OPENED MISSION IN CELLAR
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After long negotiations, April 18,
1868, Lucien Lagier and Andre Marie Garin, both Oblates, arrived in Lowell. Sunday, the
following day, they began preaching a mission in the cellar of St. Patrick's church. After
a census, it was found the Franco-Americans numbered about 1,200, including about 600
girls. Sunday evening, Fr. Garin called a meeting of his future parishioners and in the
face of their enthusiasm, the next day he bought for $11,500 a former Unitarian church on
Lee Street owned by a group of Spiritualists. By the second week of the mission, he had
$3,000 collected for the down payment. Sunday, May 3, the first Mass was celebrated in St.
Joseph's church and the first Franco-American parish of the Archdiocese of Boston was
founded. Saint Joseph the Worker Shrine www.stjosephshrine.org The parish organized, Fr. Garin turned his attention to the temporal welfare of his flock. Knowing the people's attachment to their traditions, he organized on Wednesday evening, June 24, 1868, in the cellar of St. Joseph's church, a musical soiree on the occasion of St. Jean Baptiste day, the patronal feast of the French-Canadians. Afterwards the celebration would become an annual affair. At the celebration in 1870, the first French play in Lowell "Le Proscrit" was presented in Huntington Hall. |