A PARISH HISTORY
Father Nicholas C. Murphy
Father Nicholas
C. Murphy arrived in Whitehouse Station as its new pastor on September 1961. He had been
the assistant pastor at Holy Cross Church in Rumson. During Father Murphy's stay of six
years, various repairs were made to the rectory and driveway. An addition to the garage
was also constructed. On September 11, 1962, a new building fund was opened with
Emigrant Savings in New York with a deposit of $7,500. On December 31, a memorial fund
account was initiated with a $10,000 deposit.
On November 29, 1963 the fortieth
anniversary of the parish was celebrated with a Mass on Friday, November 28 for all the
parishioners and another on Saturday, November 29, for the founders. Saturday evening
featured a dance at Liberty Hall on Kline Boulevard. The Confraternity of Christian
Doctrine classes continued to be taught by the Sisters from the Flemington regional
convent. The number of students was gradually growing. By the mid 1960's, eighty
children per year were receiving first communion. On November 8, 1964 The Holy Name
Society met for the last time. Father Murphy was transferred on September 1, 1967. He
died on December 15, 1980 while pastor of St. George Church, Washington Crossing.
Father James N. Cammisa
Father James N. Cammisa's nine and a half years as pastor began on September 1, 1967. During
these years, the parish grew in size from approximately five hundred families, when he
first came, to over eight hundred families ten years later. One of the first projects
undertaken in Father Cammisa's pastorate was the formation of a board to oversee the
religious education program. On March 26, 1968, a temporary board met to establish a
plan of action. A week later the group was formally named the Confraternity of
Christian Doctrine Advisory Council of Our Lady of Lourdes Church. Alfred Spilatro
assumed the presidency. One of the first actions of the Council was to petition
Readington School Board for use of fourteen classrooms in Whitehouse School. At the
August meeting, it was announced that classes would begin on September 21 at Whitehouse
School. The Catholic Youth Organization (CYO) was formed in the parish in conjunction
with the Council and under its supervision. Many of the youth formed a folk choir and
a Mass with folk style music was introduced.
Father Cammisa also had general repairs
done to the church, rectory, and grounds at a cost of $15,100. He renovated the
church sanctuary to fit the liturgical reforms of the Second Vatican Council. An altar
facing the people was constructed and a shrine for the reservation of the Eucharist
arranged on the side. Following the spirit of the Council, ecumenical services with
neighboring Christian Churches were held on occasion. Legendary as a frugal manager,
he invested parish funds well in preparation for the building of a new church. During
his relatively long pastorate various laymen served as trustees. These included Messrs.
Grogan and Gray, Edward Saks, Edward DelCarlo, Joseph Yankowski and William Collins.
Father Cammisa developed ill health and from February to April 1975 was on a temporary
leave of absence. Father John Bowden acted as temporary administrator. At the CCD
Council's May 16, 1977 meeting, Father Cammisa announced that the Bishop had accepted
his resignation, due to ill health, to take effect on May 27.
Father Andrew Cogan
Father Andrew Cogan
administrated the parish for two months before he was named pastor on July 29, 1977.
Before coming to Whitehouse Station, Father had been for a short time associate pastor
at Our Lady of Mount Virgin Church in Middlesex following six years as a missionary in
South America. On June 13, 1977, a few weeks after he arrived, Our Lady of Lourdes
Council of the Knights of Columbus held its first official meeting. Fred Hegarty was
named grand knight. A charismatic prayer group was formed in March, 1978.
Father Cogan
continued to work closely with the CCD Council and frequently used them as a sounding
board concerning other parish matters besides religious education. The growth in the
population of the parish made it necessary for additional religious education classes.
In September 1978, Round Valley School in Clinton Township was rented in addition to
the two sessions at Whitehouse School. In July of 1981, Mrs. Patricia Gillich was
hired as the parish's first full time director of religious education.
1980 - New Church
During the 1970's
it was becoming more evident that the small church, which had served for so long, was
inadequate for the new demands of the parish. When Father Cammisa left, there were two
Saturday night Masses and four Sunday Masses. In April of 1978, Father Cogan changed
the Sunday Mass schedule to accommodate five Masses plus the two Saturday vigil Masses.
With Father Cogan's pastorate came a mandate to build a new church. Early in 1979,
plans began for the building of a new house of worship designed to seat 700 people. The
church was to cost $1,000,000; however, due to the careful money management of Father
Cammisa, the building fund drive initiated on October 1, 1979, needed only $200,000 in
pledges. The goal was quickly achieved and ground was broken on Sunday, February 10,
1980, the day before the feast of Our Lady of Lourdes.
