|
Parish History
This
year, St. Theresa Parish celebrates the 85th anniversary
of its founding as an Italian national parish. Born of
humble beginnings, the growth of the parish over the
years is truly a testament to the idea of being a
community of faith.
In
1925, Monsignor Bonaventure J. Filitti came to the
Pelham Bay section of the Bronx to establish a Catholic
parish for the Italian community. Designated an "Italian
national parish" it would technically have no
boundaries, but be open to all Italian Catholics
anywhere in the United States.
At
that time, Pelham Bay was far from the heavily
populated, suburban neighborhood it is today. Indeed,
the Bronx itself had only recently seceded from
Westchester County and become part of New York City.
Farmland covered much of what we now know as Mulford,
Mayflower, Pilgrim and Wilkinson Avenues. Where now
prominently stands 1950 Hutchinson River Parkway was a
water-logged swamp with a meadow and dirt road running
through it. One house stood where Hutchinson River
Parkway now meets St. Theresa Avenue. A chicken market
occupied the area where Mulford Avenue meets Wilkinson
Avenue and the area between Pilgrim Avenue and Mayflower
Avenue hosted goat farms.
It
was into this arena that Msgr. Filitti built his parish
church at the intersection of Pilgrim Avenue and what
was then an extension of Morris Park Avenue. A
beautiful garden and grotto were placed next to the
church on Morris Park Avenue extending to Mayflower
Avenue and the rectory was housed in a small building on
Mayflower Avenue. Until the original church was built,
Msgr. Filitti offered mass in the homes of the
parishioners. The area began building up in the 1930's
when the Italian immigrants who originally settled in
the Harlem section of Manhattan began to move to the
Bronx, and to Pelham Bay in particular.
Msgr.
Filitti served at St. Theresa Parish until 1946 when a
priest named Fr. Mario J. Ponsiglione was transferred
from Our Lady of Mount Carmel in Yonkers, NY, to the
young parish of St. Theresa. Within the next 20 years,
St. Theresa Parish experienced great growth.
The
post World War II baby boom saw an increase in families
with young children becoming parishioners at St.
Theresa's.
Fr. Ponsiglione saw a need to educate these children in
the Catholic tradition. Anthony DePace, a trustee of
the parish and professional architect accepted the task
of designing a school building.Groundbreaking for the
school began in December, 1953 at the southwest corner
of Morris Park Avenue between Pilgrim and Mayflower
Avenues across the street from the church. Delays
occurred in the excavation of the plot and the
construction of the school so that the first classes
were held in the rectory meeting room and church hall.
Fr. Ponsiglione obtained the services of the Dominican
Sisters from the Sparkill, NY community to staff the new
school as principal and faculty and by September, 1955
classes began for grades 1 through 4 with Sr. Mary
Bernard as the first principal. Now that there was a
school staff, a convent was needed to house the
Dominican Sisters. New construction began and the
cornerstone for the convent was put in place in 1955.
This
was followed by a new rectory building in 1965. By this
time, Fr. Ponsiglione had been elevated to the title of
monsignor by the late Francis Cardinal Spellman.
St.
Theresa Parish was now truly blessed. There was a
church which served the spiritual needs of the
community, a school to educate the children, and living
quarters and administrative offices for the school and
parish staff. But who would have known that it was not
time to rest?
On
February 7, 1965, tragedy struck. Our church was
consumed by fire. Countless people watched from the
streets and from their homes on Pilgrim and Morris Park
Avenues as flames shot out of the stained glass windows
and destroyed the church. Witnesses reported a tearful
Msgr. Ponsiglione, concerned that the Blessed Sacrament
was still in the church tabernacle, may fall victim to
this inferno. When it was over, the beautiful testimony
to the foresight of Msgr. Filitti lay in ruins. The
faithful had lost their house of worship. But from its
ashes, another was to rise in its place.

Almost immediately plans began to rebuild the church.
Anthony DePace was, once again, called upon to present
plans for a new church building. The new church would
be a modern building reflecting the changes that had
taken place during the second Vatican council of the
mid-1960's. But what would the faithful do in the
meantime for Sunday Mass?
A
temporary altar was placed on the stage in the school
auditorium and the seven Sunday masses were offered
there until the new church would be ready. A small organ
provided the music, a lectern was placed on one end of
the stage as a pulpit and another on the other end of
the stage for the readings before the gospel, and chairs
were set up on the gym floor for the congregation.
