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Historic Photo from NRHP Filing
The parish of Ste. Anne is the second oldest Catholic parish with a continuous record in the United States. (Only the parish of St. Augustine, Florida is older.) The church was founded by M. Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac in 1701 simultaneously with the beginning of construction of Fort Ponchartrain on the site of present day Detroit. Cadillac started construction on a chapel on July 26, only two days after his arrival at the site. The church of Ste. Anne has been closely associated with the growth and development of the City of Detroit. It is the only institution in existence which dates from the beginning of the city and its records, starting in 1704, are an invaluable source of information on the early history of the city and especially on the French population of Detroit. One of the most important figures in the history of the parish, Father Gabriel Richard, was also one of the most important citizens of Detroit in the first half of the 19th century. Born in France in 1767, Father Richard became a Suplican priest in 1791. During the Revolution he fled France and sought asylum in the United States under the auspices of Bishop Carroll of Baltimore. In 1798 he was assigned to Ste. Anne's as assistant pastor and he became pastor of the parish in 1802. His primary concern, after his religious duties, was the development of educational programs for his frontier community. He was among the first to advocate public education and to insist upon the responsibility of government for the education of the poor. He pioneered in vocational education and started a school for girls. He was one of the founders of the University of Michigan and the first person to urge the creation of a free public library in Detroit. He was renowned for his educational work with the Indians in Michigan and he published one of Detroit's earliest newspapers on a printing press which he brought to the city in 1809. Conscious of the need for growth and development in the Michigan Territory, Father Richard served as a delegate to Congress from 1823 to 1825 and was instrumental in securing road building projects for Michigan, including a road from Detroit to Chicago. He was the first priest to serve in Congress. Almost 150 years passed before another priest was elected to serve in Washington. Father Richard died of cholera in 1832. He contracted the disease while administering aid to hundreds of cholera sufferers during the epidemic that swept the city that year. Father Richard was buried beneath the new church building that had been completed in 1828. When the present church was erected in 1887, Father Richards remains were moved to a special crypt in the new building. Several of the early buildings of Ste. Anne's parish were destroyed by fire. On at least two occasions the congregation outgrew its accommodations and was forced to erect a new building. This was the situation in 1887 when the present church was erected.
The Ste. Anne Church District is situated in a block surrounded by Howard, Ste. Anne, Lafayette and Eighteenth streets on Detroit's near west side. The district consists of five buildings: church, rectory, school, convent and parish hall. The church was completed in 1887 according to a basic cruciform plan designed by Leon Coquard, a native of the parish. It is an excellent example of the Gothic Revival style deemed appropriate for churches in the mid-nineteenth century. Twin spires flank the nave on the north side of the building following the design of the churches of northern France. The lower portion of the building was constructed from locally-quarried limestone. Each of the three entrances on the front of the building are surrounded by pointed limestone arches. Above the belt course the building is constructed of red brick. The north end of the nave is dominated by a large, round, stained glass window. Tall stained glass windows line both sides of the nave below a clerestory which contains windows from the 1828 Ste. Anne Church. The high vaulted roof is supported by graceful, fluted iron columns. Leaded glass partitions separate the narthex from the nave, the latter having a seating capacity of 1,300. All furnishings are made from oak. The thirty-five foot alter is a purely Gothic design with spires, pinnacles, turrets and flying buttresses. The base alter table and shelves are Italian marble and the columns are of Mexican onyx. Carved wooden relief panels decorate the lower portion of the alter and the niches in the upper portion are occupied by statues imported from France. Tha two $ide alters complement the main alter. A small shtine to Ste. Anne stands on the east side of the church. Behind the main alter is a small chapel which is used for daily Mass. In this chapel stands the original hand-carved alter from the 1828 church. A crypt containing the tomb. of Father Gabriel Richard lies below the steps of the main alter. Access to this crypt is through a passageway from Ste. Anne Street. The crypt was refurbished in tile in 1951. The school building was erected simultaneously with the church in 1887. It is a three story, red brick building topped by a decorative cupola. The windows on the first f~oor have a slightly pointed arch, on the second floor the arch is almost flat and the third floor windows are capped by round arches. This third story was added in 1938 and gives a neo-classical touch to an otherwise plain build1ng. Each story is delineated by a belt course of decorative brickwork. The rectory is a three story brick building with a mansard roof, and a wrap around porch. The porch is topped with an ernamental wrought iron balastrade. A portion of the porch was enclosed in the 1950s when the interior of the rectory was extensively remodeled. The convent and parish hall were built in the early 1900s and have a vaguely neo-classic feel to them. The convent is a plain three story brick building with a recessed, arched entrance with an arched balcony above. The parish hall is a one and a half story brick structure with a small portico decorated with a triple arch and Doric columns above the main entrance.
