 |
Welcome to St. E's!Pastor's PageMasses/ PresidersSacramentsBulletinJoin The ParishWeekly SchedulesReadings/ ReflectionDirectionsFood PantryRelated LinksPastoral StudyHoly Land Visit |
|
Our
History
St.
Elizabeth of Hungary is
a parish rich with history. Built upon farmland in the early 1960’s
the parish and its facilities have undergone much transformation
to adapt to the growing and ever-changing population in the South
Huntington and Melville area. Your eyes on this page are evidence
that the parish community’s impact now extends beyond its physical
borders here in Suffolk County , NY, through the global reach of
the internet.
To
help provide you with a more complete retrospective, here is the
first installment of the history of St. Elizabeth of Hungary parish
as excerpted from the 40th Jubilee parish journal, originally published
in 2002.
The
First Decade - “What will become of this child?”
The
Neighborhood
In
1962, Wolf Hill Road was a “country road” in comparison to what
it is now. There was a farm on the southeast corner of Wolf Hill
Road and New York Avenue, owned by the Cregg family. Much of the
land on the south side of Wolf Hill Road was theirs. John Cregg
became one of our first parish trustees (with Frank Schneider,…no
relation to our current pastor), and a generous contributor to our
newborn parish.
Major
department stores evaluated the area’s growth potential and soon
construction of the Walt Whitman Mall began. A&S and Macy’s
were the big name stores, as well as McCrory’s for discount items.
The community also had its own drive-in movie theater, the 110 Drive-In,
located just north of the Expressway where the Fleet Bank Building
and the Marriott Hotel now stand. An E.J. Korvette’s department
store occupied the entire area where Michael’s and Applebee’s are
now, with Kresge’s located where the Barnes and Noble and Tower
Records stores are. In the Korvette’s parking lot in the summer,
there was a carnival that came for a week or so with a Ferris wheel
and amusement park rides.
The
Public Library was in the basement of the Central Elementary school
on the west side of Route 110, just north of Jericho Turnpike. In
1969, the current South Huntington Library was built on the site
of an old small schoolhouse known as the Depot Road School . It
was complete with a bell no the roof to call students to class.
The
Post World-War II Baby Boomer generation was soon attending school.
To educate these newcomers, school buildings has to be erected all
over suburban Long Island . Soon, even these new schools were bursting
at the seams. Across Nassau and western Suffolk , the population
was expanding with war veterans and their spouses raising families.
The
Creation of St. Elizabeth
By
the early 1960’s St. Hugh of Lincoln parish in Huntington Station
, established right after WWII, had already grown too large for
its church. In 1962, Bishop Walter P. Kellenberg created five new
parishes and ours was one of the group. St. Elizabeth of Hungary
Parish, a granddaughter of St. Patrick Church in Huntington , emerged
from a daughter parish, St. Hugh ofLincoln . The boundaries of the
newborn were Jericho Turnpike to the north, Deer Park Avenue to
the east, the Long Island Expressway service road to the south and
Hartman Hill and Mount Misery Roads to the west. Bishop Kellenberg
selected Father Arthur Kane to be our first pastor.
As
a result of John Cregg’s purchase of the Cameron sod farm land,
the diocese was able to have the fifteen acres needed for our parish
buildings and for what was to become Holy Family diocesan high school,
now St. Anthony high school.
Our
first Mass was celebrated at the International Brotherhood of Electricians’
union hall (where the Swiss Air building now stands). While plans
were underway for our church and other buildings, each weekend mass
was celebrated at the union hall and later at the Walt Whitman movie
theater (and don’t forget the first “drive-in” outdoor Mass at the
110 Drive-In). Daily mass and baptisms too place in the chapel;
the converted garage of the original rectory at 215 Pidgeon Hill
Road . The permanent rectory would not be built until May 1970.
Parish
Statistics
In
the 1960s at St. Elizabeth, nearly fifty percent of the population
was under eighteen. Enrolled in what was called Confraternity of
Christian Doctrine (CCD) in 1965, were 2,400 first through twelfth
graders with 400 teachers. With no buildings available, it was an
in-home program coordinated by parish volunteers. Soon there were
more than 3,000 children and close to 500 teachers. By 1968, 481
second graders received First Communion while 464 sixth graders
were confirmed. Thirty years later, in 1998, the child population
was radically reduced, public schools have been closed in the 1980s
and First Communions and Confirmations numbered 110 and 87 respectively!