It
took five years to complete the new church. The
cornerstone was put in place in 1969 and the church was
dedicated by his Eminence, Terence Cardinal Cooke, on
May 17, 1970, the forty-fifth anniversary of the
canonization of St. Theresa. Shortly before the
dedication of the new church, the NYC council honored
St. Theresa Parish by approving a change in the name of
the street that ran in front of the church, rectory,
school and convent from Morris Park Avenue to St.
TheresaAvenue. Four years later, Msgr. Mario J.
Ponsiglione, at 75 years of age, retired as pastor.
Parish life went on under the leadership of Msgr. Robert
Mazziotta who was named pastor upon the retirement of
Msgr. Ponsiglione. Msgr. Mazziotta served as pastor
until 1980 when health concerns caused him to request a
transfer to a parish closer to his family on Staten
Island. He was followed by Msgr. John Guido who served
as pastor until his retirement in 1991.
The
retirement of Msgr. Guido presented a challenge for St.
Theresa's Parish. As a sign of the times, school
enrollment had fallen from over 500 students to 170
students. Many people had moved out of the parish.
St.Theresa's needed an energy boost to survive.
That energy boost came in the
person of Fr. Robert F. Grippo
who was named pastor to
replace the now retired Msgr. Guido. Fr. Grippo was
actually returning to St. Theresa's where he was
assigned as a deacon from September 1971 to May 1972
serving under Msgr. Ponsiglione. Like his predecessor,
Fr. Grippo saw needs in the parish and began to meet
them.
Recognizing the need for early educational training, he
worked with the then principal, Mrs. Burr, to create a
pre-kindergarten program. The now empty convent was
renovated to house the Pre-K and Kindergarten programs
thus becoming an early learning center. He introduced a
sports council to oversee the now expanded CYO sports
program which had grown from a 7th and 8th grade boys'
basketball team with a team of cheerleaders to a program
that today boasts six interscholastic basketball teams
of various age groups for both boys and girls, an
intramural basketball program, a basketball clinic, two
squads of cheerleaders and a softball team.
A
parish council was formed to act as an advisory board to
the pastor. Consisting of 21 members elected by the
parishioners, the parish council assists the pastor with
a variety of issues that confront the parish. There is a
youth council, Teen and Pre-teen center to meet the
needs and to challenge the young people of our parish,
and, of course, there is the St. Theresa Parish Feast,
the annual summer street festival held at the end of
July each year since 1996.
However, parish organizations and fund-raisers were not
the only challenges for Fr. Grippo. St. Theresa Church
was now over 20 years old, the school and convent were
close to 40 years old. The school was in danger of
being closed for lack of enrollment. Fr. Grippo
embarked on two major capital improvement drives, one in
the mid-1990's to affect many needed repairs to the
parish buildings and one in 2001 to replace the air
conditioning systems in the church and the school.
Additionally, he saw the school enrollment gradually
increase under the leadership of principals Miss Elaine
Ludwig and
Miss
Anne Gevlin so that over 500 children are educated at
St. Theresa's School and an additional 120 are enrolled
in the religious education program.
Every
parish at some point establishes organizations to assist
with its various ministries and our own St. Theresa
Parish is no different. After being established in 1927,
the St. Theresa Altar Society began in 1930 as the very
first parish organization. Led by Mrs. Rose Sibilio, the
mother of Michael Sibilio, a former parish trustee and
parish attorney, these women helped clean the church and
would wash the altar linens. Today, the Altar Society
also serves as parish hostesses at various parish
functions.
The
Altar Society was quickly followed by the Holy Name
Society which also debuted in 1930. The purpose of the
Holy Name Society is to further the Holy Name of Jesus.
They also took a role as ushers at certain Sunday
masses. In addition to their religious purpose, the Holy
Name Society also began to sponsor a series of social
events for the people of the parish such as: dances,
theme parties, beauty contests. Who remembers the "Holy
Name Father and Son Communion Breakfast" and the "Mother
and Daughter Communion Breakfast" at the old Bruckner
Manor? The Holy Name Society grew so muchover the years
that at one point there were actually three
sub-organizations, the Italian Holy Name Society, the
American Holy Name Society and the Holy Name Squires,
for younger men seeking to pursue the goals of the Holy
Name Society.