Leon Coquard
NRHP Ref# 76001040 • Data from National Park Service • Content available under CC BY-SA 4.0
Public Domain (Michigan Filing)
Basilica of Sainte Anne de Détroit (Sainte-Anne-de-Détroit) was founded July 26, 1701 by French colonists in New France, and is the second-oldest continuously operating Roman Catholic parish in the United States. The current Gothic Revival cathedral-styled church, built in 1886, is located at 1000 St. Anne Street in Detroit, Michigan, in the Hubbard-Richard neighborhood, near the Ambassador Bridge, and the Michigan Central Station. At one time it was the seat of a diocese that included French (and later British) territory in Ontario, Canada south of the Detroit River.Historically, the parish congregation has occupied eight different buildings. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1976. The main entry to the church faces a grand tree-lined, brick paved plaza. Reflecting demographic changes in the city and region since the 1930s, the present parish is largely Latino in population. On March 1, 2020, Pope Francis elevated the church to a minor basilica, the 86th such designation in the United States and the third in Michigan.Ste. Anne's church was the first building constructed in Fort Pontchartrain du Détroit. The vicinity developed as the city of Detroit. Cadillac and a party of French colonists arrived at the bank of the Detroit River on July 24, 1701. They began construction of a church on July 26, 1701, the feast day of Saint Anne (sainte Anne). The parish was founded and named by the settlers in honor of the patron of France, Saint Anne, mother of Mary and grandmother of Jesus. Nicholas Constantine del Halle, a Franciscan, and François Vaillant, a Jesuit, were the two priests who accompanied the group. Vaillant returned east to Quebec in the fall.Local Native Americans set the church on fire in 1703; this destroyed part of the fort including the church, the rectory, and the baptismal records. A new church building was built in 1704. The oldest surviving church records date to this time, with the first record on February 2, 1704, being the baptism of a child born to Cadillac. Father del Halle was kidnapped by local Native Americans, likely the historic Ojibwe of the area. After his release, as he walked back to the fort, he was shot and killed by an Indian. His remains were buried under the altar of Ste. Anne's; they have been moved four times since to the succeeding new church buildings.Father Chérubin Deniau was assigned to the parish and began work on a larger church in 1708. This church was outside the fort's palisade. It was burned in 1714 by settlers during a Fox attack, as they feared it would offer cover to the attackers. The parish did not have a church building for many years after this.One may have been built by Father Bonaventure Liénard, who was priest here for more than three decades, between 1722 and 1754. Father Simple Bocquet is known to have begun construction of a new church building in 1755, within a year after he arrived. Bocquet served here for nearly 30 years; in 1763 Detroit was part of the French territory east of the Mississippi River ceded to British rule after the latter's victory in the Seven Years' War. After the American Revolutionary War and establishment of independence, the territory came under United States rule in the early 1800s. An Anglican wedding was recorded in the parish records during this period.Father Gabriel Richard was called to Ste. Anne's in 1796. He helped start the school that eventually developed as the University of Michigan, started primary schools for white boys and girls as well as for Indians, and was elected as a territorial representative to the U.S. Congress. He helped initiate a road-building project that connected Detroit and Chicago. He also brought the first printing press to Detroit and started The Observer, the Michigan Territory's first newspaper. After his death in 1832, Father Richard was interred under the altar of Ste. Anne's.In 1805, most of Detroit, including the church, was destroyed in an accidental fire. A new church building was not begun until 1818, and it was not completed until 1828. This