Showing posts with label CT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CT. Show all posts

August 12, 2018

The Renewal of Holy Land USA

For decades, Holy Land USA has been a post-nuclear Road Warrior vision of the Holy land, perched on a bluff overlooking Waterbury. It's a fascinating and horrifying wonder of neglect -- a miniature Bethlehem, impenetrable assemblages of junk, creepy tunnels and blasted out buildings, stories of gang murders and a mysterious order of nuns.
Amidst this sprawling squalor are two unlikely items. A tall high tech cross of steel, visible for miles, would light up at night. The joke is that locals grow up believing Christ was electrocuted on the cross. More striking is the large "Hollywood"-style sign that nightly illuminates the words: Holy Land USA.
Holy Land USA burst onto the rocky slopes of Pine Hill in the early 1950s, when lawyer and evangelist John Greco responded to a personal message from God (or perhaps a broadcast message also received by the builder of Alabama's Ave Maria Grotto, Iowa's Grotto of the Redemption, and other 20th century divine labors). He directed volunteers who built hundreds of structures, grottos and educational dioramas, using discarded plywood, tin siding, chicken wire, cement and fragments of religious statuary.
Holy Land USA was a legitimate vacation destination for families in the 1960s and '70s, drawing as many as 44,000 visitors a year. It was a must-see stop for church groups and pilgrimage busses. Today, evidence can be found of a large parking lot, remnants of a gift shop, and assorted outbuildings.
The 17-acre attraction had begun its long slide into the Pit, closing a few years before Greco's death in 1986, at the age of 91. He willed the land and his testament of personal faith to the Religious Teachers Fillipini of Bristol.
Over the years, an order of nuns have attempted a degree of maintenance -- for instance, the white rocks that line the entrance wall always seem freshly painted. But the park at large has been battered by the elements, rampaging teenagers and scavengers. The nuns have declined nearly all offers of outside help by preservationists and others. A group of Boy Scouts working towards their Eagle badges in 1997 were allowed to renovate the Hollywood-style sign [1996 "before" view] as a community service project. In 2008 the 56-ft. tall metal and fiberglass panel cross was dismantled for replacement by a newer one that will continue to be lit at night.
The fate of Holy Land USA remains uncertain. It is regarded as a city landmark, visible to passing motorists on I-84. Brass Mill Center, a new 150-store mall on one side of the hill, radiates prosperity -- but perhaps threatens secular-humanizing bulldozers for mini-Bethelehem. Rough-looking full-sized neighborhoods around the rest of Pine Hill don't bode well for any relief from juvenile vandalism.



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Renewal of Holy Land in Waterbury attracts hundreds for Mass

Posted: Aug 11, 2018 10:05 PM EDTUpdated: Aug 11, 2018 10:05 PM EDT
(WFSB)
WATERBURY, CT (WFSB/AP) -
Hundreds of people, clad in ponchos and carrying umbrellas, climbed the hillside for a Mass at Holy Land in Waterbury on Saturday.
The landmark of Holy Land USA in the Brass City was once a religious theme park, but after years of disrepair, the church and monument are celebrating its renewal on Saturday afternoon.
For Waterbury resident, Rosemary Lamana, Holy Land is a special place where she said she reconnects her faith.
“You feel a sense of hope because things are coming back that were good. That were good,” said Lamana.
The event will celebrate the late Reverend Michael McGivney, who created the Knights of Columbus fraternal Catholic group in 1882 and is being considered for sainthood by the Vatican.
McGivney was a Waterbury native and assistant pastor at St. Mary's Church in New Haven when he founded the group.
Hartford Archbishop Leonard Blair led the ceremony.
The 18-acre property was once a religious theme park until it closed in 1984.
Lamana showed a picture to Channel 3 News Reporter, Jennifer Lee of herself as a girl in 1959 at the park.
“That was me when I was just a babe,” said Lamana. “There were people everywhere.”
Recently, Mayor Neil O’Leary bought the property with another businessman and sits on the Board of Holy Land U.S.A.
“We have it in the deed that it will never be anything but Holy Land USA,” said Mayor Neil O'Leary.
The giant cross stands 65 feet high and 26 feet wide.
Mayor O’Leary told Channel 3 the cross always stood as the symbol of the City of Waterbury today, and back in the 1960s and 70s.
He said Holy Land attracted more than 40,000 people to the park every single year.
“It's beautiful, it's magnificent and most importantly, it brings people from all over the country here as a destination place and it's a place of peace. It's a place of prayer, meditation and we're really proud of it,” said O’Leary.
Copyright 2018 WFSB (Meredith Corporation). All rights reserved
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July 25, 2018

