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Basilica of Saint Hyacinth

The Basilica of Saint Hyacinth (Polish: Bazylika Świętego Jacka) is a historic church of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago, located at 3636 West Wolfram Street in the Avondale neighborhood of Chicago, Illinois.

St. Hyacinth
Basilica
St. Hyacinth
Basilica
41°56′01″N 87°43′07″W / 41.933528°N 87.718694°W / 41.933528; -87.718694
LocationChicago
CountryUSA
DenominationRoman Catholic
WebsiteSt. Hyacinth Basilica
History
Founded1894 (1894)
Founder(s)Congregation of the Resurrection
DedicationHyacinth of Poland
DedicatedOctober 16, 1921 (1921-10-16)
Consecrated ()
Architecture
Functional statusActive
Heritage designationFor Polish immigrants
Architect(s)Worthmann and Steinbach
Architectural typeBasilica
StyleClassical Revival
GroundbreakingApril 30, 1917 (1917-04-30)
CompletedAugust 7, 1921 (1921-08-07)
Specifications
MaterialsBrick

It is a prime example of the Polish Cathedral style of churches in both its opulence and grand scale. Along with such monumental religious edifices as St. Mary of the Angels, St. Hedwig's, and St. Wenceslaus, it is one of the many monumental Polish churches visible from the Kennedy Expressway.

History edit

Founded in 1894 by Resurrectionsists from the city's first Polish parish, St. Stanislaus Kostka, St. Hyacinth became the center of Chicago's most well-known Polish Patch, Jackowo. The parish has been intimately tied in with Chicago's Polish immigrants, particularly those who arrived in the Solidarity and post-Solidarity waves of Polish migration to Chicago in the 1980s. On June 26, 2003, Pope John Paul II granted the designation of minor basilica, the third church in Illinois to achieve this status. On November 30, 2003, Cardinal Francis George OMI, officially proclaimed St. Hyacinth Church a basilica of the Archdiocese of Chicago.

Neighboring St. Wenceslaus parish was founded in 1912 as a Polish parish to relieve overcrowding at St. Hyacinth parish.

The 1999 film Stir of Echoes was partly filmed at St. Hyacinth Basilica.

Architecture edit

The church was designed by the architectural firm of Worthmann & Steinbach who built many of the magnificent Polish Cathedrals in Chicago. The church structure—a red-brick edifice in the classical revival style—has an ornate interior of Baroque influence. Groundbreaking occurred on April 30, 1917, and the cornerstone was laid on October 21, 1917. Completion of the building was delayed for years by financial and construction difficulties, with the first Mass celebrated in the structure not taking place until August 7, 1921. Official dedication occurred on October 16, 1921, with Archbishop Cardinal George W. Mundelein presiding.

St. Hyacinth's recognizable three-towered façade is rarely seen in American church architecture as well as the Baroque period that its style is modeled on. The church bells are a product of the McShoe Bell Foundry of Baltimore, Maryland were blessed and placed in the steeples in April 1924. St. Hyacinth's bears a striking similarity to St. Mary of the Angels, which was designed by the same architects at about the same time and use the same combination of stone, glazed terra-cotta and brick. Also like at St. Mary of the Angels, much of the church's interior was decorated by John A. Mallin, who decorated many other churches in Illinois, with two years of planning and another two years to execute the project. St. Hyacinth's is also home to the masterworks of such renowned painters as Tadeusz Żukotyński and Mary Stanisia. Beginning in the mid-1990s, and taking almost a decade, the interior was renewed thoroughly, much of the mural work being performed by Conrad Schmitt Studios of Wisconsin.

The stained glass windows have been identified as prepared by Meyer Co. of Munich, Germany, and some by the Zettler Co. of New York were installed in 1921. The church's organ is a mid-sized Kilgen organ (of St. Louis, Missouri) with 34 ranks was likewise installed in the church in 1921. The Stations of the Cross were likely assembled in Austria in the 1830s.