church was built at a new location outside the grounds of the old fort but still near the Detroit River, which travelers and traders used. In 1833, Ste. Anne's was designated as the cathedral for the new Roman Catholic diocese of Detroit it served in this role until 1848. That year coadjutor bishop Peter Paul Lefevre moved the bishop's throne to St. Peter's Cathedral, today's Saints Peter and Paul Church. Around that time, the old St-Anne's parish registers were stolen. Because of this priceless loss, parish registers are no longer allowed to be freely and easily accessed by the public. Because the registers contain precious information about the founders and history of Detroit and Michigan, researchers have worked to make copies available through digital reproduction in the public domain.In 1817, many of the remains in the old cemetery were moved to the churchyard of the new Ste. Anne's. In the 1860s, many were moved again to Mount Elliott Cemetery, including the remains of Colonel Jean François Hamtramck. In the 1860s, the 1818 church building was demolished. Furnishings and even the cornerstone were split between the new Ste. Anne's and the new parish of St. Joachim, named after Ste. Anne's husband.The church nave The church design has been attributed to architect Leon Cocquard (27 September 1860 – 26 April 1923), who at the time was draftsman for Albert E. French (3 March 1848 Prince Edward Island – 1 November 1927), and whose success led to further ecclesiastical commissions in the French Gothic style. Parish records, Detroit building permit number 23, and the final report for the Ste. Anne historic district list Albert E. French as the architect of ultimate responsibility for Ste. Anne de Détroit Catholic Church (1886–1887). French designed the church in the Gothic Revival style with flying buttresses, expressing the French history of the parish and territory. The church faces a landscaped grand brick plaza, and the main entrance on the north facade includes four gargoyles. Ste. Anne's displays the oldest stained glass in the city of Detroit. Ste. Anne's is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.The 1818 church altar and Father Richard's remains are installed in a side chapel of the present church. Other elements from the 1818 church include the communion rail, a statue of Ste. Anne, and the church bell.Both Ste. Anne and St. Joachim parishes continued French traditions. By the 1920s, increased immigration from the 19th century and other demographic changes resulted in Ste. Anne's having a predominately ethnic Irish-American congregation. Since the late 1930s, its population has become primarily Hispanic. At that time, most Hispanic parishioners were immigrants from Mexico and Puerto Rico. The first sermon in Spanish was given in 1940; the last sermon in French in 1942. A Spanish-speaking priest was assigned in 1946. The parish remains largely Hispanic, more recently bolstered by immigration from Central and South American nations.• List of Catholic cathedrals in the United States• List of cathedrals in the United States• Ste. Anne's Parish Complex Historic District• Godzak, Roman (2000). Archdiocese of Detroit (Images of America). Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0738507972.• Godzak, Roman (2004). Catholic Churches of Detroit (Images of America). Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0738532356.• Godzak, Roman (2000). Make Straight the Path: A 300 Year Pilgrimage Archdiocese of Detroit. Editions du Signe. ISBN 978-2746801455.• Tentler, Leslie Woodcock; foreword by Edmund Cardinal Szoka (February 5, 2008). Seasons of Grace: A History of the Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit. Wayne State University Press. ISBN 978-0814343999.• Tutag, Nola Huse; Hamilton, Lucy (1988). Discovering Stained Glass in Detroit. Wayne State University Press. ISBN 978-0814318751.Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saint Anne Church (Detroit, Michigan).• Basilica website• Ste. Anne Tricentennial pageShrine • National Shrine of the Little Flower, Royal OakFormer • Catholicism portal• Michigan portal
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