The
Parish: The Building of the Church
Original building plans,
on five acres that had been a sod farm, called for the creation
of a church, a two story elementary school with a gym and a cafeteria,
a convent for the women religious who would staff the school, a
rectory and a parking lot. The church would eventually be built
on the land where the rectory is presently located. With the involvement
of the diocesan building office, an architectural firm was selected
for the design work and an artist rendering and blueprints were
drawn with construction soon to follow. Fundraising was moderately
successful. A half million dollars had to be borrowed from the diocese
to complete the project. In January, 1964, a contractor was selected
and construction began that spring, starting with the school auditorium
which would be our “temporary church”. The bulletin kept parishioners
abreast of building progress. “Our new building may be seen from
your car if you go that way.” (Bulletin, April 19, 1964)
On November 19th, the cornerstone
was laid and in February, 1965 the first Mass was offered. In September
of that year, Bishop Kellenberg gave permission for the erection
of a two story, twenty-four classroom school. It was hoped that
the school and convent would be opened by September, 1968. In June,
1967 the proposed school and convent were put out to bid. After
that summer, Father Kane and his staff consulted more actively with
parishioners to determine their interest in the project and their
willingness to take on the responsibilities and the funding of a
school. The response to the referendum revealed that only a minority
were in favor of a school since there were strong ties to St. Hugh
of Lincoln school. In addition, the public school system, with numerous
Catholics as teachers, was deemed excellent and a new Catholic Elementary
school would mean a heavy financial burden. Plans for the school
were abandoned and all effort was thrown into the parish religious
education program. Due to architects fees already paid, the Center
was built solidly enough structurally to have a second floor and
the convent a third floor (for the dozen or more Sisters who would
teach in the school).
Parish
Life
While the buildings were
being constructed, beginning with the church, committee meetings
were held at the Huntington Town House, the basement of Twin Oaks
Beverage, and the homes of many parishioners. The Parish Center
would soon become the locus for all parish activities and meeting
place for ongoing formation of both adults and children. The Center
and the adjacent Convent were completed in the spring of 1969 and
dedicated by Bishop Kellenberg in June.
Everything was new, from
the parish buildings to the community homes. Even the Mass was taking
a new form as the documents of Vatican II were implemented. One
Sunday, Father Kane announced, "Next week we are turning the
altar around. I don't know why, but that's the way it will be next
weekend.
By invitation, six Sisters
of St. Joseph joined the parish in September, 1967. Their focus
was on adult formation, and secondarily, the religious education
of children. Through their far-reaching efforts many lay leaders
were educated in the faith. Over the next ten years, besides other
accomplishments, Josephite Sisters, working closely with parish
lay leaders and priests, would inaugurate a diocesan-wide Mini-Congress,
a Baptismal Program, Ecumenical Religious Education Classes, “Beginnings”,
a Social Justice Committee, and an annual Thanksgiving Food Drive.
The parish was a gathering
point for young families, offering many sports programs for the
kids, a performing arts group for the adults, social groups, and
fashion shows. The South Huntington Knights of Columbus was started
too. With so many young families with children, there was much interest
in getting away for an evening of fun. Dinner dances, fashion shows,
card parties and other social events, helped recreate tired parents
and build community. Tickets to most events were on a first come,
first served basis. There were dances in the lower church for St.
Patrick’s Day, Halloween, and New Year’s Eve, each hosting approximately
600 people.
The St. Elizabeth choir
was invited to sing at the World’s Fair Vatican Pavilion in 1965,
and they were good enough to record their own LP.
In June, 1969 the Parish
Council, a lay leadership ministry that grew out of the significant
reforms of Vatican II, approved the plans for the building of a
rectory on parish grounds. Construction began in October, the rectory
on Pigeon Hill was sold, and the new Rectory was ready for occupancy
by early 1970.
Next…
The
Second Decade: The Evolving Catholic
Church
|