Past and Prologue: Mechanicville Catholic History
Part III of III: 1952 – 2002
By Dr. Paul Loatman-City Historian
September 17, 2002
In its first century, Catholicism took root and grew in Mechanicville by
transplanting an unchanging religious tradition to a new environment being
shaped by the dynamic of Irish, Italian, and Lithuanian immigrants moving into
an expanding milltown. In the next fifty years, by contrast, the dynamic of
change came not so much from the host community as from the institution of the
Church itself.
Younger Catholics may shake their heads in both bewilderment and bemusement upon
reading this, but the typical Catholic accepted a number of adages as “eternal
truths” half a century ago:
Once a priest, always a priest.
The Pope is always an Italian.
Marriage is forever.
The Mass always was, and always will be, said in Latin.
The last fifty years have demonstrated that these truisms may be neither eternal
nor true, at least in the manner in which they were previously understood.
Disproving or modifying our understanding of their applicability to Catholicism
may have been the least of it because, while that process may have been
earth-shaking enough, even more profound changes were at work that would
drastically change the way parishoners viewed their religion and the roles they
were expected to play in it. Most profoundly, the Church emerged from Vatican
Council II (1962-1965) with a rediscovered sense of itself as “the people of
God” where the laity were no longer expected to be merely passive spectators
seeking private piety watching a mysterious ceremony which was celebrated in
what was then proudly described as a “dead language.” Hereafter, they were
called to be active participants, so enlivened by the communal experience of
Sunday Masses that they would put the Faith into practice in homes, schools, and
workplaces throughout the week. The era of the Baltimore Catechism’s rote
responses to pre-digested questions formulated 150 years ago was over; a renewed
interest in Biblical study, Church history, and liturgical renewal was called
for- and it would involve the laity as much as, if not more so, than the clergy.
But, what did this mean in practical terms, right here in River City?
When the Sisters of Atonement were brought here by Fr. Serafino Aurigemma in
1947 to conduct the Assumption parish’s catechetical program, one of their
primary responsibilities involved “preparing the children” for First Communion,
just as their Josephite opposite numbers had been doing for two decades with the
children in St. Paul’s parish. When the Atonement sisters left Mechanicville
thirty years later, First Communion preparations entailed the religious
education of the parents as much as the children. The responsibility for this
also had by then devolved onto a catechetical program run almost entirely by the
laity, as it is now, with the nuns acting as much as coordinators as teachers.
Today, this approach has been extended to the point where some parents have
assumed full responsibility for the catechesis of their children in a
“home-based” program engaging the family at an even higher level of
responsibility.
In the early twentieth century, sodalities such as the Sacred Heart Society, the
Holy Name Society, the Catholic Daughters and many others were founded by
Mechanicville’s two Catholic congregations so that parishioners- cut off from
the larger society both by their own parochialism and the hostility of the
larger society- could socialize within a context that would reinforce their
Faith. These organizations provided the only outlets where the laity were
permitted to assume leadership roles in the Church.
Today, though many of these organizations continue to exist, the role of the
laity has expanded dramatically. Not only are they permitted to assume
leadership roles; their new understanding of themselves as “the people of God”
demands that they do so. What is now taken for granted in CCD, Bible studies,
Prayer and Worship, the Parish Council, Pre-Cana Preparation, Hospitality,
Social Action and many other committees- i.e., the participation and leadership
of the laity- would have been dreaded by both clergy and laity alike fifty years
ago. Although he was merely acting as a harbinger of the future, when Fr. Alfred
Monte encouraged a group of “Concerned Assumption Parishoners” in 1971 to
organize themselves into a parish council, he was acting in a manner that would
have been regarded as subversive by priests and laity alike only a few years
earlier.
In another regard, Catholicism in Mechanicville and America at large re-oriented
itself toward the larger society when it discovered the Kennedy family living in
the White House and Pope John XXIII in the Vatican. The Greek-derivative term
“ecumenical” became a word Christians of all persuasions learned to both spell
and pronounce by the late 1960s. But, before local Catholics could embrace
Mechanicville’s other Christians (Baptists, Episcopalians, Methodists, and
Presbyterians), they had to learn to deal with fellow Catholics worshipping
across the street from each other. Fifty years ago, rare was the child baptized
in either local Catholic congregation who had parents from different parishes,
much less from different Faiths. A possible watershed event, now long-since
forgotten, occurred at a week-long joint parish mission conducted in 1969.