When darkness falls, We are reborn


SH Church 
Established 1876SH parish, CT was taken from the territory of St. John the Evangelist, whose pastor was Father Carmody. On October 24, 1874, he bought a former Congregational church on Avenue C, a building that dated as a house of worship in 1852. The refurbished edifice first opened for Catholic Mass on December 20, 1874. On February 14, 1875, Father Sheffrey was named first pastor of the newly consecrated SH parish. As his first public act in CT, Bishop Tierney blessed the cornerstone of SH School on April 29, 1894. Dedicated on September 1, 1895, the new school opened to 675 pupils and was staffed by the Sisters of Mercy. In 1990, the Sisters of Mercy left the parish and were succeeded by the Apostles of the SH. In 1997, St. Peter's Church and St. John the Evangelist merged with SH. 


The church is one of five buildings in the complex, including the former rectory, attached to the rear of the church, the former convent, which once housed a homeless shelter, the original SH School and a garage. It now sits vacant and The options are the wrecking ball or Rebirth.

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February 6, 2013

The Sterling Opera House. Derby, CT.

Built in 1889, the Sterling Opera House, located across Elizabeth Street from the Derby Green, has been deeply rooted in the Valley’s cultural and political traditions for more than 110 years. A veritable “Who’s Who” list of performers and celebrities have appeared at the Sterling: from John Philip Sousa to Red Skelton; Harry Houdini to Donald O’Connor; and Amelia Earhart to Lionel, John, and Ethel Barrymore. The Sterling served as an opera house until 1933; from then until the building’s closing in 1965, its two lower levels housed Derby’s City Hall and Police Station.

Designer H.E. Ficken, one of the creators of Carnegie Hall, combined several architectural styles in the Sterling. The exterior and rooftop and the interior walls and doorways are Italianate Victorian and display the final evolution of the Italian Baroque opera house. The interior-seating plan was influence by German composer Richard Wagner's conception of a triangle seating arrangement, with all the seats enjoying an unobstructed view of the stage. No box seats were used, but two "piano boxes" were located on either side of the stage to accommodate two Sterling Pianos. A proscenium arch frames the 60-by-34 foot stage. Below are 10 dressing rooms. The auditorium boasts an orchestra pit, two gracefully sweeping balconies, and fine examples of bottle glass, keystone arches and wrought iron work. Acoustically, the Sterling has no equal. Even a whisper can be heard clearly from all areas of the auditorium.

Almost as storied as the Sterling itself have been the dedicated groups committed to its restoration and eventual revitalization. From the 1970’s through the mid-90’s the Sterling Opera House Foundation, led initially by the late Vivian Kellams, included current Valley Community Foundation Board Member Alan Tyma. The group began to create awareness of the Sterling’s place in Derby’s and the Valley’s history, and successfully had the Sterling listed as the first structure on the National Register of Historic Places. In the 1990's, Paul Lane formed the Old Birmingham Business Association (OBBA) and its subsidiary Save Our Sterling (SOS) took up the charge, drumming up support for the opera house’s restoration. Harvey Bletchman, then artistic director of SOS, along with other members of the group, organized local soirees with a variety of musical themes to raise funds for, and create cultural awareness of, the Sterling.

Those fundraising efforts generated enough to enable the current members to create the Sterling Opera House Endowment Fund at the Valley Community Foundation. “We want people to be able to use and visit the Sterling 100 years from now,” said Association President Beth Colette. “By creating this Endowment, we are setting aside money that has come in from so many caring Valley residents to help the Sterling carry on its rich traditions.” Board member Judy Augusta agreed. “This beautiful building has the opportunity to become a vital component of the revitalization of downtown Derby,” she said. “This Fund will allow other groups who follow in our footsteps to address its needs well into the future and keep its wonderful spirit alive.”

Through the years, the efforts of Congressional and State representatives, along with the Connecticut Dept. of Economic and Community Development, have produced funds to help with this project. Current Derby Mayor Anthony Staffieri, a former member of OBBA, has continued ongoing efforts to restore the Sterling. At present, the exterior has been completely renovated, and the City is moving forward with plans for restoration of the interior. “The City is pursuing additional funding for the Opera House through historic preservation funds and federal and state tax credits,” said Sheila O’Malley, Derby’s Director of Economic and Community Development. Perhaps one of the greatest gifts the Sterling has received, however, is the forward thinking of the dedicated groups whose Endowment will help to ensure the Sterling is here for generations to come. As Board Member Markanthony Izzo so aptly said, “There is no time like the present to plan for the future.”

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