The Parish of Mary Queen of Apostles, Goulburn, now the Centre of the Goulburn Mission, is set to celebrate 180 years of history on Sunday, September 15, with a celebratory Mass and parish lunch at the Workers Club, to which everyone connected with the local Catholic community is invited.
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The event will also be a chance to farewell retiring Parish Priest, Father Dermid McDermott and his assistant, Father Lolisio Gisa, who will take up an appointment at Cootamundra in two weeks.
Fr McDermott has been parish priest for the past 11 years. He is the son of former Goulburn Mayor Ernie McDermott and has a deep affection for the city.
The first Mass in the Goulburn district was celebrated by Father Therry in 1833 at Matt Healey's Inn (now called 'Riversdale' - a National Trust property). This was also the location of a celebratory Mass in 2012 to Mark 150 years of the Archdiocese of Canberra and Goulburn.
In 1840, Archbishop Polding visited Goulburn to lay out the site for the first church. The construction of the Sts Peter & Paul's Parish Church began on the corner of Bourke and Verner Streets in 1844.The original brick church was completed in 1848. Some of the old church foundations are still visible under the Cathedral floor today.
The Archdiocese of Canberra and Goulburn evolved from the Diocese of Goulburn, which was created on November 17, 1862. The first bishop, Patrick Bonaventure Geoghegan, died before taking up his appointment. He was succeeded by Bishop William Lanigan who arrived in the diocese on Pentecost Sunday, 1867.
At this time, there were seven parishes, served by 10 priests and one congregation of religious, the Sisters of Mercy at Goulburn. The Sisters of Mercy had come from Ireland to Goulburn in 1859, to establish the Convent and School which eventually became Our Lady of Mercy College.
Caroline Chisholm recognised the strong Catholic roots of the new settlers to the region and brought many girls and families to her depots at Goulburn and Yass in the hope of finding employment and perhaps marriage.
In 1880, Henry Parkes secured passage of the Public Instruction Act , which introduced compulsory free education and severed connections between the church and the public schools. This prompted Bishop Lanigan to establish an independent Catholic school system.
In the 1860s and 1870s in Australia, the withdrawal of state funding for church-sponsored or denominational schools in all states led to an almost total reliance on religious congregations to administer Catholic schools. The work of Tennyson Woods and Mary MacKillop greatly influenced this movement.
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The bishops' desire to have a school in every parish had a higher priority than their desire to have a parish church. Thus was established the traditional Catholic enclave of church, convent, presbytery and school which was to be found throughout the country. In larger centres there was the addition of a separate school for boys and a 'monastery' for the religious brothers.
The former Saint Patrick's College In Goulburn (now Trinity Catholic College) was one of the oldest Catholic boarding schools in Australia. The college, founded by the Goulburn Catholic Diocese in 1874, was operated by the Christian Brothers from 1897.
Father Richard Walsh was appointed Goulburn's first Parish Priest in 1847. After the church was opened in 1848 by Archbishop Polding, work began on construction of the presbytery next to the Cathedral on Verner Street.
In 1871, construction of the St Peter and Paul's Cathedral commenced. The Cathedral was built in two stages and was constructed around the original 1843 church (when the cathedral exterior was completed the old church was demolished and the materials were removed outside through the cathedral doors).
The foundation stone for the cathedral nave was laid in 1871 and 16 years later the foundation stone for the additions was laid, the additions consisting of the transepts, sanctuary, chapel, sacristy and tower.
The former Cathedral has important associations with key figures in the Catholic Church in NSW. Bishop Polding, the first Catholic Bishop of the colony, selected the site for the church in 1840 . Cardinal Moran laid the foundation stone for the sanctuary in 1887, opened and blessed the Cathedral in 1890 and dedicated it in 1898.
Its construction was largely due to Bishop Lanigan who served the Catholic community for many years and is buried beneath the sanctuary. Sts Peter and Paul's Cathedral was the only cathedral in Australia entirely built and consecrated under the one Bishop. It is built from locally quarried green porphyry and Sydney sandstone.
Five sisters of St Joseph arrived in Goulburn in 1882 and settled in a convent built in North Goulburn, establishing St Joseph's primary and secondary schools. The north Goulburn parish thrived and the first church was replaced by the Church of Our Lady of Fatima.
The 1962 Catholic School strike was seen as a significant turning point in the state aid debate.
- Dr Ursula Stephens
Goulburn's Catholic community remained strong over many years, with four primary schools, three secondary boarding schools, the agricultural college at Inverolochy, large Mass attendance and huge Easter gatherings at the former Marys Mount Monastery for Stations of the Cross.
The Sisters of St John of God order came to Goulburn from WA in 1916 at Bishop John Gallagher's invitation to establish a 13-bed hospital in a doctor's residence, bequeathed to the church. The facility grew to 24 beds, including a male and female ward and by 1950, additions and alterations took it to 70 beds, complete with a children's ward, coronary care and intensive care units.
In 1979 the hospital became a private provider of publicly funded health care and its services expanded to include oncology and palliative care, before it was taken over by the NSW Department of Health.
On Friday, July 13, 1962, six Catholic schools in the Goulburn diocese were closed for six weeks and 2000 pupils directed to enrol the following Monday in the government school system which had only 640 vacancies. Known as the Goulburn Strike, it was in protest at the refusal of NSW health authorities to install additional toilet facilities at Our Lady of Mercy Preparatory School. It is seen as a significant turning point in the state aid debate.
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Other significant events in the long life of the Parish include the transfer of the Diocese of Goulburn to Canberra in 1948, and the subsequent construction of St Christopher's Cathedral, with the Cathedral of Sts Peter and Paul, relegated to the status of the Old Cathedral.
The restructure of Catholic secondary education and the withdrawal of the religious congregations from education, led to the establishment of Trinity Catholic College. This coincided with amalgamation of the Goulburn and North Goulburn parishes and the formation of St Mary Queen of Apostles Parish as part of the wider Goulburn Mission, which now encompasses Bungonia, Taralga, Crookwell, Goulburn, Marulan, Tarago and Collector.
Parish priest, Fr Dermid McDermott and several parishioners are planning a pilgrimage to Rome, following the celebrations on September 15. Afterwards, he plans to live in Goulburn.
He will be replaced by Fr Joshy Kurien from Cootamundra, while newly ordained priest, Fr Alex Osborne, will replace Fr Lolisio.
Many current and former Goulburn residents are expected to attend Sunday's lunch at the Goulburn Workers Club. The guest speaker will be social historian and author, Professor Jeff Brownrigg.
Tickets for the event are $50, and bookings can be made up until Wednesday morning at Trybooking.com/ 511492 or by emailing goulburnparishevents@gmail.com.
Proceeds will go to the restoration fund for the old cathedral.
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