Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Church - Denver, CO
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Outspoken1
N 39° 50.286 W 104° 57.476
13S E 503599 N 4409789
Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Catholic Community includes the Church and Catholic School.
Waymark Code: WM2WHV
Location: Colorado, United States
Date Posted: 12/31/2007
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member silverquill
Views: 162

While I am not Catholic, I have heard the bell call those who are to mass every Sunday of my life. This area originally had many Italian ancestry families who started this Church. Local Denver history professor Dr. Thomas Noel has written the following about the church:

"ASSUMPTION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY (1911)[edited]

Welby is a small town on the northern outskirts of Denver in Adams County, where many Italians planted vegetable farms along the South Platte River. Joseph Bosetti, a young priest just arrived from Italy, bicycled out to Welby in 1911 to say the first Mass in Rotolo's Grocery Store. (Rotollo's old grocery store--now a garage--is still diagonal across the street.)

Dominic Rotolo, the grocer, spearheaded fund raising for a church on an acre of ground bought from the Denver, Laramie & Northwestern Railway, which had platted Welby in 1910. A handsome, simple red brick church was completed for $1,300 and dedicated on May 12, 1912. The Servites, an Italian order, took charge of the Assumption church, which they have served ever since. Father Stanislaus "John" Giambastiani, the first Servite pastor, lived in the tiny sacristy behind the altar. Weekdays, he traveled about the parish, blessing homes and fields and welcoming dinner invitations.

The many Catholic children in Welby led Father John to open a school in 1920. Mother Mary Veronica and three other Sisters Servants of Mary handled thirty-one grade school students and four high schoolers the first year. The sisters offered not only reading, writing, arithmetic, and religion but also classes in ballet, music, rural life, sports, and swimming. In 1950, a $40,000 gymnasium was added to the parish plant for assemblies, athletics, and the popular spaghetti dinners. Although the high school closed in 1952, and the nuns left in the 1970s, Assumption School remains open as a kindergarten and grade school. Bingo games, begun in 1963, became a winning way to finance education.

After the 1933 South Platte River flood almost swept away the church, parishioners helped to persuade the Army Corps of Engineers to build a dike along the South Platte River. This dike, now part of the Platte River Greenway hike/bike trail, would delight Father Bosetti, who once toured his parish on a two-wheeler.

At Assumption parish, a handsome brick rectory (1916) and convent (1922) were built by Henry Kline on land he donated. Father John, who had left Assumption in 1924, returned as pastor in 1945. Finding his little church jampacked on Sundays, he enlarged the structure. In the process, he carefully preserved the old bell tower, vestibule, sanctuary, and windows, while adding a second matching bell tower and installing a new Hammond organ.

Mrs. Raymond (Agnes Porreco) Domenico, who compiled the seventy-five-year history of Assumption parish in 1987, reported that the annual bazaar and spaghetti dinners date back to the 1920s when "outdoor feasts were held during the summer months on Saturday and Sunday evenings to celebrate the feasts of Saint Anthony, Saint Rocco and the Assumption." Another traditional gala came after the Christmas holidays when, as Agnes Domenico recalled,four or five families would get together to butcher their hogs, render the lard and make the Italian sausage that was either canned or dried for winter meals. In the middle of all this activity was Father John, to give his blessing on the work and then to join with everyone at dinner followed by card games of "Tresette," "Briscola" and "Scopa" and a keg of beer.

Four-day-long bazaars, as Agnes Domenico recorded, were also "held in November after the farmers had finished their harvests and had more time. . . . The bazaars were held in the upstairs of the school and the spaghetti dinner was cooked in the classrooms. The school children enjoyed this as they were given two days off from school." Joseph M. Carbone, OSM, pastor since 1988, reported in 1989 that Assumption parish now has over 1,100 families of whom 40 percent are Italian and 30 percent are Hispanics, along with Irish, Germans, and many other groups. The grade school enrolls 140 students taught by eight lay teachers.

Type of Church: Church

Status of Building: Actively in use for worship

Date of building construction: 05/12/1912

Archdiocese: Archdiocese of Denver

Diocese: Denver

Address/Location:
2361 East 78th Avenue
Denver, Colorado USA
80229


Relvant Web Site: [Web Link]

Date of organization: Not listed

Dominant Architectural Style: Not listed

Associated Shrines, Art, etc.: Not listed

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kaiwarrior visited Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Church - Denver, CO 09/11/2012 kaiwarrior visited it