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ST. LADISLAUS (SLOVAK)
From:
Ohio Historical Records Survey Project, Service Division, Work Projects Administration, ed. (1942). Parishes of the Catholic Church Diocese of Cleveland: history and records. Cleveland: Cadillac Press.{{cite book}}
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The first Slovak Church in the Cleveland Diocese was St. Ladislas, established in 1885.
Its people had been attending St. Joseph's German Church, to which the Rev. Stephen Furdek, pastor of Our Lady of Lourdes Parish, went weekly to preach a Slovak sermon. Furdek assisted in organizing the new parish and in 1899 purchased two lots on old Corwin Avenue (E. 92nd), building there a little frame church in which a one-room school was opened. The Rev. John Martvon was first pastor. At first, an increasing Hungarian population aided in attendance and support, but this group left in 1891 to build St. Elizabeth's parish. When Martvon returned to Europe in 1892, Rev. V. Panuska became pastor and he was succeeded by Rev. J. Jiranek. In 1901, Rev. J. Tichy took over the pastoral duties.
From: "People of Faith" by Charles R. Kaczynski
The first Slovak Church in Cleveland was a Catholic one – St. Ladislaus Church.
It was founded in 1885 at Corwin (now E. 92nd Street) and Holton Avenues in the Buckeye area.
c. 1901 – c. 1904 – St. Ladislaus, Rev. J. Tichy
The Polish National Catholic Church (PNCC) was accepted into the Union of Utrecht (UU) in 1907.
Troxler
editit managed Kozlowski not the different directions among the Poles in America together to a diocese to unite out of the Vilatte consecrated Kaminski Bishop of Buffalo
settled in March 1900 Hodur of Scranton in Pennsylvania Choose from ten Polish communities as bishop and was looking at the Old Catholic bishops in Europe by the episcopal consecration on. But the negotiations led to no decision.
A request by the Czechs to consecrate a Czech auxiliary bishop was rejected by the Old Catholic Bishops' Conference in September 1904 in Olten.
Tichy tried to unite the rom-free Slaven in America and establish an Old Catholic Diocese in Cleveland, Ohio.
Herzog wrote If this the Poles to them community must refuse they are particularly organize hostilities or even excommunications should be avoided.
America is big enough to encompass three or four Old Catholic dioceses.
[2]: 76
The "National Catholic Church in North America" (NCCNA) was incorporated in Ohio June 14 1912.[4]: 1307 Arnold Mathew consecrated de Landas Berghes on June 29 1912 and sent him to the United States in 1914 to reunite scattered Old Roman Catholic churches;[4]: 1307 the National Catholic Church of America received de Landas Berghes and elected him archbishop.[4]: 307–308 On October 4, 1916, Berghes consecrated Carmel Henry Carfora as his coadjutor and regionary bishop;[4]: 1308
"North American Old Roman Catholic Diocese" was incorporated in the State of Illinois on October 17, 1917 and located in Norwood Park.[4]: 1308 [5]
"The name of the church was changed to avoid confusion and from the desire to have no connection with other churches claiming to represent the Old Catholic movement in the United States."[4]: 1308 Carfora was elected archbishop in 1919 and in 1922 was made primate of all Old Roman Catholic churches.[4]: 1308
Tichy's name appeared only in one edition of Yearbook of the Churches, the 1924-1925 edition, as "Monsignor Tichy" and he was not identified in the edition as a bishop.[6]
Theodore Andrews, in The Polish National Catholic Church in America and Poland, stated that Kozlowski did not consecrate any bishops in the US.[8]: 19
Title , Volumes 19-21
Contributor Slovensky ustav
|page=54
Slovak Studies. Cleveland: Slovak Institute. 1979. ISSN 0583-5577 https://books.google.com/books?id=Q422AAAAIAAJ&q=Bishop+Jan+Tichy. {{cite journal}}
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(help)CS1 maint: url-status (link)
CSU 2nd Floor Book Stacks DB663 .S5 no.21
"bishop of the National Catholic Diocese of North America"
About a month later, the Church of St. John Neminick on Woodhill "Our congregation will very probably disperse," said Tichy, although he planned to hold monthly "chapel services" and continue to visit other small churches.[9]
- ^ Hynes, Michael J (1953). History of the Diocese of Cleveland: origin and growth, 1847-1952 (1st ed.). Cleveland: Diocese of Cleveland.
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
Troxler1908
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Revue d'histoire et de philosophie religieuses. 50. Paris: Presses universitaires de France. 1970. ISSN 0035-2403 https://books.google.com/books?id=sGLYAAAAMAAJ.
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(help) - ^ a b c d e f g Cite error: The named reference
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was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ Illinois. Office of Secretary of State (1919). "Domestic corporations not for profit". Biennial Report of the Secretary of State of the State of Illinois (Fiscal years beginning October 1 1916 and ending September 30 1918 ed.). Springfield, IL: 52. hdl:2027/njp.32101072358599. OCLC 557554812. Retrieved 2013-11-26.
- ^ "Old Catholic Church in America". Year book of the churches (1924-1925 ed.). New York: The Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America. 1924. pp. 168–169. ISSN 0084-3644.
- ^ Hynes, Michael J (1953). History of the Diocese of Cleveland: origin and growth, 1847-1952. Cleveland: Diocese of Cleveland. OCLC 311175.
- ^
(doctorate of theology). pp. –.
{{cite thesis}}
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(help)CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link) CS1 maint: url-status (link) Society for the Promotion of Christian Knowledge Thesis - General Theological Seminary of New York Without thesis statement General Theological Seminary CLEVELAND/Off-site Storage Social Sciences Department Storage 284.81 114 Available CLEVELAND/Off-site Storage Social Sciences Department Storage 284.81 AN27P Available Andrews, Theodore (1953). The Polish National Catholic Church in America and Poland. London: S.P.C.K. LCCN 54003735. - ^ a b
"Bishop gives up fight". Plain Dealer. Cleveland. 1909-06-24. p. 2. LCCN sn83045167. Retrieved 2013-12-15.
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