A number of statues are found within the basilica's interior. A bas-relief of St. Hyacinth hangs above the main altar, as well as full statues of St. Peter and St. Paul. Figures of the Sacred Heart of Jesus and the Blessed Mother (Immaculate Conception) are found at lesser side altars, along with a figure of Our Lady of Sorrows as a Pietà in the church's eastern alcove. Additionally, sculptures of St. Joseph, St. Ann, the Infant of Prague, St. Maximilian Kolbe, St. Francis of Assisi, St. Anthony of Padua, St. Barbara and St. Thérèse of Lisieux are spread throughout the sanctuary.

The large saucer dome which hangs over the church's crossing has a gigantic mural covering some 3,000 square feet (280 m2) with over 150 figures, depicting saints, clergy and laity.

A large icon of Our Lady of Częstochowa that was brought in from Poland occupies the shrine in the basilica's western transept. The icon, which had been blessed by Pope John Paul II, is crowned in keeping with Roman Catholic tradition, with the Virgin Mary's crown measuring nearly a foot long while the Infant Jesus's crown being slightly smaller in size, each one bookended by bas-relief sculpted angels. Both crowns were crafted by Adam and Kathy Karbownik who melted down the gold and set the gemstones in them, while the jewelry used in the crowns was donated by thousands of parishioners with the gold alone weighed in at ten pounds [1]

Three pairs of monumental bronze doors were hung along the main entrance at the basilica's northern end by famed Polish sculptor Czesław Dźwigaj, well known for also casting the monument of Christ the King in Cicero in front of the church of St. Mary of Częstochowa as well as the Tolerance Monument that was unveiled in Jerusalem.

Monuments to Pope John Paul II, and Father Jerzy Popiełuszko, as well as a memorial to parishioners who served in the Blue Army during World War I can be found in the neighboring 'Garden of Memory'.

Center of Chicago's Polonia edit

 
Rahm Emanuel speaking at St. Hyacinth Basilica.

Due to St. Hyacinth's impressive size and history as the center of the neighborhood of first arrival for countless Polish Americans, the Basilica is considered[by whom?] to be the center of Chicago's Polonia, or Polish community.

This has brought notable visitors to St. Hyacinth's who come here to reach out to Chicago's Polish community. General Józef Haller, Prime Minister Stanisław Mikołajczyk, Nobel Peace Prize winner and former President of Poland Lech Wałęsa, and former Premier Jarosław Kaczyński as well as his deceased twin brother President Lech Kaczyński have paid official visits to St. Hyacinth's. Other famous Solidarity activists such as Anna Walentynowicz, Zbigniew Romaszewski and Antoni Macierewicz have visited the Basilica as well. Famous clergy have also visited, including the Servant of God Jan Cieplak as well as the future Pope John Paul II, who trekked to St. Hyacinth's several times as the Archbishop of Cracow and referred to his gatherings there during his 1979 pilgrimage to Chicago.[2]

St. Hyacinth's also served as the place for local and national political elites to publicly cavort for the support of the Polish American electorate with politicians, their first stop as they would tour Chicago's Polish Village along with an obligatory meal at one of the local Polish restaurants. President George H. W. Bush attended mass at St. Hyacinth's twice, first as Vice President in 1985, as well as during his 1988 campaign. Purportedly, violence almost broke out as supporters of Lyndon LaRouche protesting outside the basilica were not looked at very kindly by local Poles, who had a reverence for the candidate they saw as the best hope against the loathed Communist regime in Poland.[3]

Relics edit

St. Hyacinth Basilica has an impressive collection of relics of Saints of the Roman Catholic Church. A total of 121 relics are encased and presented to the faithful on All Saints Day, as well as the memorial day of each saint. Among them are:

Additionally, a collection of memorabilia of Pope John Paul II hangs next to a plaque honoring him, during whose pontificate the church was titled a Minor Basilica.

St. Hyacinth's today edit

St. Hyacinth is located in Chicago's Avondale neighborhood. About 8,000 worshippers attend mass every weekend. In keeping with customs brought to the area by Polish immigrants, the area is also known as "Jackowo", as "Jacek" is Polish for the proper name "Hyacinth". Naming neighborhoods or geographical areas after the local parish church is a widespread habit of Polish Catholics.