One casualty of the new church was the parish auditorium, built so lovingly by the first
generation of Our Lady of Lourdes parishioners, it was razed to make room for the new
structure. At the end of February 1981, the new church was ready for use. The new
church was solemnly dedicated on Sunday, April 5, 1981 by Bishop John C. Reiss, the
Bishop of Trenton. More than a dozen priests attended including two former pastors,
Father Cammisa and Father Coen. The cornerstone was laid on the same occasion. A
reception followed in the new parish center, the former church building. Mr. DelCarlo
continued as lay trustee throughout Father Cogan's pastorate. He was joined by Robert
Nielson until 1980, who was succeeded by William Collins.
1981 - New Diocese of Metuchen
At the end of November, 1981,
the parish found itself a part of a new Diocese. The Diocese of Trenton was split into
two with the Diocese of Metuchen being established, Bishop Theodore E. McCarrick became
the first bishop. In the spring of 1983, Father Cogan asked permission of Bishop
McCarrick to be released to pursue a vocation in a religious order. On May 25, the
parish said good-bye to Father Cogan at a farewell Mass and reception. Eventually,
Father Cogan returned to the Diocese of Metuchen. He died February 20, 1991, as pastor
of Saint Joseph Parish, North Plainfield.
1983 - Father Gregory Toft
Father Frances Gunner, a retired priest of
the Trenton Diocese, who was in residence at the rectory, was named temporary
administrator. At the end of June, Bishop McCarrick appointed Father Gregory Toft as
the new pastor. He was installed on July 22, 1983. Father Toft had been the chaplain
at Bishop Ahr High School in Edison and served as the diocesan Director of Vocations.
Assigned with him as the parish's first duly appointed associate pastor was Father
Michael Santillo. Father Santillo continued doing part-time work on the faculty of
St. Pius High School in Piscataway. In the fall, Father Toft conducted a parish census
which showed that the parish had grown to 1000 families. In September, he reduced the
Masses on Sunday from five to four. Liturgical practices and ministries were
strengthened during his stay. In early February 1984, Father Toft took a leave of
absence from the active priesthood. Father Santillo was named temporary administrator.
1984 - 2003 / Father Florian J. Gall
Father Florian J. Gall began his pastorate at Our Lady of Lourdes on June 8, 1984.
He was diocesan Vicar for Parish Life and had served as pastor of Saint Joseph Parish,
Bound Brook until his appointment. Father Santillo was transferred to be Associate
Pastor at St. John Vianney, Colonia at the same time. In the spring of 1985, the Blask
property immediately north of the new church and abutting the parish property became
available. On July 3, 1985, the parish purchased it for the sum of $120,000. Included
in its 1.36 acres was a framed ranch type home. Though the property was not initially
purchased to use as a rectory, by September of 1985, it was determined that the
original rectory was needed for staff working space and expanded parish offices.
Simultaneous with the priests moving into new quarters, in September of 1985, the
rectory was developed into the Parish House. It served as such until it was torn down
during the construction of Lourdes Community House.
Messrs. DelCarlo and Collins
continued to serve as trustees into Father Gall's pastorate. In 1985, Mr. Collins
gave way to Charlotte Wurzberg. Upon Mrs. Wurzberg's relocation from the parish in
1987, Bertha Kappus was elected as a trustee and served into 1993. Edward Del Carlo
served as trustee to the end of November in 1991. Mr. DelCarlo's terms as trustee
extended for eighteen years which marked him as the longest serving trustee in the
parish's history.
Staff Developed
During Father Gall's pastorate, a full parish staff was developed
over a period of four years. Sister Suzanne Faulkner, S.C., came in September of 1984
as the first parish pastoral assistant. She was succeeded in September of 1985 by
Sister Barbara Carey, R.S.C.J. Other full time staff members included a bookkeeper,
administrative assistant, director of liturgical music and a parish secretary. The
religious education department was also strengthened with the hiring of a secretary.
During Father Toft's pastorate, the CCD Council began to lose momentum and voted to
disband shortly after Father Gall's arrival. In June 1985, Father Raymond Avery was
assigned as the parish's associate pastor. He remained until October of 1986 when
Father David O'Brien, an extern priest of the Diocese of Brooklyn, took his place.
Father O'Brien was named temporary administrator during February and March of 1987 when
Father Gall was recovering from a heart attack. In June 1987, Father O'Brien exchanged
assignments with Father Leonard Rusay, who had been associate pastor in St. Cecelia'a
Church in Iselin. Father Len remained until June of 1991.
Father Michael Saharic ordained
On May 28, 1988, Father
Michael Saharic, a son of the parish, was ordained a priest at St. Francis Cathedral,
Metuchen. He celebrated his first Mass the following day at Our Lady of Lourdes Church.
