A Catholic Mission
  • Home
    • About
    • Contact
  • Our Story
    • 1. The Stage is Set
    • 2. The Osages Enter Kansas.
    • 3. Earliest Commerce
    • 4. Earliest Protestant Missions
    • 5. The Catholic Osage Mission >
      • 5A. The Mission Complex
      • 5B. The Osage Manual Labor Schools
      • 5C. A Beacon on The Plains ...
    • 6. Progress and Tragedy
    • 7. The Missionary Trails >
      • 7A. Missions, Stations, Churches
    • 8. A Dangerous Balance - The Civil War >
      • 8A. Confederate Officers Massacred
    • 9. The Osage Leave Kansas >
      • 9A. The Missionaries Did Not Abuse the Osage.
      • 9B. Fr. Schoenmakers Speech
    • 10. A Very Unique Community is Born >
      • 10A. A Church Raising
    • 11. Regional Boarding Schools >
      • 11A. St. Francis Institution for Boys
      • 11B. St. Ann's Academy for Girls
    • 12. Transitions
    • 13. The Passionists Era Begins
    • 14. Citizen Lawmen - The A.H.T.A. >
      • A.H.T.A. Chanute - October 1914
    • 15. The Passionist Influence is Expanded
    • 16. The Schools Today >
      • 16..1 Champions & Records
  • Characters
    • The Osages
    • The Missionaries >
      • Father John Schoenmakers >
        • Father Schoenmakers' Windows
      • Fr. John Bax >
        • Father John Bax II
      • Mother Bridget Hayden
      • Fr. Paul Ponziglione >
        • Father Paul's Memoir >
          • Index - Father Paul's Memoir >
            • Dedication & Introduction
            • IX. Construction & Acceptance of Mission Buildings.
            • X. Fr. Schoenmakers Arrives at Osage Mission
            • XI. Miss Lucille St. Pierre Came to the Neosho
            • XII. Progress of the Schools
            • XIII. Origin and Development of the Roman Catholic Church in Kansas
            • XXVII - Winds of War
            • XXVIII — Fr. Schoenmakers Return
            • Chapter XLII - Farming Issues, Death Of Father Colleton
            • Chapter XLIX - Includes The Death of Fr. Schoenmakers
            • Chapter L — Dedication of the New Church
            • Conclusion
            • Appendix I — Copy of a letter to Sister M. Coaina Mongrain about the coming of the Sisters of Loretto at Osage Mission
            • Appendix 6 — A Sketch of my Biography
            • Appendix 7 - Letter to W. W. Graves
      • Father Philip Colleton
      • Brother John Sheehan
    • W. W. Graves
    • 17 Sisters
    • 17 Sisters II - Fr. Fox's Sermon
    • Who's Behind the Window >
      • Who We Were 120 Years Ago
      • 1. The Thomas Carroll Window
      • 2. The W.W. O'Bryan Window
      • 3. The Jas. Owens & Family Window
      • 4. The C.P & C.J. Hentzen Windows
      • 5. The Dr. McNamara & Family Window
      • 6. The Fitzsimmons & Family Window
      • 7. The Parents of T.K. Joyce Window
      • 8. J.E. Sevart & Family Window
      • 9. The Rev. John Schoenmakers S.J. Window
      • 10. The Patrick Diskin and L&M George Window
      • 11. The J.A. Johnston & Family Window
      • 12. The Peter & Jacob Bonifas Windows
      • 13. The Mr & Mrs. Patrick Keeting Window
      • 14. The John Butler Window
      • 15. The Mr. & Mrs. Gutting Window
      • 16. Rosette Window Above Doors
      • 17. The Michael A. Barnes Window
      • 18. The Henry M. O'Bryan Window
      • 19. The John and Bridget McCarthy Window
      • The Sodality Windows
    • The Church Women's Bonfire (Graves)
    • Beechwood
    • John and Margaret Naudier
    • Fr. Tom McKernan - The Poet Priest of Kansas
    • The Dimond Family and Estate Sale
    • Dear Sister >
      • Friend Gertrude
    • A Year and a Day — Passionist Memories.
    • Mary Elizabeth Lease
    • K of C Council 760 - The Early Days
    • Our Hometown Boys
    • SPHS Class of 1956
  • Places
    • The Great American Desert
    • St. Francis Catholic Church
    • St. Francis de Heironymo Catholic Church Grounds
    • St. Paul - 135 Years Ago
    • St. Paul - 1890's as a Scale Model.
    • St. Paul - The Booming 60's
    • Osage Mission as a Statewide History Finalist
    • St. Francis Cemetery
    • Hope Cemetery
    • The Basement Chapel
    • World War I Museum Display
    • St. Paul Middle School >
      • Some Great Folks!
    • Ladore
    • St. Boniface, Scipio KS
    • Road Trip - Father Emil Kapaun
    • Exchange State Bank Robbery!
  • Thoughts ...
  • Links
  • Link Page