St. Hyacinth once had a thriving elementary school. In the 60's enrollment was over 2,500 students. On October 29, 2014, the Archdiocese of Chicago announced the closing of the school after the 2014–2015 school year. Enrollment was only 154 students.[citation needed]

Church in architecture books edit

  • Sinkevitch, Alice, ed. (2004). The AIA Guide to Chicago (2nd ed.). Harvest Books. ISBN 0156029081.
  • Schulze, Franz; Harrington, Kevin (2003). Chicago's Famous Buildings (5th ed.). University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226740641.
  • McNamara, Denis R. (2005). Heavenly City: The Architectural Tradition of Catholic Chicago. Liturgy Training Publications. ISBN 978-1-56854-503-5.
  • Chiat, Marylin (2004). The Spiritual Traveler: Chicago and Illinois: A Guide to Sacred Sites and Peaceful Places. Mahwah, NJ: HiddenSpring. ISBN 1587680106.
  • Lane, George A. (1981). Chicago Churches and Synagogues: An Architectural Pilgrimage. Loyola Press. ISBN 0829403736.
  • Kantowicz, Edward R. (2007). The Archdiocese of Chicago: A Journey of Faith. Booklink.
  • Kociołek, Jacek; Filipowicz, Stefan (2002). Kościoły Polskie w Chicago [Polish Churches of Chicago] (in Polish). Ex Libris. ISBN 9781928900511.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ DeFiglio, Pam (September 14–27, 2008). "Icon's crown made from jewelry donated by faithful". Catholic New World. Vol. 116, no. 19. p. 56..
  2. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-27. Retrieved 2010-12-25.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. ^ "Strona główna".

