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St. Josaphat Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral (Parma, Ohio)

St. Josaphat Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral is a Ukrainian Catholic cathedral located in Parma, Ohio, in the United States. The cathedral grew out of a parochial school which opened in 1951 and a parish erected in 1959. Construction on the cathedral began in 1982, and was completed in 1985. It was dedicated in 1988, the thousand-year anniversary of the arrival of Christianity in Ukraine. The cathedral is the seat for the Ukrainian Catholic Eparchy of Saint Josaphat in Parma, which was erected in 1983 during construction of the building.

St. Josaphat Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral
St. Josaphat Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral in Parma, Ohio, U.S.
41°24′24″N 81°42′40″W / 41.40667°N 81.71111°W / 41.40667; -81.71111
Location5720 State Road
Parma, Ohio
CountryUnited States
DenominationUkrainian Greek Catholic Church
Websitestjosaphatcathedral.com
Architecture
Architect(s)McWilliams-Martyniuk-Schidlowski
StyleByzantine Revival
GroundbreakingJune 24, 1982
Specifications
Capacity500
Administration
DioceseSaint Josaphat in Parma
Clergy
Bishop(s)Bohdan Danylo

Site: School and chapel edit

School growth edit

 
1953 school building

In 1947, Saints Peter and Paul Ukrainian Catholic Church in Cleveland, Ohio, purchased 10 acres (4.0 ha) of land[a] in then-sparsely populated Parma, Ohio.[2] The $32,000 ($400,000 in 2023 dollars) school was dedicated on May 31, 1951, and opened the following November 15.[3] The school was staffed by the Sisters of the Order of St. Basil the Great.[4] The school contained a chapel, named for St. Josaphat.[5] which served as a mission church to Ukrainian Catholic families in the area.[6] The chapel was renovated in 1959, at which time the name of the school was changed to St. Josaphat School.[6][7]

A second, $100,000 ($1,100,000 in 2023 dollars) school building on the site was completed in 1953[3] and blessed on May 9, 1954.[4] A convent building for the Sisters of St. Basil was blessed on the site on May 9, 1954, as well.[8]

A five-classroom addition to the St. Josaphat School was built in 1965.[9]

Construction of the "Astrodome" edit

 
"Astrodome"

In the summer of 1961, St. Josaphat Parish began construction of a high school on its property.[10] Parishioner[1] Nicholas Baiko, an engineer with the Arthur G. McKee & Co. industrial engineering firm, did the preliminary drawings.[11] Parishioner[1] Michael Stefanyk, an architect and engineer, completed the plans.[10] The dome of the school was designed by Roof Structures, Inc. of St. Louis, Missouri, while the architectural firm of T.A. Badowski & Associates consulted.[11]

Designed for 500 students,[10][1] the structure was circular and features 16 one-story classrooms clustered around a central dome. The classroom ring contained administrative offices, classrooms, a library, and laboratories. The central dome was a combination auditorium, gymnasium, and theatre. The wall supporting the dome was 25 feet (7.6 m) high, and the dome rose another 48 feet (15 m) above the wall. The dome itself was 140 feet (43 m) in diameter, while the classroom ring was 211 feet (64 m) in diameter.[10]

The foundation consisted of reinforced concrete footers standing on bedrock.[11] The structure had an extensive basement. Initially designed to act as a fallout shelter capable of serving 2,000 people,[10] it was redesigned so that half the space was occupied by Heating, ventilation, and air conditioning machinery while the other half contained seven classrooms and a cafeteria.[11][b] The outer wall of the classroom ring was built of brick with stone trim,[10] while the higher inner wall was concrete block and glass brick.[11] A hallway around the inner wall gave students access to all classrooms and the dome. Roughly halfway up the inner wall, a balcony projected into the dome. A ring of poured reinforced concrete lay atop the balcony, anchoring it to this wall. Another ring of poured reinforced concrete lay atop the wall. The base of the dome itself was made of steel plate. Each plate was 9 inches (230 mm) high and 1.5 inches (38 mm) thick, and they were both bolted and welded where they joined one another. The dome was supported by wooden ribs, each 4 by 10 inches (100 by 250 mm) in size. Manufactured in Oregon, they were curved on the top to match the arc of the dome. Thirty-two ribs were jointed with steel angle plates to the dome rim. Halfway to the dome apex, the 32 ribs were spliced into one another (again using steel angle plates) to create 16 ribs. These 16 ribs were bolted to a steel ring at the apex of the dome. Secondary wooden beams were used between the ribs to enhance the dome's stability. Tongue and groove planks, each 2 inches (51 mm) thick, were spiked to the ribs from the outside. These in turn were covered with 1 inch (25 mm) thick composite insulation board. Liquid hot asphalt was mopped onto the insulation board, building up the roof. A layer of white marble chips was impregnated into the asphalt to complete the roof. The auditorium and balcony could accommodate 1,500 people.[11] The structure was estimated to cost $1 million ($10.2 million in 2023 dollars), with another $700,000 ($7.14 million in 2023 dollars) in labor[10] donated free from parishioners.[10][12]

