The establishment of the Catholic Church in Maurice begins with the early
church in the
Louisiana territory. Church archives list the first record of a priest in
New Orleans in 1720.
As
the people moved to outer territories, missionaries and priests from
established parishes
visited these outlying areas. It was not until 1765 that a regular parish
was established in
St. Martinville, about the time of the arrival of the Acadians.
Through the labors of many devoted priests who instructed the settlers and
preached
the word of God, the church continued to spread and increase with the
founding of
the Diocese of Louisiana and New Orleans as the See City on July 17, 1793.
1993
marked the Bicentennial of the Archdiocese of New Orleans.
As
years went by, missions were established in Grand Coteau, Opelousas and
Vermilionville
(Lafayette), and eventually the parish of St. Charles of Grand Coteau, which
included all this
area west of the Vermilion River from Vermilionville south to the Gulf of
Mexico, was formed
on April 29, 1819.
On
May 15, 1822, the new parish of St. John the Evangelist broke away from
Grand Coteau,
encompassing territory from Lafayette south to the Gulf of Mexico and as far
west as
Lake Charles.
St. May Magdalen Church Parish in Abbeville was established in 1843. From
1866—69,
Father T. L. Lamy visited the far—flung sections of the parish as far as the
Sahine River.
Lake Charles was a mission of Abbeville. Father Lamy and his successors said
Mass in the
homes of residents on their once-a-month visits to these outer areas. Roger
Boudier, in The Catholic Church in Louisiana on page 147 states that “At stations
(places where
church services were held in any convenient locale) of Cossinade,
Mauriceville, Bancker
and Meadow (now Delcambre), Mass was said periodically by a priest from
Abbeville.”
In 1870 Reverend Alexander Mehault became pastor in Abbeville. Under his
able
administration, the immense territory of his parish was divided into four
ecclesiastical
parishes. In Maurice, until a church was built, Sunday services were held in
a small
private schoolhouse located on Maurice Villien ‘s property.
The ten acre site in Section 11 of Township 11, on which the church and
rectory here
in Maurice were to be built, was donated by a prominent family, Mr. and Mrs.
Maurice
Villien. The original act of donation is on file in the Vermilion Parish
Clerk of Court’s
office, recorded in Volume 1 of Donations and Testaments, at Page 63,
No. 63,
on May 29, 1889. The donation dated May 28, 1889, was from Maurice Villien
to
Reverend Francis Janssens, Archbishop of New Orleans:
“in consideration of the good will he bears toward all institution(s) of
good morals and the
interest he feels in the Catholic religion “for the use and benefit and
for the purpose of
erecting thereon, a building for the use and benefit of the Catholic Church,
the following
described property, to—wit:
"One certain tract or parcel of land, situated in the parish of Vermilion,
and lying in the
northeastern portion of the Southeast Quarter of Section Eleven, Township
Eleven South
of Range Three East, measuring Ten chains, square and containing Ten
Superficial Acres.
(Note: 1 chain = 66 feet)
The tract herein described lying and contiguous to the public road on the
east and its
northern limits being distanced four chains from the Northern line of said
quarter section.
Also one building situated thereon.
The donor, Maurice Villien, further
declared that in case it should become necessary to
build a church elsewhere in the neighborhood, then in that case this act of
donation was
to be null and void. The donor further agreed and stipulated that the land
therein donated
or any portion thereof shall not be signed and sold under any circumstances
whatever,
and further, should the burial ground or cemetery be located on the tract
therein donated,
the said Donor reserved to himself and family a plot of ground ten feet
square on said tract.
The donation was executed before Alcide LeBlanc, Clerk of the District Court
as Notary
Public, and before Columbus E. Broussard and Clairville Blanchet as
witnesses.
An error was made in the donation in the
property description, so on December 3, 1907, Mrs. Maurice Villien and her sons, Jean and Joseph, executed an act of
correction of the
donation recorded on May 29, 1889. Maurice Villien had died in 1902. The
description
erroneously stated Southeast Quarter of Section 11, when it should have
stated the
Northeast Quarter of Section 11, and the court records were thus changed to
this effect.
In January 1893, during the pastorate of Father S. E. Forge at St. John’s in
Lafayette
(1881— 1905) and Father Mehault at Abbeville (1870 — 1890), a part of each
of their
parishes was formed into a new parish (now St. Alphonsus) by Most Reverend
Francis
Janssens, Fifth Archbishop of New Orleans Diocese (1888—1897). When
Archbishop Janssens came into this area for the dedication of new parishes, the
welcomes were
very impressive, gala occasions. Typical South Louisiana touches with
enthusiastic
welcome addresses, volleys, and dinners at homes of some prominent planters
were
the custom used to dedicate new chapels.
The first Mass in St. Alphonsus Parish was celebrated January 15, 1893. The
new
parish at Maurice had its church dedicated to St. Alphonsus de Liguori.
Archbishop
Janssens sent Father C. P. Alphonse LeQuillene as first rector, He was
installed in a
very modest house ($1,400) near the simple chapel that stood beside the road
from
Lafayette to Abbeville. The first church was known as “La Chapelle a
Maurice.”
Father LeQuillene served from January 15 to October 23,1893. The
first baptism listed in the register, dated January 23, 1893, was Joachim
Daigle, son of Adam Daigle and Azelina Duhon. However, the first child
baptized was on Januaty 22, 1893, and she is listed second in the record
book, Matilde Dora Broussard, daughter of Albert Broussard and Cecile
Broussard. The first death, recorded on Februaty 5, was Etienne Fernes Clark.
