1 document)
Peosta and Holy Family Booklet to Fr. Loras, 2009 – Includes History, Family Directory Pictures ca. 1870, Early Peosta History Horse ads (5 documents)
Pictorial Atlas of Dubuque County, Iowa – 1979, Compiled and Published by Title Atlas Co., Inc. Minnesota, on New Melleray Abbey and Our Lady of the Mississippi Abby, Dubuque, Iowa. (1 document)
Souvenir of the Mission: Passionist Fathers, Holy Family Aug. 27th-Sep. 3rd 1950. (1 document)
“Centennial,” Dubuque: The Witness, Vol. LXIX No. 25, 13 August 1989. (2 documents)
Colton, Ray E., “Penetrating the Silent Halls of the Monastery Near Dubuque, Iowa,” The Des Moines Register, 20 January 1935.
“Holy Family Parish will celebrate 150th,” The Witness, 25 June 2000.
“Trappists in Iowa Withdraw from Parish Work, Ending Link with Days of Pioneers in West,” Washington D.C.: Domestic N.C.W.C. News Service, 29 December 1952 (2 documents)- Rev. Msgr. Edgar Kurt, “Parish Profile #105: Holy Name Parish, West Union.” Dubuque: The Witness, 25 December 1988.
]]>“The first resident pastor was Father Patrick McMahon, coming to West Union in April 1879. It was he who began sacramental records. He lived with the John Owens family during his one-year pastorate. Father Laurence H. Burns came in May 1880 and immediately purchased a house, to which an addition was built a year later. He remained five years, also attending Wadena. West Union pastors continued to care for the Wadena Catholics until 1899.”
- Rev. Msgr. Edgar Kurt, “Parish Profile #105: Holy Name Parish, West Union.” Dubuque: The Witness, 25 December 1988.
Annual History 1963-1964, 1979-1980, 1983-1984, 1985-1986 (1 document, 3 packets)
Cluster Agreement – St. Joseph the Worker Cluster July 2010 (1 packet)
History (1 packet)
History 1937-1961 (1 packet)
Holy Name Catholic School Reunion 26 July 2003 (1 document)
Holy Name Parish Handbook (2 booklets)
Parish Council Meeting Agenda 1980 (1 document)
Pastor/Priest Cards (1 set)
Pastor List and Major Developments 1937-1958 (2 documents)
Pastor/Priest Timeline 1861-1987 (2 documents)
Photographs: Church 1961, Rectory 1961, School 1961 (3 photographs)
Rev. Kenneth M. Ryan Letter regarding enclosed photographs 1961 (2 documents)
Rosary Society End of Year Report 1978 (1 packet)
Vocations List (1 document)
“Holy Name Catholic School Reunion.” West Union Newspaper, 26 July 2003, p. 1-2.
Van Sickle, Mike. “New west Union church to welcome parishioners March 4.” West Union: Union News, ca. 2001, p. 1, A-3.