When construction began in May 1961,[12] parish officials believed the high school would be complete in September 1962.[10] Construction delays were numerous, however, and by June 1964 officials thought that five classrooms might open in September 1965.[1] The building was finally completed in early 1969, and blessed by Archbishop Ambrose Senyshyn of the Archeparchy of Philadelphia on April 20, 1969.[12]

For various reasons, the school never opened.[12] It was repurposed into an event center, public auditorium, public theatre, and sports venue. It was first known as St. Josaphat Auditorium,[13] but by 1975 had been nicknamed the "St. Josaphat Astrodome" for its resemblance to the Houston Astrodome.[14]

Congregation and chapel edit

 
Rectory

Archbishop Constantine Bohachevsky erected St. Josaphat Parish in August 1959, appointing Rev. Andrew Ulicky (an assistant pastor at SS. Peter and Paul Church) as the pastor. Brookpark Road was named the dividing line between the mother parish and the new St. Josaphat, whose boundary extended south to Medina, Ohio. The erection of the new parish came about due to the significant growth among Ukrainian Catholics in the area (now numbering some 450 families).[6]

St. Josaphat Chapel was redecorated after the elevation to parish status. Artist Theodore Katomay of Chicago created 24 murals for the renovation, 17 of which were placed in the sanctuary. The new murals were in place in time for the Christmas celebration on January 7, 1961, and blessed on January 22 by Monsignor Dmytro Gresko of SS. Peter and Paul and Rev. Ulicky.[15]

A fire broke out in St. Josaphat Chapel during the evening mass on April 11, 1973. It began in the sacristy, and 40 worshippers fled the blaze. The fire did $100,000 ($700,000 in 2023 dollars) in damage, destroying the sacristy and main altar and scorching some pews.[9]

Cathedral edit

Construction edit

Rev. Ulicky originally sought to build a church immediately after erection of the parish. Church leaders, however, believed construction of the high school should come first.[16] In 1973,[17] Father Ulicky was appointed pastor at St. Mary Byzantine Catholic Church in Johnstown, Pennsylvania.[18] His successor, the Very Reverend Yaroslaw Sirko, continued to plan for construction of a church,[16] but died in October 1979 after a two-year battle with cancer.[19] The Right Reverend Michael Fedorowich, assigned to St. Josaphat in December 1979, began the process of organizing committees to plan the new church.[16]

The structure was designed by the firm of McWilliams Martyniuk Schidlowski of Kent, Ohio,[20] and built under the auspices of general contractor Chopko Construction.[16] The 500-seat building incorporated traditional features such as onion domes on the roof and an altar set in the east wall. It also included contemporary and "futuristic" architectural details in order to reflect the then-upcoming thousand-year anniversary of Christianity's introduction in Ukraine.[20]

Ground for the cathedral was broken on June 24, 1982.[16][20] The initial cost was estimated at $2.3 million ($7.26 million in 2023 dollars).[21] Topping out of the church occurred on August 30, 1983, when the 12 short tons (11 t) main aluminum onion dome was set atop the church.[22] During construction, the Eparchy of Saint Josaphat was erected in December 1983.[21] Robert Mikhail Moskal was installed as the first eparch (bishop) of the diocese at the unfinished cathedral on February 29, 1984.[23] A ceremonial cornerstone was laid and blessed on November 11, 1984, which happened to be the 25th anniversary of the congregation's establishment as well.[24]

St. Josaphat Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral held its first services on June 24, 1985. Eparch Robert Moskal led a procession from the chapel to the cathedral carrying the Blessed Sacrament and relics of St. Josaphat, then celebrated a pontifical divine liturgy at the new church. The cathedral was blessed once.[16]