The first wedding, February 6, united Joseph Cormier, son of Joseph Cormier
and Melanie Ainsce, and Elise Broussard, minor and legitimate daughter of
Pierre Broussard and Belzire Meaux. On Palm Sunday, March 26, 1893, the pews
at the Catholic church at Mauriceville were sold for the first time. A bazaar
for benefit of the church on April 19, 1893, netted $75.00 profit.
Dated June 6, 1893, a page from a ledger kept by Father LeQuillene gives the
“Limits of our Parish.” From Abbeville side he listed for the boundaries:
Adolph Duhon, Jules Dartez, August Vincent, Lastie Hebert, Severine Hebert,
Nunia Hebert, Mozard LeBlanc, John Abshire, Victor Landry, Brunot Broussard
and Ursin Broussard. In the direction of Coulee des Cannes to the plateau in
front of Madam Paul Rouxel to the road at Amedee Boudreau. From the
Lafayette side the channel of Desire Montet and continuing to he extremes of
the west (Bayou—Queue—Tortue) to Bayou Vermilion and a line straight to Paul
Duhon— this is the new parish. He recorded, in French, that these are the
regulations and dictates of Monsignor Janssens, Archbishop. He also
recorded on Tuesday, June 6,1893, children were tested; Confirmation was on
June 7 with 18 confirmants; First Communion on March 18 had 94
children.
No known record of how the church was named has been found but perhaps the
first pastor had some influence. Father LeQuillene was named after St.
Alphonsus Mary de Liguori, a famous bishop, confessor and doctor of the
church. St. Alphonsus was born near Naples, Italy in 1699. He is renowned as a
great moral theologian and founder of the congregation of priests known as
the Redemptorist Order. His writings and prayers are numerous. Note the
cover of our Mass program denotes “Patron of Prayer.” St. Alphonsus insisted
in simple preaching and unhurried celebration of the Eucharist, and he
sought to bring back sinners by patience and moderation. He died in 1787 and
was canonized in 1839. August 2 is his feast day. Although the first few
years’ records used the spelling “Alphonse’, after 1900 all the church
records are spelled “Alphonsus.” Read about St. Alphonsus under
"Patron Saint" on this website
In November 1893, Father Ferdinand Grimaud, hero of the Cheniere Carminada
disaster, succeeded Father LeQuillene. With the offerings and efforts of his
parishioners, Father Grimaud completed the church and the rectory and
established a cemetery. He was born in Honnet, France on March 3,1855,
ordained on June 24, 1878, and entered the New Orleans diocese on March 1,
1889. On April 20, 1920, Father Grimaud was honored with the title Recteur
Benemerite.
Father Grimaud had been stationed at Grand Isle and Cheniere Carminada when
a terrific hurricane struck. Winds of 100 miles an hour blew for 48 hours,
causing a tidal wave over the islands. Father saved himself by
clinging to floating wreckage. The rectory was one of the few
buildings still standing. Father Grimaud performed over 400 funeral
services. It was said that he never recovered from the shock of the
tragedy he had witnessed. Tears came to his eyes every time he heard
church bells ring.
Church fairs in the early days
were a popular method of raising money for the church. Sometimes
several fairs were held in one year. A bazaar and concert were held on
October 14, 1894 for the benefit of the Catholic Church in Mauriceville. A
fair in 1897 netted $307.65. In 1898 a fair for enlarging the church netted
$200.00. A bill of $94.00 was paid to the Bank of Abbeville for the addition
to the church. In 1899 the fair made $194.90.
The charter for
St. Alphonsus Parish is dated August 7, 1894, and states that “the
Corporation be known, designated and styled The Congregation of St. Alphonse
Roman Catholic Church of the Parish of Vermilion, State of Louisiana. The
corporation shall be managed, administered and controlled by a Board of five
directors. The first board to be composed of the Most Reverend Francis Janssens, Reverend John B. Bogaerts, Vicar General, the Reverend Joseph
Grimaud, Pastor, and J. Theophile Broussard and Maurice Villien, members of
the Congregation. The Corporation is formed without capital stock and is to
exist and continue for five hundred years.” This charter was recorded in
Volume 6, Folio 221, Number 29555 on June 21, A.D. 1895.
On May 14, 1896,
Archbishop Francis Janssens transferred the property donated to him by
Maurice Villien to the Congregation of St. Alphonse Roman Catholic Church.
In those early
days, the method used for setting church parish boundaries was not an exact
science, yet the pastors were very concerned about the boundaries. On June
13,1896, Archbishop Janssens sent Father Grimaud a letter giving him the
boundaries made in November, 1894, between Rayne and Lafayette. His letter
states that Father Grimaud can figure for himself from the copy he has of
the boundaries, if the priest from Rayne has taken any territory from his
parish.
December 20,
1896, Father Mehault from Abbeville wrote Father Grimaud a letter giving him
the boundaries of St. Alphonsus by naming residents of the area. Names
included Rousseau Broussard, Marcel Landry, Alexander Landry, Julien Simon,
John Abshire, Ambrose Duhon, Homer Broussard, Victor Landry, Oscar Bourque
and Albert Hebert.
The annual report
to the diocese in 1897 listed a church population of 1,400 and 1200 received
communion. The pastor’s yearly salary was $1,200.00. Total receipts were
$1,336.00 and total expenses were $1,660.86.
Father Grimaud
served in Maurice until 1899 and was then transferred to Carencro. An
interesting story was often told that Mrs. Maurice Villien bought a statue
of the Blessed Virgin and brought it to Father Grimaud in her husband’s
hack. Father Grimaud returned to France in 1920 and died September 15, 1946.
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