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Parish
History:
St. Frances de Chantal parish, which
celebrates in 2002 its 75th anniversary of
serving God’s people in the Throggs Neck
community, had its humble beginnings in a
tent erected at Meagher and Lawton Avenues
where the first Mass was celebrated in July,
1922. At that time Throggs Neck was a part
of Holy Family parish. In 1926 this little
chapel was placed under the care of Father
William Jordan who was entrusted with the
task of founding a new parish and replacing
the tent with a church. Our parish was
formally established by Patrick Cardinal
Hayes in 1927.
Father Jordan directed the building of the
new church despite the hardships and
difficulties which came as a result of the
stock market crash in 1929 and the ensuing
Depression. St. Frances de Chantal Church
was completed and the first Mass offered in
1930. The parish school opened its doors for
the first time in September of that same
year. There were 150 students in grades one
through four under the guidance of the
Sisters of the Divine Compassion. Sr. Mary
Bernard was the founding principal.
During Father Jordan’s 29 years as pastor
the parish grew not only in size but in the
variety of ways in which the needs of
parishioners were cared for. One of the
proudest moments in now Msgr. Jordan’s
pastorate was when Francis Cardinal Spellman
came to dedicate the new convent on October
9, 1953. It was around this time that
Monsignor’s health began to fail and his
death on May 7, 1955 was indeed a very sad
day for the parish.
Our Parish Grows
The second pastor of St. Frances de Chantal
was Father John T. Halpin who came to the
parish at a time of rapid growth and
expansion. He began plans to build an
addition to the school and started to buy up
land on which to build a new and larger
church. A new wing to the school containing
16 classrooms and an expanded convent were
dedicated by Cardinal Spellman in 1957.
The major task faced by Msgr. Halpin was the
construction of our present church,
necessitated by the ever growing population
of the parish and his desire to respond to
the liturgical changes that came from the
Second Vatican Council. Construction began
in April, 1969 and was completed in
September, 1970. This magnificent structure
was free of debt, a wonderful tribute to the
faith and the generosity of the parishioners
of St. Frances. His Eminence Terence
Cardinal Cooke celebrated the Mass of
Dedication on October 25, 1970; the homilist
was Bishop Patrick Ahern. This was a truly
great day not only for the parish but the
entire community.
When Msgr. Halpin began to experience some
health problems in his later years, Cardinal
Cooke sent Msgr. Joseph Devlin to the parish
in 1972 as administrator. Msgr. Devlin
became the third pastor of St. Frances in
1973 until his retirement in 1986 and lived
at St. Frances as pastor emeritus until
2001, the year in which he celebrated his
90th birthday and 65th anniversary as a
priest. During the Devlin years the parish
celebrated its Golden Jubilee in 1977. Msgr.
Halpin died on October 17, 1986.
The fourth pastor of our parish was
Monsignor Daniel J. Keehan who was appointed
in 1986 and served at St. Frances for 10
years at which time he was named pastor of
Holy Family Church on Staten Island. It was
during Msgr. Keenan’s tenure that a new
congregation of religious women founded in
1991 by Cardinal O’Connor, the Sisters of
Life, took up residence in our parish
convent. Our parish school celebrated its
60th anniversary in 1990.
In November of 1996, John Cardinal O’Connor
appointed Msgr. Leslie J. Ivers as 5th
pastor of St. Frances de Chantal parish.
Msgr. Ivers celebrated the 75th
anniversary of the parish with a successful
parish campaign. During his tenure, many
improvements were made to the church and
school. Msgr. Ivers was pastor of St.
Frances for 13 years. He was then assigned
to Epiphany parish in Manhattan as pastor.
Father Michael J. Sullivan, our current
pastor, was assigned to St. Frances de
Chantal on July 1, 2009 as Administrator.
Father Sullivan was once a faculty member of
the parish school and is very excited to
have returned “home.”
We Welcome the Future
St. Frances de Chantal Parish continues to
minister to the Catholic community of
Throggs Neck. We currently have
approximately 2,500 families registered as
parishioners. On a given weekend almost
2,300 people attend Mass which is celebrated
in two languages (English and Spanish). Our
parish school educates children from pre-K
through grade eight. There are also about
220 children are enrolled in our Religious
Education Program. Our Rite of Christian
Initiation of Adults (RCIA) program has
brought many adults into the Church. A host
of parish programs and societies serve the
needs of parishioners from children to
senior citizens.
Our parish has grown over the last 85 years
- from a tent chapel to a magnificent
church, one of the first built in the
Archdiocese reflecting the Second Vatican
Council. The needs and challenges of our
parish have changed, as have the people we
are called to serve. We continue through the
21st century filled with hope as we continue
to be a sign of Christ’s presence here in
Throggs Neck.
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