The consecration of St. Josaphat Cathedral was delayed until May 1, 1988, the year in which Ukrainians observed the thousand-year anniversary of Christianity in Ukraine. This also allowed for completion of all iconostasis and other interior decorations.[16] Cardinal Myroslav Ivan Lubachivsky, head of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church worldwide, led the April 29 rites consecrating the main altar, assisted by Archbishop Maxim Hermaniuk of the Archeparchy of Winnipeg, Archbishop Stephen Sulyk of the Archeparchy of Philadelphia, Exarch Michel Hrynchyshyn of the Apostolic Exarchate of France, Benelux and Switzerland, Eparch Andrew Pataki of the Ruthenian Catholic Eparchy of Parma, and others.

Consecration of the walls occurred on May 1. A procession led by Cardinal Lubachivsky, Archbishop and Papal Pro-Nuncio Pio Laghi, Bishop Anthony Pilla of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Cleveland, Bishop James William Malone of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Youngstown, and Bishop Emeritus William Michael Cosgrove of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Belleville circled the building before entering. Cardinal Lubachivsky anointed the wall behind the main altar with holy chrism, Archbishop Laghi the north wall, and Archbishops Hermaniuk and Sulyk the south and west walls. The walls were sprinkled with holy water, concluding the consecration rite. A Pontifical High Mass followed.[25]

Cathedral history edit

The cathedral is the seat of the Ukrainian Catholic Eparchy of Saint Josaphat.[21][24]

St. Josaphat's aluminum domes gradually faded to a celadon color due to weathering. They were painted gold in the 1990s.[26]

A shrine to Our Lady of Pochaiv was dedicated on the cathedral grounds on May 23, 2010. The shrine was the result of a seven-year design and fundraising effort by the St. Josaphat Apostleship of Prayer, a group of women congregants. The shrine was designed by a Cleveland firm, Kulchytsky Architects. The brick shrine holds a mosaic in the likeness of the painted Ukrainian icon, which was designed by Eikona Studios of Cleveland and created in Italy. The shrine was blessed by Bishop John Bura, then apostolic administrator of the Eparchy of St. Josaphat.[27]

The domes atop the cathedral were replaced in 2015. Parishioners of St. Josaphat began raising funds about 2010 to replace the cathedral's five domes, which had deteriorated over time. Architect Christ J. Kamages was hired to design the replacements, and Unique Services & Applications installed them. The new domes are made of stainless steel and covered with titanium nitride, a ceramic material with a brilliant gold sheen. Construction of the domes began in the spring of 2015, and were blessed by Eparch Bohdan Danylo on October 5. Installation was completed in November. The $550,000 ($700,000 in 2023 dollars) domes are expected to last from 50 to 200 years.[26]

