Assumption Church requires $9.8M in repairs

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Assumption Church(Windsor, Ontario, Canada) , the oldest Catholic parish in Canada west of Montreal, may close due to mounting costs to repair crumbling walls, the church’s pastor said Thursday.

A report completed last week, based on a half year of exploratory work which ended in November, pegged the cost of repairs at $9.8 million, significantly higher than an earlier $6.1-million estimate.

Perhaps worse, the architectural report suggests that the outside walls should be repaired by no later than the end of 2009, lest falling pieces pose a danger to passers-by.

“It’s a real concern,” said Father Paul Walsh, who intends to discuss the situation further with his parishioners on the weekend. "At some point the building would have to be closed. Whether that happens two years from now or 10 years from now, who knows?

“But if no work is done then the damage will escalate. And at some point, pieces will start falling.”

Water damage worsens at the top of the building, where the stone cornice is visibly falling apart and pinnacles must be rebuilt.

Walsh said the Roman Catholic Diocese of London, which oversees churches in Windsor, cannot likely afford such a costly refurbishment.

“The funding resources are not at all clear,” Walsh said. “This is just a parish of 800 families. A parish of this size could be expected to raise only $1 million or $2 million, perhaps, if it’s a well-off parish. And the diocese has very serious financial considerations.”

The London Diocese has been closing and reorganizing churches in the wake of declining membership, a lack of priests, and settlements in recent sex-abuse lawsuits. The diocese’s outstanding debt includes half the projected $5.2-million cost of a restoration project for St. Peter’s cathedral in London and $1.2 million for its contribution to the Pope’s World Youth Day in Canada in 2002.

Larry Brennan, spokesman for the London Diocese, said the issue must be further investigated.

“This is a huge estimate, in terms of projected costs,” he said. “We just received the report. So we need to discuss it further internally. Then we need to meet with Father Walsh and parish representatives to fully investigate what our options are.”

Walsh thinks the church holds sufficient cultural and historic significance that senior levels of government should provide a lifeline. The parish, after all, started in 1728 in Detroit and moved briefly to Boblo Island, before settling in 1742 at its current site as a mission church for Huron natives - for which Huron Church Road was named.

It also formed the foundation for Assumption University, a forerunner of the University of Windsor.

With the oldest section of the current church completed in 1846, it is the fourth church built on the site, and is remarkable in the area for a number of reasons, including its age and size, given it can hold 900 people.

Details include figures of white stone carved into the altar, the ends of wooden pews in the sanctuary carved into angels, woodwork of vines carved into the altar backdrop, tiles decorated in fleur-de-lys and crosses, a painting from 1845, and the church’s oldest artifact: a wooden pulpit from the third church.

“Losing it would be hard to measure. It would be a tragedy,” Walsh said. “This is national heritage. It’s French Canadian and Canadian heritage dating back to the settlement of this area.”

MP Brian Masse (NDP - Windsor West) agrees the federal government should help preserve the building on cultural grounds.

“It’s a significant icon, not just locally but also for the country,” said Masse. "We’re the oldest European settlement in Canada west of Montreal. It was aboriginal, then French, then later British, and now multicultural. That parish has seen everything Canada has seen.

“It represents the history of Canada.”

MORE AT - canada.com/windsorstar/features/soundoff/story.html?id=10384cd4-4709-43ca-9257-5ba30d46e10c&k=65316
 
Unfortunate. I have been there and it is a beautiful Church.

I lived in London until a few months ago. The Diocese probably wont put anything towards the repairs, opting to sell the church instead. Like a few former Catholic and Anglican churches in London it could very well be taken over by the ultra-liberal United Church of Canada.

Sad.
 
Its hard to say what will happen.

The church is located right on the University of Windsor campus, and there has been talk for years they would love the land. As well it is located right next to the bridge to Detroit, which is in the process of building a second span, and rumours have been they would love the land to. The bridge and the trucks that cross the bridge and the vibrations that causes are believed to ahve caused some of the problems to the Church.

I dont think the Diocese cares to save any of the older churchs that they have. They have already closed up several older churches in Windsor, and are in the process of building onto a newer modern one.

Sad indeed.
 
Many of the pre-Vatican II churches are crumbling, as gorgeous as they are.

Taking into account the increasing average age of priests who require more medical care, dwindling donations due to reduced Mass attendence as a result of scandal, coupled with large settlement payouts. The Church simply no longer has much spare change to throw around anymore, and repairing old churches is probably not the highest on many diocese’s priority lists.

Very sad.😦
 
How sad. 😦 I wish I could donate some money and help them out but I am out of money and any donation I made would be very insignificant considering the amount of money that they need.
 
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