External links edit

  •   Media related to Basilica of St. Hyacinth at Wikimedia Commons

basilica, saint, hyacinth, polish, bazylika, Świętego, jacka, historic, church, roman, catholic, archdiocese, chicago, located, 3636, west, wolfram, street, avondale, neighborhood, chicago, illinois, hyacinthbasilicast, hyacinthbasilica41, 933528, 718694, 9335. The Basilica of Saint Hyacinth Polish Bazylika Swietego Jacka is a historic church of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago located at 3636 West Wolfram Street in the Avondale neighborhood of Chicago Illinois St HyacinthBasilicaSt HyacinthBasilica41 56 01 N 87 43 07 W 41 933528 N 87 718694 W 41 933528 87 718694LocationChicagoCountryUSADenominationRoman CatholicWebsiteSt Hyacinth BasilicaHistoryFounded1894 1894 Founder s Congregation of the ResurrectionDedicationHyacinth of PolandDedicatedOctober 16 1921 1921 10 16 Consecrated ArchitectureFunctional statusActiveHeritage designationFor Polish immigrantsArchitect s Worthmann and SteinbachArchitectural typeBasilicaStyleClassical RevivalGroundbreakingApril 30 1917 1917 04 30 CompletedAugust 7 1921 1921 08 07 SpecificationsMaterialsBrick It is a prime example of the Polish Cathedral style of churches in both its opulence and grand scale Along with such monumental religious edifices as St Mary of the Angels St Hedwig s and St Wenceslaus it is one of the many monumental Polish churches visible from the Kennedy Expressway Contents 1 History 2 Architecture 3 Center of Chicago s Polonia 4 Relics 5 St Hyacinth s today 6 Church in architecture books 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory editFounded in 1894 by Resurrectionsists from the city s first Polish parish St Stanislaus Kostka St Hyacinth became the center of Chicago s most well known Polish Patch Jackowo The parish has been intimately tied in with Chicago s Polish immigrants particularly those who arrived in the Solidarity and post Solidarity waves of Polish migration to Chicago in the 1980s On June 26 2003 Pope John Paul II granted the designation of minor basilica the third church in Illinois to achieve this status On November 30 2003 Cardinal Francis George OMI officially proclaimed St Hyacinth Church a basilica of the Archdiocese of Chicago Neighboring St Wenceslaus parish was founded in 1912 as a Polish parish to relieve overcrowding at St Hyacinth parish The 1999 film Stir of Echoes was partly filmed at St Hyacinth Basilica Architecture editThe church was designed by the architectural firm of Worthmann amp Steinbach who built many of the magnificent Polish Cathedrals in Chicago The church structure a red brick edifice in the classical revival style has an ornate interior of Baroque influence Groundbreaking occurred on April 30 1917 and the cornerstone was laid on October 21 1917 Completion of the building was delayed for years by financial and construction difficulties with the first Mass celebrated in the structure not taking place until August 7 1921 Official dedication occurred on October 16 1921 with Archbishop Cardinal George W Mundelein presiding St Hyacinth s recognizable three towered facade is rarely seen in American church architecture as well as the Baroque period that its style is modeled on The church bells are a product of the McShoe Bell Foundry of Baltimore Maryland were blessed and placed in the steeples in April 1924 St Hyacinth s bears a striking similarity to St Mary of the Angels which was designed by the same architects at about the same time and use the same combination of stone glazed terra cotta and brick Also like at St Mary of the Angels much of the church s interior was decorated by John A Mallin who decorated many other churches in Illinois with two years of planning and another two years to execute the project St Hyacinth s is also home to the masterworks of such renowned painters as Tadeusz Zukotynski and Mary Stanisia Beginning in the mid 1990s and taking almost a decade the interior was renewed thoroughly much of the mural work being performed by Conrad Schmitt Studios of Wisconsin The stained glass windows have been identified as prepared by Meyer Co of Munich Germany and some by the Zettler Co of New York were installed in 1921 The church s organ is a mid sized Kilgen organ of St Louis Missouri with 34 ranks was likewise installed in the church in 1921 The Stations of the Cross were likely assembled in Austria in the 1830s A number of statues are found within the basilica s interior A bas relief of St Hyacinth hangs above the main altar as well as full statues of St Peter and St Paul Figures of the Sacred Heart of Jesus and the Blessed Mother Immaculate Conception are found at lesser side altars along with a figure of Our Lady of Sorrows as a Pieta in the church s eastern alcove Additionally sculptures of St Joseph St Ann the Infant of Prague St Maximilian Kolbe St Francis of Assisi St Anthony of Padua St Barbara and St Therese of Lisieux are spread throughout the sanctuary The large saucer dome which hangs over the church s crossing has a gigantic mural covering some 3 000 square feet 280 m2 with over 150 figures depicting saints clergy and laity A large icon of Our Lady of Czestochowa that was brought in from Poland occupies the shrine in the basilica s western transept The icon which had been blessed by Pope John Paul II is crowned in keeping with Roman Catholic tradition with the Virgin Mary s crown measuring nearly a foot long while the Infant Jesus s crown being slightly smaller in size each one bookended by bas relief sculpted angels Both crowns were crafted by Adam and Kathy Karbownik who melted down the gold and set the gemstones in them while the jewelry used in the crowns was donated by