See also edit

References edit

Notes
  1. ^ A later source says 10.5 acres (4.2 ha).[1]
  2. ^ The number of below-ground classrooms is derived from a June 1964 newspaper article which reported that the building had 22 classrooms in total.[1] Another news media article just three months later noted that there were 15 ground-level classrooms.[11] This indicates seven classrooms were below-ground.
Citations
  1. ^ a b c d e f Rees, John W. (June 6, 1964). "Parishioners Build Own School". The Plain Dealer. p. 19.
  2. ^ "Rev. Mitred Dmytro Gresko, Ukrainian Catholic Pastor". The Plain Dealer. September 16, 1986.
  3. ^ a b "Parma School to Mark Anniversary" (PDF). The Ukrainian Weekly. September 4, 1977. p. 5. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
  4. ^ a b "Archbishop Will Dedicate New St. Raphael's Church". The Plain Dealer. May 8, 1954. p. 13.
  5. ^ "Byzantine Eve of Christmas Marked by Rite's Followers". The Plain Dealer. January 7, 1952. p. 4.
  6. ^ a b c "New Byzantine Rite Parish Added Here". The Plain Dealer. August 29, 1959. p. 15.
  7. ^ Karmazyn, Anizia (October 28, 2007). "St. Josaphat School in Parma: Still Making Memories at 60 Years" (PDF). The Ukrainian Weekly. p. 11. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
  8. ^ "St. Raphael's Church Is Dedicated". The Plain Dealer. May 10, 1954. p. 23.
  9. ^ a b "$100,000 Fire Routs 40 in Parma". The Plain Dealer. April 12, 1973. p. 1.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Fallout Shelter Part of New Parma School". The Plain Dealer. August 12, 1961. pp. 1–2.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Crawford, John A. (September 27, 1964). "141-Foot Dome Spans Parma School". The Plain Dealer. p. E34.
  12. ^ a b c d Sprague, Ingrid Schaefer (September 2, 2015). "Beyond the Astrodome". CBC Magazine. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
  13. ^ "St. Josaphat Holds Boxing Benefit". The Plain Dealer. October 22, 1969. p. F7.
  14. ^ Sammon, Judy (April 24, 1975). "Today". The Plain Dealer. p. A8.
  15. ^ "Byzantine Rite Church Blessed, Murals Placed". The Plain Dealer. January 23, 1961. p. 8.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g "Parma's St. Josaphat Cathedral to be officially opened" (PDF). The Ukrainian Weekly. June 23, 1985. p. 4. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
  17. ^ "Msgr. Andrew Ulicky, Ukrainian Catholic Church vicar general". The Plain Dealer. March 28, 1983. p. B6.
  18. ^ Bihun, Yaro (April 9, 2006). "'An unidentified guest,' and Our Family Collections". The Ukrainian Weekly. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
  19. ^ "Rev. Sirko, 67, Ukrainian priest". The Plain Dealer. October 8, 1979. p. B11.
  20. ^ a b c Romanowych, Patricia (June 20, 1982). "Groundbreaking of St. Josaphat's scheduled for June 24" (PDF). The Ukrainian Weekly. p. 11. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
  21. ^ a b c "Ukrainian Diocese Set in Parma". The Plain Dealer. December 21, 1983. p. F2.
  22. ^ "Topping Off". The Plain Dealer. August 31, 1983. p. B10.
  23. ^ Holland, Darrell (February 25, 1984). "Ukrainian Diocese to Install Leader". The Plain Dealer. p. B7.
  24. ^ a b "New Ukrainian Cathedral". The Plain Dealer. November 10, 1984. p. C9.
  25. ^ "St. Josaphat Cathedral Dedicated in Parma" (PDF). The Ukrainian Weekly. July 10, 1988. pp. 11, 15. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
  26. ^ a b "Parma's St. Josaphat Cathedral gold domes get $550,000 renovation". The Plain Dealer. October 6, 2015. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
  27. ^ Russ, Dick (July 11, 2010). "Parma cathedral dedicates Our Lady of Pochaiv Shrine" (PDF). The Ukrainian Weekly. p. 9. Retrieved June 26, 2019.

External links edit

  Media related to St. Josaphat Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral (Parma, Ohio) at Wikimedia Commons