Sponsored by the Diocese, it attracted hundreds of Catholics from both parishes,
and while a good deal of self-examination was encouraged, it focused as much on
the community at large as it did on the individual. Large-group and small-group
discussions examined issues such as the appropriate role the laity should play
in liturgical celebrations and parish councils, adjustment to the novelty of
hearing the Mass said in English rather than in Latin, the changing roles of
priests and religious, and raft of other issues raised by the aftermath of
Vatican II. All of this was followed by a communal penance service-a first for
most parishioners. Because sessions were held on alternate days in both
churches, the mission marked the first time many Mechanicville Catholics had
crossed the invisible line of demarcation which had separated the two
congregations for sixty years.
Five years later when a management-consultant firm advised the Augustinian Order
to close its upstate New York parishes in the face of declining vocations, a
proposed merger of Mechanicville’s two Catholic parishes received a chilly
reception at a public meeting attended by a crowd of nearly a thousand. The
editor of the Augustinian Provincial Newsletter, following a tour of upstate New
York in the summer of 1974, noted that a majority of priests opposed closing any
parishes and “those who favored it were largely ignorant of the situation in the
… area.” There matters stood for nearly three years.
When the merger issue re-emerged in 1977, petitions with
over 1,000 signatures of Assumption parishioners protesting the move were
presented to Fr. Howard Hubbard, Acting Head and soon-to-be named Bishop of the
Albany Diocese. Although telling the local press that a final decision in the
matter would not be subject to any “voting procedure,” Hubbard went on to note
that the petition raised “real concerns,” given the fact that the signatures of
more than half of the adult members of the parish had been collected in less
than three days. He also stated that “the importance of identity in one’s whole
life process … cannot be minimized.” Assumption parishioners stated that
they merely wished to preserve a dynamic institution whose extinction threatened
their ethnic identity and “sense of shared experience.”
Following meetings with representative groups on both sides of the issue, the
newly-appointed Bishop won concurrence from the Augustinian Order that it would
continue to staff the newly-merged Assumption-St. Paul Parish. Yet, though
united, the merger agreement stipulated that both parish’s church buildings
continue to be used for daily and weekly services, a practice followed today.
Additionally, an Ethnic Affairs Committee was to be incorporated into the
organizational structure of the parish.
The merger issue may have been unnecessarily complicated by the enthusiasm for
“architectural correctness” that came into vogue in the aftermath of Vatican II.
Gratian, a twelfth century religious commentator, proclaimed that “paintings are
the Bible of the laity,” and throughout the ages, Catholic churches have been
noted for their murals, statues, and paintings. However, it became au courant
during the 1970s to subscribe to the dictate that such visual representations
had been intended for pre-literate congregations and were now passé. In keeping
with this philosophy, when the Church of the Assumption was “renovated” at the
time of the merger, all statuary and pictorial traces of its heritage as an
Italian ethnic parish were removed- Sts. Rocco, Anthony, and associates being
relegated to exile in the belfry. However, when St. Paul’s Church was renovated
fifteen years later, the same diocesan architectural consultants who had
provided advice on Assumption’s renovations issued mea culpas for their past
over-zealousness in favoring the austere look. In contrast, they now recommended
that St. Paul’s statuary and paintings be restored to their original brilliance
and given added prominence through the use of special lighting to highlight
them. The irony of the contrasting approaches taken with the two restorations
was not lost on everyone.
In other cases, enthusiasm for change may have overstepped its bounds here and
in other parishes throughout the country. Older Catholics today nod in
recognition when listening to well-known comedians jest about the legendary
sense of guilt Catholics formerly embraced, a product of parental and religious
training that encouraged them to go to Confession weekly, or at least monthly.
