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Our Lady of Perpetual Help

635 Steiner Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio 45204 USA

  • Independent
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“abandoned church that needs perpetual help”

This place is on private property. Listing for informational purposes only. Please do not visit without express permission from the land owner. Our Lady of Perpetual Help, located in the Sedamsville neighborhood on Cincinnati, Ohio‘s western fringes, is an abandoned church that holds a prominent stance over the neighborhood and the remains of the business district. The beginnings of Our Lady of Perpetual Help dated to first English filial congregation of the Catholic church on Sycamore Street, St. Francis Xavier’s church that was in charge of the Jesuit Fathers. Considered the “mother” English-speaking parish in Cincinnati, St. Xavier was instrumental in arranging the development of Catholicism in the western and eastern parts of the city.  Because Cincinnati was considered a booming community in the 1800s, relating its gains to the meatpacking industries and its location along the Ohio River, it was not long before a new church was needed outside of St. Xavier. A large Irish population had developed on the southwestern part of the city, and in 1850, it was proposed to build a church on the northeast corner of 3rd and Mill Streets. The lease was signed on May 1, 1850 by Lemuel Page, John Bonte and John T. Chambers to Reverend John B. Purcell for $1,800 with the privilege of purchase at a price of $7,000. That privilege was exercised in May 1853. Father Cahill, to whom the organization of the new church was entrusted to, built St. Patrick’s cathedral in the same year, and it was blessed by Bishop Lamy on November 24. The first filial church of St. Patrick’s came only a little more than a decade later. The parish of the Atonement on West 3rd Street was begun in 1870 as a chapel for the Sisters of Mercy, but was converted into a parish church with Father Homan as pastor. The second filial church of St. Patrick’s was St. Vincent de Paul’s in Sedamsville, on the west side of Cincinnati. St. Vincent was completed in 1861 under the organization of Father McLeod. In 1878, a division occurred within the parish of St. Vincent de Paul, when German-speaking Catholics desired a Catholic school. Organized by Father Otto Jair, O.F.M. on January 27, Our Lady of Perpetual Help was formed in Sedamsville on Cincinnati’s west end, and was made official on May 12, 1878. An old stone school house near the Ohio River on Sedam Street was purchased, with the upper floor being dedicated to church services, while the basement served as a school and teacher residence. Several years later, a new parochial residence was constructed on Dehli Avenue. Frequent flooding required relocation, and property was purchased along Steiner Avenue for a new church. On June 10, 1888, the cornerstone was laid for the new building, and the new facility, designed in the Gothic Revival architectural style, was dedicated on May 5, 1889. Stretching for 145-feet in length, 51-feet in width, transept 70-feet and soaring high for 170-feet, the church that was perched on the hillside offered a commanding presence that overlooked the business district of Sedamsville. The church contained four bells in the tower and an organ that was given to the parish by Pope Leo XIII. The basement housed the parochial school, while the edifice contained furnishings that cost approximately $30,000. In 1890-1891, a new parsonage was constructed and the old residence was reused as a house for the Sisters who taught in the parochial school. In 1907, a new three-story school structure was constructed, although it was closed in 1976.

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Our Lady of Perpetual Help

635 Steiner Ave.
Cincinnati, Ohio
45204 USA
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