  • Official Cathedral site
  • Eparchy of Saint Josaphat in Parma official site

josaphat, ukrainian, catholic, cathedral, parma, ohio, josaphat, ukrainian, catholic, cathedral, ukrainian, catholic, cathedral, located, parma, ohio, united, states, cathedral, grew, parochial, school, which, opened, 1951, parish, erected, 1959, construction,. St Josaphat Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral is a Ukrainian Catholic cathedral located in Parma Ohio in the United States The cathedral grew out of a parochial school which opened in 1951 and a parish erected in 1959 Construction on the cathedral began in 1982 and was completed in 1985 It was dedicated in 1988 the thousand year anniversary of the arrival of Christianity in Ukraine The cathedral is the seat for the Ukrainian Catholic Eparchy of Saint Josaphat in Parma which was erected in 1983 during construction of the building St Josaphat Ukrainian Catholic CathedralSt Josaphat Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral in Parma Ohio U S 41 24 24 N 81 42 40 W 41 40667 N 81 71111 W 41 40667 81 71111Location5720 State RoadParma OhioCountryUnited StatesDenominationUkrainian Greek Catholic ChurchWebsitestjosaphatcathedral wbr comArchitectureArchitect s McWilliams Martyniuk SchidlowskiStyleByzantine RevivalGroundbreakingJune 24 1982SpecificationsCapacity500AdministrationDioceseSaint Josaphat in ParmaClergyBishop s Bohdan Danylo Contents 1 Site School and chapel 1 1 School growth 1 2 Construction of the Astrodome 1 3 Congregation and chapel 2 Cathedral 2 1 Construction 2 2 Cathedral history 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksSite School and chapel editSchool growth edit nbsp 1953 school buildingIn 1947 Saints Peter and Paul Ukrainian Catholic Church in Cleveland Ohio purchased 10 acres 4 0 ha of land a in then sparsely populated Parma Ohio 2 The 32 000 400 000 in 2023 dollars school was dedicated on May 31 1951 and opened the following November 15 3 The school was staffed by the Sisters of the Order of St Basil the Great 4 The school contained a chapel named for St Josaphat 5 which served as a mission church to Ukrainian Catholic families in the area 6 The chapel was renovated in 1959 at which time the name of the school was changed to St Josaphat School 6 7 A second 100 000 1 100 000 in 2023 dollars school building on the site was completed in 1953 3 and blessed on May 9 1954 4 A convent building for the Sisters of St Basil was blessed on the site on May 9 1954 as well 8 A five classroom addition to the St Josaphat School was built in 1965 9 Construction of the Astrodome edit nbsp Astrodome In the summer of 1961 St Josaphat Parish began construction of a high school on its property 10 Parishioner 1 Nicholas Baiko an engineer with the Arthur G McKee amp Co industrial engineering firm did the preliminary drawings 11 Parishioner 1 Michael Stefanyk an architect and engineer completed the plans 10 The dome of the school was designed by Roof Structures Inc of St Louis Missouri while the architectural firm of T A Badowski amp Associates consulted 11 Designed for 500 students 10 1 the structure was circular and features 16 one story classrooms clustered around a central dome The classroom ring contained administrative offices classrooms a library and laboratories The central dome was a combination auditorium gymnasium and theatre The wall supporting the dome was 25 feet 7 6 m high and the dome rose another 48 feet 15 m above the wall The dome itself was 140 feet 43 m in diameter while the classroom ring was 211 feet 64 m in diameter 10 The foundation consisted of reinforced concrete footers standing on bedrock 11 The structure had an extensive basement Initially designed to act as a fallout shelter capable of serving 2 000 people 10 it was redesigned so that half the space was occupied by Heating ventilation and air conditioning machinery while the other half contained seven classrooms and a cafeteria 11 b The outer wall of the classroom ring was built of brick with stone trim 10 while the higher inner wall was concrete block and glass brick 11 A hallway around the inner wall gave students access to all classrooms and the dome Roughly halfway up the inner wall a balcony projected into the dome A ring of poured reinforced concrete lay atop the balcony anchoring it to this wall Another ring of poured reinforced concrete lay atop the wall The base of the dome itself was made of steel plate Each plate was 9 inches 230 mm high and 1 5 inches 38 mm thick and they were both bolted and welded where they joined one another The dome was supported by wooden ribs each 4 by 10 inches 100 by 250 mm in size Manufactured in Oregon they were curved on the top to match the arc of the dome Thirty two ribs were jointed with steel angle plates to the dome rim Halfway to the dome apex the 32 ribs were spliced into one another again using steel angle plates to create 16 ribs These 16 ribs were bolted to a steel ring at the apex of the dome Secondary wooden beams were used between the ribs to enhance the dome s stability Tongue and groove planks each 2 inches 51 mm thick were spiked to the ribs from the outside These in turn were covered with 1 inch 25 mm thick composite insulation board Liquid hot asphalt was mopped onto the