翻訳と辞書 ・ St. Rose Dominican Hospital – Siena Campus ・ St. Rose High School ・ St. Rose Hospital ・ St. Rose of Lima Catholic Church (Gaithersburg, Maryland) ・ St. Rose of Lima Church ・ St. Rose of Lima Church (Newtown, Connecticut) ・ St. Rose of Lima Mission, Roman Catholic Church (Silver Lake, Missouri) ・ St. Rose of Lima Parish in Chula Vista ・ St. Rose of Lima Park ・ St. Rose of Lima's Church (Manhattan) ・ St. Rose of Lima's Old Church (New York City) ・ St. Rose of Viterbo Convent ・ St. Rose Priory ・ St. Rose Roman Catholic Church Complex ・ St. Rose Roman Catholic Church Complex (Lima, New York) ・ St. Rose's Catholic Church (St. Rose, Ohio) ・ St. Rose's Church ・ St. Rose's High School, Guyana ・ St. Rose, Louisiana ・ St. Rose, Nova Scotia ・ St. Rumbold's Cathedral ・ St. Rupert's Church, Vienna ・ St. Rynagh's GAA ・ St. Sabbas Russian Orthodox Monastery (Harper Woods, Michigan) ・ St. Salvator's Cathedral ・ St. Salvator's Church ・ St. Sarkis Church (Dearborn, Michigan) ・ St. Sava Academy ・ St. Sava Church, Paris ・ St. Sava Orthodox School
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St. Rose's Catholic Church (St. Rose, Ohio) : ウィキペディア英語版 | St. Rose's Catholic Church (St. Rose, Ohio)
St. Rose's Catholic Church (also known as "St. Rosa's Catholic Church"〔Scranton, S.S. ''History of Mercer County, Ohio and Representative Citizens''. Chicago: Biographical, 1907, 224.〕) is a historic Catholic church in St. Rose,〔 an unincorporated community in Marion Township, Mercer County, Ohio, United States. ==Parish history== Catholics near the community of St. Rose began meeting for worship in 1837; they built a log church building in the following year,〔 and in early 1842, they purchased land ultimately to be used for a cemetery and a larger church.〔"Mercer County, Ohio History 1978" Celina: Mercer County Historical Society, 1978, 767.〕 In 1844, these individuals were erected into a separate parish, which was dedicated to St. Rose.〔Fortin, Roger. ''(Faith and Action: A History of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati 1821-1996 )''. Columbus: Ohio State UP, 2002, 400.〕 At that time, the parish encompassed a significantly larger area than it does today; five other parishes — Nativity in Cassella, St. Sebastian in Sebastian, Precious Blood in Chickasaw, St. Aloysius in Carthagena, and Our Lady of Guadalupe in Montezuma — were partially or entirely formed from territory originally included in St. Rose parish.〔 Mass was celebrated at the church sporadically for its first eight years; only in 1845, after several priests from the Congregation of the Precious Blood began serving St. Rose and several surrounding parishes, were the parishioners able to have regular services. By the 1850s, the log church building had become too small, so a replacement brick structure was constructed at a cost of $6,000 and consecrated in mid-1854. Measuring by , it was periodically modernized; by 1907, it featured such improvements as acetylene lighting.〔 However, this structure in turn was becoming too small by this time; four years later, a third church building was begun, and it was consecrated in September 1912.〔 Today, St. Rose's remains an active parish of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati. It is part of the Marion Catholic Community cluster, along with Precious Blood parish in Chickasaw, Nativity of the Blessed Virgin parish in Cassella, St. Sebastian parish in Sebastian, and St. John the Baptist parish in Maria Stein. The entire cluster is a part of the St. Marys Deanery.〔(The Futures Project ), Archdiocese of Cincinnati. Accessed 2010-08-22.〕
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