thousands of parishioners with the gold alone weighed in at ten pounds 1 Three pairs of monumental bronze doors were hung along the main entrance at the basilica s northern end by famed Polish sculptor Czeslaw Dzwigaj well known for also casting the monument of Christ the King in Cicero in front of the church of St Mary of Czestochowa as well as the Tolerance Monument that was unveiled in Jerusalem Monuments to Pope John Paul II and Father Jerzy Popieluszko as well as a memorial to parishioners who served in the Blue Army during World War I can be found in the neighboring Garden of Memory Center of Chicago s Polonia editMain article Chicago s Polish Village nbsp Rahm Emanuel speaking at St Hyacinth Basilica Due to St Hyacinth s impressive size and history as the center of the neighborhood of first arrival for countless Polish Americans the Basilica is considered by whom to be the center of Chicago s Polonia or Polish community This has brought notable visitors to St Hyacinth s who come here to reach out to Chicago s Polish community General Jozef Haller Prime Minister Stanislaw Mikolajczyk Nobel Peace Prize winner and former President of Poland Lech Walesa and former Premier Jaroslaw Kaczynski as well as his deceased twin brother President Lech Kaczynski have paid official visits to St Hyacinth s Other famous Solidarity activists such as Anna Walentynowicz Zbigniew Romaszewski and Antoni Macierewicz have visited the Basilica as well Famous clergy have also visited including the Servant of God Jan Cieplak as well as the future Pope John Paul II who trekked to St Hyacinth s several times as the Archbishop of Cracow and referred to his gatherings there during his 1979 pilgrimage to Chicago 2 St Hyacinth s also served as the place for local and national political elites to publicly cavort for the support of the Polish American electorate with politicians their first stop as they would tour Chicago s Polish Village along with an obligatory meal at one of the local Polish restaurants President George H W Bush attended mass at St Hyacinth s twice first as Vice President in 1985 as well as during his 1988 campaign Purportedly violence almost broke out as supporters of Lyndon LaRouche protesting outside the basilica were not looked at very kindly by local Poles who had a reverence for the candidate they saw as the best hope against the loathed Communist regime in Poland 3 Relics editSt Hyacinth Basilica has an impressive collection of relics of Saints of the Roman Catholic Church A total of 121 relics are encased and presented to the faithful on All Saints Day as well as the memorial day of each saint Among them are St Hyacinth St Stanislaus Kostka St Bonaventure St Clara St Andrew Bobola St John Bosco St Maria Goretti St Bernadette St Julian Pope Gregory I St Elizabeth Seton St Francis of Rome St Vincent De Paul St Ann St John Cantius St John Chrysostom St Blaise St Philip Neri St Francis Xavier St John Berchmans bl Angela Truszkowska St Faustina Kowalska St Hedwig St Stanislaus Bishop and Martyr St Francis of Assisi St Therese of Liseaux St Andrew Avellino St John Maria Vianney St Elizabeth of Hungary St Pius X St Valentine St John Paul II St Maravillas de Jesus St Simon Ap True Cross St John XXIII Padre Pio St Agnes St Aloysius Gonzaga Additionally a collection of memorabilia of Pope John Paul II hangs next to a plaque honoring him during whose pontificate the church was titled a Minor Basilica St Hyacinth s today editSt Hyacinth is located in Chicago s Avondale neighborhood About 8 000 worshippers attend mass every weekend In keeping with customs brought to the area by Polish immigrants the area is also known as Jackowo as Jacek is Polish for the proper name Hyacinth Naming neighborhoods or geographical areas after the local parish church is a widespread habit of Polish Catholics St Hyacinth once had a thriving elementary school In the 60 s enrollment was over 2 500 students On October 29 2014 the Archdiocese of Chicago announced the closing of the school after the 2014 2015 school year Enrollment was only 154 students citation needed Church in architecture books editSinkevitch Alice ed 2004 The AIA Guide to Chicago 2nd ed Harvest Books ISBN 0156029081 Schulze Franz Harrington Kevin 2003 Chicago s Famous Buildings 5th ed University of Chicago Press ISBN 0226740641 McNamara Denis R 2005 Heavenly City The Architectural Tradition of Catholic Chicago Liturgy Training Publications ISBN 978 1 56854 503 5 Chiat Marylin 2004 The Spiritual Traveler Chicago and Illinois A Guide to Sacred Sites and Peaceful Places Mahwah NJ HiddenSpring ISBN 1587680106 Lane George A 1981 Chicago Churches and Synagogues An Architectural Pilgrimage Loyola Press ISBN 0829403736 Kantowicz Edward R 2007 The Archdiocese of Chicago A Journey of Faith Booklink Kociolek Jacek Filipowicz Stefan 2002 Koscioly Polskie w Chicago Polish Churches of Chicago in Polish Ex Libris ISBN 9781928900511 See also editPolish Cathedral style churches of Chicago Polish Americans Poles in Chicago Sr Mary Stanisia Tadeusz Zukotynski Roman Catholicism in PolandReferences edit DeFiglio Pam September 14 27 2008 Icon s crown made from jewelry donated by faithful Catholic New World Vol 116 no 19 p 56 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 27 Retrieved 2010 12 25 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Strona glowna External links edit nbsp Media related to Basilica of St Hyacinth at Wikimedia Commons PGSA St Hyacinth Church History Archdiocese of Chicago Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Basilica of Saint Hyacinth amp oldid 1218921002, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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