insulation board building up the roof A layer of white marble chips was impregnated into the asphalt to complete the roof The auditorium and balcony could accommodate 1 500 people 11 The structure was estimated to cost 1 million 10 2 million in 2023 dollars with another 700 000 7 14 million in 2023 dollars in labor 10 donated free from parishioners 10 12 When construction began in May 1961 12 parish officials believed the high school would be complete in September 1962 10 Construction delays were numerous however and by June 1964 officials thought that five classrooms might open in September 1965 1 The building was finally completed in early 1969 and blessed by Archbishop Ambrose Senyshyn of the Archeparchy of Philadelphia on April 20 1969 12 For various reasons the school never opened 12 It was repurposed into an event center public auditorium public theatre and sports venue It was first known as St Josaphat Auditorium 13 but by 1975 had been nicknamed the St Josaphat Astrodome for its resemblance to the Houston Astrodome 14 Congregation and chapel edit nbsp RectoryArchbishop Constantine Bohachevsky erected St Josaphat Parish in August 1959 appointing Rev Andrew Ulicky an assistant pastor at SS Peter and Paul Church as the pastor Brookpark Road was named the dividing line between the mother parish and the new St Josaphat whose boundary extended south to Medina Ohio The erection of the new parish came about due to the significant growth among Ukrainian Catholics in the area now numbering some 450 families 6 St Josaphat Chapel was redecorated after the elevation to parish status Artist Theodore Katomay of Chicago created 24 murals for the renovation 17 of which were placed in the sanctuary The new murals were in place in time for the Christmas celebration on January 7 1961 and blessed on January 22 by Monsignor Dmytro Gresko of SS Peter and Paul and Rev Ulicky 15 A fire broke out in St Josaphat Chapel during the evening mass on April 11 1973 It began in the sacristy and 40 worshippers fled the blaze The fire did 100 000 700 000 in 2023 dollars in damage destroying the sacristy and main altar and scorching some pews 9 Cathedral editConstruction edit Rev Ulicky originally sought to build a church immediately after erection of the parish Church leaders however believed construction of the high school should come first 16 In 1973 17 Father Ulicky was appointed pastor at St Mary Byzantine Catholic Church in Johnstown Pennsylvania 18 His successor the Very Reverend Yaroslaw Sirko continued to plan for construction of a church 16 but died in October 1979 after a two year battle with cancer 19 The Right Reverend Michael Fedorowich assigned to St Josaphat in December 1979 began the process of organizing committees to plan the new church 16 The structure was designed by the firm of McWilliams Martyniuk Schidlowski of Kent Ohio 20 and built under the auspices of general contractor Chopko Construction 16 The 500 seat building incorporated traditional features such as onion domes on the roof and an altar set in the east wall It also included contemporary and futuristic architectural details in order to reflect the then upcoming thousand year anniversary of Christianity s introduction in Ukraine 20 Ground for the cathedral was broken on June 24 1982 16 20 The initial cost was estimated at 2 3 million 7 26 million in 2023 dollars 21 Topping out of the church occurred on August 30 1983 when the 12 short tons 11 t main aluminum onion dome was set atop the church 22 During construction the Eparchy of Saint Josaphat was erected in December 1983 21 Robert Mikhail Moskal was installed as the first eparch bishop of the diocese at the unfinished cathedral on February 29 1984 23 A ceremonial cornerstone was laid and blessed on November 11 1984 which happened to be the 25th anniversary of the congregation s establishment as well 24 St Josaphat Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral held its first services on June 24 1985 Eparch Robert Moskal led a procession from the chapel to the cathedral carrying the Blessed Sacrament and relics of St Josaphat then celebrated a pontifical divine liturgy at the new church The cathedral was blessed once 16 The consecration of St Josaphat Cathedral was delayed until May 1 1988 the year in which Ukrainians observed the thousand year anniversary of Christianity in Ukraine This also allowed for completion of all iconostasis and other interior decorations 16 Cardinal Myroslav Ivan Lubachivsky head of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church worldwide led the April 29 rites consecrating the main altar assisted by Archbishop Maxim Hermaniuk of the Archeparchy of Winnipeg Archbishop Stephen Sulyk of the Archeparchy of Philadelphia Exarch Michel Hrynchyshyn of the Apostolic Exarchate of France Benelux and Switzerland Eparch Andrew Pataki of the Ruthenian Catholic Eparchy of Parma and others Consecration of the walls occurred on May 1 A procession led by Cardinal Lubachivsky Archbishop and Papal Pro Nuncio Pio Laghi Bishop Anthony Pilla of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Cleveland Bishop James William Malone of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Youngstown and Bishop Emeritus William Michael Cosgrove