Thoughts 'n Things

Past and Present Day St. Paul, Southern Kansas and The Four - State Region.

Got Lucky — In More Ways Than One!

9/18/2017

 
Picture
Sometimes research leads you astray.   You are staring at a computer screen or a frame of microfilm looking for a specific piece of information.  Then, something in the corner of the screen catches your eye — something more interesting than what you were looking for in first place.  For a moment your search is interrupted with “OH! Look at that!”  I had an "OH!" experience a few years ago while looking at a 137 year old St. Francis Catholic Church logbook entry. The family that was interested in that entry came to St. Paul three times to celebrate their heritage. 

It started on April 19, 2011 when Larry Strecker called me.   Larry is a Topeka business consultant who was planning a trip to St. Paul.  The trip would involve driving from Topeka to Spearville, just north of Dodge City, to pick up his parents Bernard and Eleanor.  Then he would drive back across Kansas to visit our museum—and they were coming for a very specific reason.  Their branch of the Strecker family tree was formed, by marriage, at Osage Mission during the 1870’s.  They were also pretty certain that the marriage of Erick Strecker to Agnes Engles was performed by the prominent Jesuit missionary Father Paul Mary Ponziglione.
 
We set a visit date of May 10 and Larry asked for a favor.  Would I please check marriage records to confirm a wedding date he gave me; and the fact that Father Paul did officiate at the service?
PictureBishop Ignatius J. Strecker
As it turns out, Larry, Bernard and Eleanor were pretty sure that Father Paul had heard the vows of Erick Strecker and Agnes Engles.  In fact, the Strecker’s knew a lot about the Kansas Catholic Church in general.  Bernard’s first cousin was Archbishop Ignatius Jerome Strecker of Kansas City from 1969 through 1993 [1]. After his retirement he wrote a book about the history of the Church in Kansas [2]. Bishop Strecker's book discusses the history of Osage Mission and specifically includes his family's Osage Mission wedding.  It also includes a couple of sketches of Father Paul that are shown here.    Also, at the time of his visit, Larry was on the boards of the Catholic Foundation of Northeast Kansas and Christ’s Peace House of Prayer.

PictureSketch of Fr. Ponziglione and Settlers from Bishop Strecker's Book.
​The day after our conversation I called the rectory to arrange to see the old marriage books. When I got there Nancy had already found the book.  The information I wrote down for the wedding was the 1878 to 1880.  We had to search a bit because the actual marriage date was recorded as April 18, 1874—and it was recorded in the beautiful script of Father Ponziglione.  I took some photos of the book, thanked Nancy and headed home to clean up the photographs and call Larry with the news.

OH!
​It was during the photo editing that I had my “OH!” moment.  On the line below the Strecker’s was recorded a wedding on April 27, 1874; Charley Cooney and Mary Lucretia Davis.  My great grandparents were married by Father Paul just over a week later!  I had seen the information in a genealogy study done by Jeanie Van Leeuwen; but to see it in Father Ponziglione’s own writing was pretty neat [3].