During the initial years of Father Gall's pastorate various parish ministries were
developed and improved. The youth ministry was renewed beginning late spring 1985
under the leadership of a number of parish lay people. The liturgical music ministry
was strengthened with adult, youth and bell choirs. Ministry to the bereaved, to the
homeless, to the poor and to the divorced and separated were initiated. A Pre-Cana
team and program began in the fall of 1986. The Lourdes Players were initiated in 1988.
Programs of spiritual renewal were encouraged including Ashes to Easter and RENEW.
The liturgy became a main focal point of parish life. Some liturgical renovations to
the church were put into effect beginning in 1987, including a place of reservation
for the Eucharist and the relocation of the font to the entrance of the church.
Shrine areas for devotion to the Sacred Heart, Our Lady of Lourdes and St. Joseph
were also constructed. Ecumenical programs with neighboring Christian communities
were also reintroduced into the parish. Lay participation in parish affairs was
encouraged. The Parish Finance Council was established with Dominick DiMauro as
first Chairman.
1991 - Community House Built
The need for education, social and office space for a growing parish
of almost fifteen hundred families led to the decision in 1986 to build the new
Lourdes Community House. To construct the new parish building a capital campaign was
conducted called "Building Community" in the spring of 1987. Some $875,000 was pledged
and collected. The building was planned with the assistance of various ad hoc parish
committees: the project planning committee, the architectural selection committee and
the building committee. A ceremonial ground breaking was conducted on Thanksgiving Day,
November 24, 1988 and the building was blessed by Bishop Edward T. Hughes of Metuchen
on Sunday, April 21, 1991. Kellenyi Associates Architects of Red Bank designed the
structure and general contractors were Marigliano & Sons of Dunnellen. The cost of
the building was approximately $1,800,000. The original rectory, at that time in poor
repair, was demolished as part of the project.
The parish continued to grow during the
1990s. Parish membership by 1998 reached approximately 1,700 households. In March of
that year a small portion of the parish in the southeast corner of its territory was
transferred to St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Parish in the Three Bridges section of
Readington Township. Fifty families were incorporated into that neighboring parish.
The growth of the parish contributed to the decision to explore various means by which
a community and welcoming spirit would be preserved. Small Church Communities were
initiated in 1992 and a welcoming committee with a new welcoming process consisting
of a Welcome Evening and Welcome Sunday for new parishioners was put into effect in
September of 1994. Parish ministries continued to be developed and strengthened such
as the training of a group of couples as the pre-baptism preparation team, a program
for parents and pre-school children, a family oriented religious education program
called family ministry, and adult religious education.
Parish Leadership
Associate pastors assigned to
the parish during these years include Father Patrick Maccarone from June 1991 to 1993,
Father John Fell from June 1993 to September 1998. New trustees during the 1990s
include Robert Wachendorf, 1992-1996; Florence Fitzgerald, 1994-1997; Aloysius
Sullivan 1997-1998; and Helen Omilian 1998. Pastoral staff members who served the
parish include Mr. Thomas DeLessio, director of liturgical music since 1987, Mrs.
Paula Choa, who succeeded Mrs. Patricia Gillich as director of religious education
in 1991 to 1997, and Sister Patricia Centner, O.S.F., pastoral assistant since 1996.
Sister Barbara Carey retired from the staff in 1998. Two men of the parish were
ordained to the permanent diaconate on May 5, 1996. Deacon Samuel Damiano and Deacon
John Hanna were also assigned to minister to the parish. In September 1997 the parish
was linked with Holy Trinity Church in Perth Amboy as a sister church beginning a
process of financial, cultural, and practical aid and exchange.
1997 / Church Restoration & Renovation
Primary in the parish's
planning to celebrate its diamond jubilee was the restoration and renovation of the
interior of the church building. The catalyst for this was the need to restore the
interior church walls. Over the years it was discovered that faulty contruction
necessitated this. The restoration/renovation work replaced the plaster board walls
with new vapor barriers and plaster board as well as with a brick wall behind the
sanctuary. The floors were covered with quarry tile. New lighting and audio systems
were installed. The narthex was enlarged, eliminating the day chapel, and a glass
atrium was added to the building. A new reconciliation chapel, a pastoral room and
video room were constructed. The marble font, which originally was situated in Old St.
Mary's Cathedral, Trenton, was enlarged to allow for baptism by immersion and a new
altar and other liturgical furnishings for the sanctuary were commissioned and installed.
Some flexible seating was arranged around the font and around the sanctuary and a Chapel
of the Eucharist constructed. The side devotional shrines were enlarged and assigned to
images of Our Lady of Lourdes and the Sacred Heart.