of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Belleville circled the building before entering Cardinal Lubachivsky anointed the wall behind the main altar with holy chrism Archbishop Laghi the north wall and Archbishops Hermaniuk and Sulyk the south and west walls The walls were sprinkled with holy water concluding the consecration rite A Pontifical High Mass followed 25 Cathedral history edit The cathedral is the seat of the Ukrainian Catholic Eparchy of Saint Josaphat 21 24 St Josaphat s aluminum domes gradually faded to a celadon color due to weathering They were painted gold in the 1990s 26 A shrine to Our Lady of Pochaiv was dedicated on the cathedral grounds on May 23 2010 The shrine was the result of a seven year design and fundraising effort by the St Josaphat Apostleship of Prayer a group of women congregants The shrine was designed by a Cleveland firm Kulchytsky Architects The brick shrine holds a mosaic in the likeness of the painted Ukrainian icon which was designed by Eikona Studios of Cleveland and created in Italy The shrine was blessed by Bishop John Bura then apostolic administrator of the Eparchy of St Josaphat 27 The domes atop the cathedral were replaced in 2015 Parishioners of St Josaphat began raising funds about 2010 to replace the cathedral s five domes which had deteriorated over time Architect Christ J Kamages was hired to design the replacements and Unique Services amp Applications installed them The new domes are made of stainless steel and covered with titanium nitride a ceramic material with a brilliant gold sheen Construction of the domes began in the spring of 2015 and were blessed by Eparch Bohdan Danylo on October 5 Installation was completed in November The 550 000 700 000 in 2023 dollars domes are expected to last from 50 to 200 years 26 See also editList of Catholic cathedrals in the United States List of cathedrals in the United StatesReferences editNotes A later source says 10 5 acres 4 2 ha 1 The number of below ground classrooms is derived from a June 1964 newspaper article which reported that the building had 22 classrooms in total 1 Another news media article just three months later noted that there were 15 ground level classrooms 11 This indicates seven classrooms were below ground Citations a b c d e f Rees John W June 6 1964 Parishioners Build Own School The Plain Dealer p 19 Rev Mitred Dmytro Gresko Ukrainian Catholic Pastor The Plain Dealer September 16 1986 a b Parma School to Mark Anniversary PDF The Ukrainian Weekly September 4 1977 p 5 Retrieved June 25 2019 a b Archbishop Will Dedicate New St Raphael s Church The Plain Dealer May 8 1954 p 13 Byzantine Eve of Christmas Marked by Rite s Followers The Plain Dealer January 7 1952 p 4 a b c New Byzantine Rite Parish Added Here The Plain Dealer August 29 1959 p 15 Karmazyn Anizia October 28 2007 St Josaphat School in Parma Still Making Memories at 60 Years PDF The Ukrainian Weekly p 11 Retrieved June 25 2019 St Raphael s Church Is Dedicated The Plain Dealer May 10 1954 p 23 a b 100 000 Fire Routs 40 in Parma The Plain Dealer April 12 1973 p 1 a b c d e f g h i Fallout Shelter Part of New Parma School The Plain Dealer August 12 1961 pp 1 2 a b c d e f g Crawford John A September 27 1964 141 Foot Dome Spans Parma School The Plain Dealer p E34 a b c d Sprague Ingrid Schaefer September 2 2015 Beyond the Astrodome CBC Magazine Retrieved June 25 2019 St Josaphat Holds Boxing Benefit The Plain Dealer October 22 1969 p F7 Sammon Judy April 24 1975 Today The Plain Dealer p A8 Byzantine Rite Church Blessed Murals Placed The Plain Dealer January 23 1961 p 8 a b c d e f g Parma s St Josaphat Cathedral to be officially opened PDF The Ukrainian Weekly June 23 1985 p 4 Retrieved June 25 2019 Msgr Andrew Ulicky Ukrainian Catholic Church vicar general The Plain Dealer March 28 1983 p B6 Bihun Yaro April 9 2006 An unidentified guest and Our Family Collections The Ukrainian Weekly Retrieved June 25 2019 Rev Sirko 67 Ukrainian priest The Plain Dealer October 8 1979 p B11 a b c Romanowych Patricia June 20 1982 Groundbreaking of St Josaphat s scheduled for June 24 PDF The Ukrainian Weekly p 11 Retrieved June 25 2019 a b c Ukrainian Diocese Set in Parma The Plain Dealer December 21 1983 p F2 Topping Off The Plain Dealer August 31 1983 p B10 Holland Darrell February 25 1984 Ukrainian Diocese to Install Leader The Plain Dealer p B7 a b New Ukrainian Cathedral The Plain Dealer November 10 1984 p C9 St Josaphat Cathedral Dedicated in Parma PDF The Ukrainian Weekly July 10 1988 pp 11 15 Retrieved June 25 2019 a b Parma s St Josaphat Cathedral gold domes get 550 000 renovation The Plain Dealer October 6 2015 Retrieved June 25 2019 Russ Dick July 11 2010 Parma cathedral dedicates Our Lady of Pochaiv Shrine PDF The Ukrainian Weekly p 9 Retrieved June 26 2019 External links edit nbsp Media related to St Josaphat Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral Parma Ohio at Wikimedia Commons Official Cathedral site Eparchy of Saint Josaphat in Parma official site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Josaphat Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral Parma Ohio amp oldid 1134083403, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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