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By Monsignor Noel C. Burtenshaw
Maybe you are too new to the North Georgia area. Maybe you came
here to be near Atlanta. So maybe you have never set foot, never have even
heard of Washington, Georgia or Wilkes County.
Well, if you ever go and you have some kind of heart for a little
history, you will find yourself in heaven. Because the origins, the beginnings
of the Catholic Church in Georgia, are there just 100 miles southwest of
Atlanta an easy interstate ride and a most rewarding one.
First you really have to meet the pastor. He is Father Edward
Randall, an Oblate Father originally from Lowell, Massachusetts. You cant
miss his Kennedyese accent and hell burn your ear off with stories about
Mayor Curley and the honest type of crook he was.
But theres more to Father Ed. His parish is eight counties
long and wide. He is a hard traveling country pastor but more than that. He
gives art lessons twice a week, he flies a plane when he gets a chance, and he
puts additions on his country churches and rectories WITH HIS OWN HANDS
plus a little help from his friends.
The flying I have kinda quit, says the rugged looking
pastor, but the painting classes are going great and I still put up a few
bricks here and there. His classes in art are on Saturday morning for
children and Tuesday evening for adults. Mostly his students are non-Catholics
from the community.
In his beautiful little light-filled church in Washington along
with his new assistant, also a Bostonian, Father John Morrissey, we met one
morning. Father Ed was running late. I was over in Thompson, he
apologetically explained, and got a call from the local NAACP man. We had
to chat. But he was now anxious to get going and show me around. I was
excited too. It had been a long time.
We first visited the most famous building in Washington, the old
orphanage, now a Christian academy. The only relic left of the screaming active
orphaned Catholic boys is the big bell still standing on the grounds. In 1967
the famous home for boys closed its door for the last time ending a history of
90 years of charity and the home became St. Josephs Village as it moved
to Southwest Atlanta.
I saw where the chapel had been, the sturdy old walls, and maybe
as we looked in we heard the clamor of boys feet and the swish of the St.
Josephs Sisters habits as boys and nuns began a new day. When
it closed, said Father Ed there were about 70 boys here. They
certainly helped the parish numerically. Now in Washington we have only 25
families, about 50 people at Mass on Sundays.
Leaving the old home, we looked at the great bell. We
eventually got someone who could move it, said the pastor but they
wouldnt give it to us. They use it now to call the students.
I was anxious to get to Sharon, about 15 miles away, but first, a
quick visit to the Catholic cemetery in Washington.
History bulges through the walls. First of all, you learn the
first church for the parish was built here. And it wasnt called St.
Josephs. It was St. Patricks. The orphanage that later arrived was
operated by St. Joseph Sisters. And since the church moved to the home, the
good ladies had their way (whats new) and St. Patrick got relegated.
The headstones tell the story. Young sisters, victims of far-off
plagues in 1860-70-80. The graves are well-kept. The centerpiece of the
cemetery is a final resting place of a man who made the church and the original
work of the orphanage a reality, Father James M. OBrien. His headstone
reads Erected by the voluntary contributions of the people
irrespective of creed as a tribute of love and respect to the memory of
this noble man, the life-long friend of the orphan, the true priest of God, who
lies buried here. Born Jan. 28, 1842, Died May 11, 1900.
We set out for Sharon. Sharon is in the next county, Taliaferro.
The natives pronounce it Tolliver. Even in daylight you get the
feeling that this is a ghost town. A wind would probably blow sage-brush down
the little main street, just like Tombstone in the movies.
It only has about 100 people now, says Father Randall
the bank is closed, not much doing and we get 7 people at Mass on Sunday.
But at Easter and Christmas we sometimes get 14. Hes smiling, but I
know hes not kidding. Fourteen is a full house in Sharon.
You see the tall white structure as you approach the town.
Its the Church of the Purification of Our Lady. It was built here in
1860, when Sharon was a thriving railroad town. The surrounding plantations
brought their big money maker King Cotton to Sharon, and the
steel horse sent it up North.
Standing beside the church are the remains of the Catholic Academy
which once thrived here. It was built in 1818 by the settlers and operated by
the Sisters of St. Joseph of Georgia. Thats correct, a religious
community was actually founded here in Sharon. When the town died and the
Catholic community moved, the sisters became a part of the St. Josephs
Sisters of Carondolet.
But the history goes even deeper. Just down the road, about five
miles south in a place called Locust Grove, the very first Catholic church in
the entire state was built in 1792 by Father John LeMoin, a French priest.
Father Randall and Father Morrissey show you the interior of the
old wooden structure. Look at the hole in the ceiling, says Father
Ed, the chimney for the old pot-bellied stove went through there. And
look at the old organ the petals are wind pumps. It still works
fine. However, the magnificent 7 on Sundays dont always sing both
priests assured me.
We left the ghostly streets of the old railroad town and headed
west 35 miles to Thompson and the growth area of the parish. I live in
Thompson says Father Randall. We have a lot of activity and good
growth. We are up to 100 families at Queen of the Angels and more on the
way.
The church sits prominently on the Washington Highway. Thirty
miles further is the renowned city of Augusta, golf capitol of the world and
home of the Masters. Augusta is growing in the direction of Thompson.
Lunch was provided by an active group of parish ladies led by
Janet Chamberlain and Mary Roper, a transplant from Atlanta.
The parish is busy preparing for the Pilgrim Virgin
statue, said the pastor. Its going to be a great event for
us.
The final mission of this historic parish is in Elberton, St.
Marys Church. This Georgia town is also a center of historic note. It is
the granite capitol of the world, with rich quarries of valuable granite cut
and used throughout the nation. Many Italians came to work with the stone
years ago, said Father Randall but there were no priests, no Mass
and they were lost to the Church. But some have made it back.
There are thirty families in Elberton. The CCD clan meets for
instruction on Saturdays. We have 3 children, says Father Morrissey,
but well grow.
It was originally St. Patricks; now its St.
Josephs and still standing proudly. Many historical moments have been
seen by this parish and its people who have served so faithfully over the
years.
It is our mother church. From those roots, the vital, vibrant tree
has grown and beautifully flowered. We look back at historic St. Josephs
with pride. |