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Copyright 2008,
Cathedral of St. Raphael.
All Rights Reserved
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History
St. Raphael's Parish has a long and rich history that
reaches all the way back to 1833. The history of this
parish is a record of stories of grace, of courage, or vision and of
dedication by those holy men and women who have served here. "May the
Lord, who has begun this good work among us, see it through to its
completion."
Part 1: The Early Years
| In 1833 the first permanent European settlement
was established. In July of 1833 Father Charles Felix Van
Quickenborne celebrated mass in the river front home of Mrs.
Brophy. Father Van Quickenborne began planning for a
parish building, but he was reassigned before any serious work
could be done. Father Van Quickenborne was followed by
Father J. Fitzmaurice. Fr. Fitzmaurice was pastor for only
one year when he died in a cholera outbreak. |

Father Samuel Mazzuchelli as a young man. |
The next pastor was the renowned and revered Venerable
Father Samuel Mazzuchelli, a Dominican priest, who came in 1835.
Father Samuel reorganized the parish, and named it St. Raphael's
after one of the three Archangels. He
designed and built this first Church building, which was completed in 1836.
This church was located just to the south of the current building where
the school building stands today.
On July 28, 1837 the Diocese of Dubuque was created.
Fr. Mathias Loras was named the first Bishop of Dubuque.
He immediately went to Europe to recruit priests for the new
diocese. Bishop Mathias Loras arrived for the first time
in Dubuque in 1839. He found a growing community complete
with a Catholic parish. At this point St. Raphael's was
then raised to the status of a Cathedral.
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In 1839,
Fr. Mazzuchelli directed the construction of a large building at
the back of the Cathedral. This structure served the
Bishop, and was the first home of St. Raphael's Seminary - which
today is known as Loras College. Bishop Loras, Fr.
Mazzuchelli, and other pioneer religious helped establish the
presence of the church in what would become the state of Iowa.
In 1843 the Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary
(B.V.M.) came to Dubuque from Philadelphia and began the first
Cathedral School.
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The first Saint Raphael's Cathedral.
Constructed in 1836, this building served as the Cathedral until
the construction of the present building in 1861. This
building sat where the school building is today. |
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Following its founding in 1833, the city of Dubuque
experienced rapid growth. Soon the Cathedral was filled to
capacity on Sundays. A new church was planned on Main
Street between 7th and 8th Streets to provide a second parish
for the city. A cornerstone was laid in 1849, but work
never proceeded past the foundation. Because of the crowding at
the Cathedral, Loras created St. Patrick's parish, and also created Holy Trinity (now
Saint Mary's) parish to minister to the increasing number of Germans in
the city.
Loras realized that founding new parishes was only a
temporary solution. In 1857, in response to the rapid growth of
Dubuque, Bishop Loras made plans to build a much larger Cathedral
Church. John Mullany was chosen to draw the plans for the new
building - which would be over three times larger than the previous
building. Mullany used Magdalen College in Oxford, England
as the model for the Cathedral. Work began on land just to
the north of the first Cathedral building. The cornerstone
was laid on Sunday, July 5, 1857, and was witnessed by a huge
gathering.
During this time, the health of Bishop Loras began to
fail. Father Clement Smyth - a Trappist Father from the nearby New
Melleray Abbey became the coadjutor to the Bishop of
Dubuque and oversaw the building of the new Cathedral. The
structure was completed enough for Bishop Loras to offer the first mass
in the new building on Christmas Day, 1857. Less than two months
later Bishop Pierre Jean Mathias Loras
died. |
On to Part II >
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