The
St. Vincent de Paul Society began in March, 1937. It
was a charitable organization which sought to help those
in need in the parish. Years before the “Midnight Run”
the men of the St. Vincent de Paul Society would collect
clothes and food for those who were in need; they would
give financial assistance to students whose families
suffered some financial hardship and could not pay the
school tuition; they would provide a Christian funeral
and burial for those who died with no family to make the
arrangements. This group of dedicated men would meet on
Friday nights when abstinence from meat was still the
rule. After the meeting, they would socialize
but since it was Friday, the only thing they could eat
was cheese. This fact got them the nickname, "The
Cheese Club."
I n
1985, Msgr. Guido introduced the ministry of the
extraordinary ministers of the Eucharist. This group of
men and women assisted with the distribution of
communion at Mass. Today, this group has grown to the
extent that the "Eucharistic Ministers" not only assist
at Mass, but also bring the Eucharist to those who are
homebound or hospitalized.
Of
course, over the years, many other organizations
developed. As the school grew, a parent organization
was formed to assist the school in its development.
Originally called the "Parents Guild," this group has
now evolved into the St. Theresa Home School
Association. Two social events the Parents Guild would
sponsor were the Columbus Day Dance and the St.
Patrick's Day Dance. The Parents Guild also organized a
Christmas Fair which began as a type of flea market in
the school cafeteria and auditorium. Today, our H.S.A.
sponsors many events during the course of the school
year such as The St. Theresa Annual Dinner Dance, a
Halloween Costume Party, a Mother and Son Bowling Party,
a Father and Daughter Dinner Dance, Easter Bunny
Breakfast, and an Annual Bake Sale, Mother's Day Plant
Sale and Christmas Boutique.
Today, St. Theresa's hosts many other organizations that
assist in its ministry of serving the faithful. There
is the RCIA program that prepares adults for Baptism and
other sacraments; the Pre-Cana Team which offers a
marriage preparation seminar for those preparing for the
sacrament of matrimony; the Midnight Run, which
distributes food and clothes to the poor in Manhattan;
the Altar Servers – originally a group of school boys
who would assist at the altar during Mass, and now
members include both boys and girls of the school; The
Knights of the Sacred Heart, a group of high school
young men who assist at certain masses on Sunday; The
St. Theresa Youth Group; The St. Theresa Proclaimers,
who proclaim the old and new testament readings before
the gospel at Sunday mass; The Societies of Our Lady of
Montevirgine and Our Lady of Abondanza, two religious,
Italian cultural groups.
One
cannot attend mass at St. Theresa's without hearing the
music of the Adult Choir at the 12:15 PM Mass and the
Children’s Choir at the 10:30 am Mass. Remember Vincent
Criscruolo whose tenor voice filled the church in the
1960's and 1970's. Remember Frank Boulet whose rich
baritone voice led the congregation in song throughout
the late 1970's and 1980's.
Who
remembers the folk groups that played music at the
children and teen masses in years gone by? Developed by
Fr. Herbert D'Argenio, who served at St. Theresa's from
1959 through 1975, the Teen Folk Group consisted of
three guitar players, Lenny Seiter, Emil Pulichiccio and
Timothy Fitzgerald. These young men also led the
congregation in song. Later they were joined on special
occasions by two female singers, Margaret Hausman and
Deborah DiFiore. On occasion, George Vatore, a trumpet
player and graduate of St. Theresa School, would
contribute his talent.
Additionally, in 1970, Sr. Theresa Frances, the school
principal and Sr. William Francis, one of the 8th grade
teachers, formed a children's folk group to provide
music at the 9 o'clock children's mass. Over the years
guitar players such as Michael Napolitano, Michael
Arena, Andrew Ippolito, Joe Contino, Julius DiFiore,
Anthony Lombardo, Jeffrey Hendricks, Frank Segreti,
Terence Travers and Nicky Cappa would supply the music
while Michael Troccoli, Steve Marrinaccio, Frank Greco,
and Benny and Robert Alfano would lead the school
children in chorus after chorus of such old folk tunes
such as, "Hear, Oh Lord", "Shout From the Highest
Mountain", "Go Forth", "Alive in Christ", and the songs
from Godspell, such as "Day by Day" and "Prepare Ye The
Way of the Lord."
Of
course, the story of St. Theresa Parish does not end
today. What began as a need to serve the Italian
immigrant population of New York back in the 1920's has
grown into a rich diverse community of faith. In
looking back on St. Theresa's history, we can celebrate
where we've been and anticipate where we are headed in
the future. |