A nineteen rank pipe organ was
constructed by Randall Dyer & Associates of Jefferson City, Tennessee. Robert Rambusch
and Larry Hoy were liturgical consultants and fabricated the new altar and other
liturgical furnishings through Renovata Studios, Brooklyn. To finance this project a
seventy-fifth anniversary fund, Restoring Our Church -- Celebrating Our Diamond Jubilee,
was established. During April and May of 1996 a mail campaign was conducted with over a
half million dollars pledged. A building committee and liturgical environment and art
committee was established to plan and supervise the renovations. The major portion of
the restoration/renovation was done during October to December 1997.
1997-1998 / Diamond Jubilee
The parish began the celebration of the Diamond Jubilee on Sunday, June 1, 1997 and
continued it for seventeen months to Thanksgiving of 1998. The highlight of the
celebration was the liturgical observance on Sunday, June 14, 1998. Bishop Vincent
de Paul Breen of Metuchen was the presiding celebrant at a Diamond Jubilee Mass.
Bishop Fernando Gamalero of Escuintla, Guatamala, as well as some two dozen priests
joined in the day's festivities which included a buffet lunch for over three hundred
parishioners following the Noon Mass. Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament was
conducted during the afternoon hours and Evening Prayer and Benedicition concluded the
day's celebration.
Various events to celebrate the anniversary were held during the
seventeen months observance. Events during 1997 included the August 17 rededication
of the grotto with a parish picnic, and the September Anniversary Golf Outing. In 1998
a Parish Anniversary Retreat was held from February 8 to 11. The music ministry's
presentation of the Song of Mark on February 8 set the mood for the retreat. The
Lourdes Players annual presentation during May was also marked as a jubilee event.
The church was rededicated by Bishop Breen on August 22 followed by an Ethnic Festival.
A memorial plaque to past pastors was also dedicated. Final events included the
Blessing of the Organ on November 1 and a dinner-dance at the the Hunterdon Hills
Playhouse on November 13. The celebration of Thanksgiving marked not only the conclusion
of the Diamond Jubilee celebrations but also the seventy-fifth anniversary of the
blessing of the first church. Thanksgiving was celebrated at the church on Wednesday
evening, November 16 with the Community Thanksgiving Ecumenical Service and with Mass
on Thanksgiving morning at 10 o'clock.
The final months of the parish's Diamond Jubilee
year were marked with a number of changes within the pastoral staff. Father John
Primich was assigned in June 1998 as associate pastor to replace Father John Fell who
left in September for doctoral studies in Rome. Sister Rosanne McCabe, S.S.J., took
the place of Sister Barbara Carey and Miss Patricia Beucher became a pastoral
assistant for youth ministry, education and music. Planning for future, the parish
purchased in September a piece of land adjacent to the parish property of more than
three and a half acres. A house on the property was turned into a rectory for the
priests while the former rectory was given over to the sisters for a convent. Plans
to use some of the property for overflow parking were also made. As the parish looked
forward to its centennial during the Third Christian Millenium the process was
initiated to introduce to the parish the spiritual experience of RENEW 2000. The hope
of the future of the parish is that it might grow more and more into being the Body of
Christ and the People of God as the community of Catholic Christians called the Church
of Our Lady of Lourdes, Whitehouse, N.J.
Epilogue / Assisting Priests
No history of the parish would be complete without some mention of the auxiliary priests
who served the community so faithfully over the years, beginning with the Franciscan
Friars of Holy Name Province in 1957, many religious priests have serviced the parish.
Among the Franciscans who served were Fathers Gerald Dolan and Guy Morgan, Theodore Lehr,
Edward Sullivan, Malcolm MacDonald, Robert Davis. The Franciscans ended their ministry
in the mid 1970s. The Benedictine monks of St. Paul's Abbey in Newton succeeded the
Franciscans. Father Andrew O'Sullivan, the best known of the Benedictines, served the
parish for thirteen years, until January 1991, as the weekend assistant. In 1978, Father
Joseph McGroarty of the Dominican Friars began weekend ministry in the parish. He
continued until the fall of 1983. Father Frances Thaivalappil, a Carmelite priest from
India, was in residence at the parish while he pursued studies in this country during
the late 1970s and early 1980s. Father Francis Gunner, a retired Trenton priest, was
in residence and assisted from early 1982 until January 1985 when he suffered a stroke.
He died on November 4, 1986.
Parish Seminarians Ordained
Over the years, seminarians of the Diocese of Trenton and
Metuchen have been assigned to the parish during the summer. Some of those who were
eventually ordained are Fathers John Sullivan, Joseph Mizerak, Harold Hirsch, Albert
Smith, Herbert Stab, Brian McCormick, Armand Pedata, and Ralph Stansley who served from
the late 1940s into the 1960s. During Father Gall's pastorate, several young men served
the parish as seminarians or transitional deacons. These include Fathers Edward Abano,
George Pisanello, Sean Winters, Edward Flanagan, and Robert Medley, Charles Sabella,
George Farrell and Wayne Haddad.