Little wonder then that it was the rule of thumb in the 1950s that St. Paul’s
and Assumption conducted four-hour weekly Saturday Penance services. However,
such practices went by the boards in the 1970s. The recent trend toward
infrequent confession led Fr. Frank Gallogoly (who served here both as an
Associate and as Pastor) to express amazement at how angelic Mechanicville
Catholics had become in the interim between his first and second local
assignments in the 1970s and 1990s.
Other recent changes have struck a chord of regret rather than discord. After
more than six decades of service, St. Paul’s Parochial School closed its doors
in 1988. During its years of service, many of its graduates had achieved
academic distinction, often excelling when they went on to Mechanicville’s and
other area high schools. Its fate came on the heels of other school closings
that occurred throughout the diocese, attributed in large part to the inability
of parishes to incur the costs of hiring paid lay faculty to replace the
teaching orders of nuns whose volunteer efforts had previously subsidized
Catholic education throughout the diocese. In the case of St. Paul’s, the
school’s financial problems were exacerbated by the fact that they arose at a
period of economic decline in the area.
In another regard, Mechanicville Catholics took pride in the prominence achieved
by native-son, Monsignor John Nolan, who for many years represented the Papacy
in the Middle East as the head of the Catholic Near East Welfare Association. An
outstanding homilist, parishoners always looked forward to hearing him preach at
Mass during his numerous visits here. Because of his extensive first-hand
experience in a critical part of the world, Monsignor Nolan’s opinions were much
sought after by the national media at times of crisis in the Middle East, and he
was as likely to be quoted by NBC News as by the diocesan Evangelist in such
instances. Pope John Paul II recognized his efforts on behalf of Palestinian
Christian refugees by raising him to the episcopacy in 1988. Bishop Nolan died
in 1997 and is buried in the local parish cemetery.
******************************************
Celebrating 150 years of Catholicism in Mechanicville, the question arises:
where does this period fall in the larger scheme of things? However, answering
that question would require us to stand outside of Time, viewing the End-
something only God can do. Yet, having become a living part of that history,
each Catholic must become his or her own historian in an attempt to make sense
of it all. As it celebrated its sesquicentennial, the parish membership included
more than thirty parishioners who were over ninety years of age-the oldest among
them enjoying her 103rd year. As a group, they have represented the last
connection to the “heroic generation”: outcast immigrant refugees who struggled
to keep body and soul together, often having to fight to maintain their dignity
in a society that did not always welcome them, a generation which experienced
two world wars and a Great Depression. And through it all, they kept the Faith.
What is the challenge confronting the children and grandchildren of this “heroic
generation”? Enjoying the benefits of freedom and the abundant fruits of their
labor, they may well be facing the “adversities of affluence” rather than their
ancestors’ challenge of poverty. Yet, while the demands on them may be new, they
are no less challenging than those faced by their predecessors. How to keep, not
body and soul, but families together; how to protect the young from the
allurements of an increasingly materialistic popular culture; how to sustain
one-parent families; how to care for the elderly and protect their dignity-
these are but a few of the challenges they face now and will continue to face in
the future. Seventy-five years ago, Catholics joined with other Mechanicville
Christians to “keep holy the Sabbath” by prohibiting the showing of motion
pictures on Sunday afternoons. Today, Sunday services of all faiths are
compelled to compete with youth soccer, basketball, and football- and religious
indifference.
Older generations often toiled long and exhausting hours in the factories,
mills, and rail yards of Mechanicville, but in many cases, two and three
generations of the same family worked side by side- and were able to walk to and
from their places of work. That world has long since ceased to exist, never to
return. Yet, despite the fact that many of our young people must leave the area
to find employment after completing their education, the parish remains a
dynamic Catholic community with active sodalities, numerous volunteer
committees, and choirs renowned for their musical virtuosity. Continuing to be
staffed by two Augustinians, the parish is a highly spirited as well as a deeply
spiritual Catholic community, displaying hospitality, openness, commitment and
love in its on-going relationship with the devoted and exemplary clergy who
serve it
Thus, while many of today’s challenges may appear daunting, the 150th
commemoration marks a celebration not only of past triumphs over adversity, but
also, a recognition that even in the darkest hours (maybe mostly in those
darkest hours), it is Faith that sustains our lives. Recognizing this, the
legacy of this history requires that it be passed on to future generations by
being lived it each day.