Picture
St. Francis Marriage Record Including April, 1874 Services (Click to Enlarge).
First Visit.
​Larry and his parents did visit St. Paul on May 10.  Bernard and Eleanor were in their early 80’s and were full of energy and enthusiasm.   Another museum volunteer and I gave them information and we learned from them too.  They toured the church and St. Francis Cemetery and by late afternoon we all felt like it had been a great day.

​During our visit Larry told us his consulting business works with the state of Kansas quite a bit and he was familiar with some of the Kansas tourism folks.  On the way to the car he was talking about the incredible story of the Catholic Mission and he asked “Ron, what kind of economic impact does your glorious history have on the local economy?”  I had to admit that it really wasn’t much.   
PictureSecond Sketch of Fr. Ponziglione With His 'Ambulance" and Team
Second Visit.
In October of 2013 Larry contacted the museum again. Bernard was aging and Larry told his parents he would like to take them on a trip anywhere they wanted to go.  Dad said “Osage Mission!”  He wanted to come back to St. Paul.   When they arrived in mid-October Bernard seemed more frail and both Larry and his mother showed concern.  At the time Eleanor and Bernard had been married for 59 years and she seldom left his side.  As I recall we made a late-afternoon trip to Chicken Annie’s, Girard, and said goodbye in the parking lot.   A short time later Larry let us know that dad had taken a bad fall and was in the hospital.  He passed away on November 30.

A Reunion.
​Several members of the Strecker Family returned to St. Paul in 2014 for a family reunion; but Rosie and I were traveling.  We hated to miss it because our memory of the Strecker’s, and the discovery they led us to, will last forever.  


Some Reference Information:
[1] Archbishop Strecker’s service in Kansas City was his second appointment.  In April of 1962 he was appointed the second Bishop of Springfield-Cape Girardeau, Missouri by Pope John XXIII.  When Pope John Paul VI later named him to the Kansas City position, at age 51, he was the youngest prelate of that rank in the United States.  As noted, he retired in 1993, published his book in about 2000 and passed away on October 16, 2003.

[2] Archbishop Strecker’s book is: The Church in Kansas, 1850 – 1905, A Family Story.  The book contains no publisher information or a publish date and I assume it was self-published.  I found our copy on eBay and there were several others available on the internet.  The 2000 publish date appeared on some of the internet sites.  The sketches shown above are on pages 43 and 44 of the book.   I mentioned using the sketches here, with Larry, and he saw no reason why I wouldn’t.

[3] When I look at the dates in the marriage records a few things came to mind:
  • The two weddings were on April 18 and April 27—nine days apart.   Today we are accustomed to Saturday weddings.  A quick timeanddate.com check showed the Strecker wedding to be on a Saturday and my great grandparents on Monday.  I checked a few more logbook entries and Monday weddings were not unusual.  But that was a different time.  Our Saturday weddings have become a celebration of large, and often expensive, proportions.   Our early Osage Mission ancestors were settlers. Many of them arrived here in wagons with sparse possessions.   When a couple decided to get married they met with the pastor, probably got some instruction, and set a date.  In contrast with today’s nuptial extravaganzas, the post-wedding celebration was usually pretty modest. The newlywed's families might follow the wedding Mass with a family breakfast or lunch. Then, bride and groom went home and started their lives together.
 
  • As settlers, people like the Strecker’s and Cooney’s had been in Osage Mission for a short time.  Osage Mission had been a town for a very short time. My great grandparents were married only five years, to the month, after the date of the first meeting of the Board of town trustees.  That is when our founders got the ball rolling on a very unique community. 
 
  • The church in which the Streckers and Cooneys were married was the original Osage Mission log church (below).  Construction of the the stone church was started in 1870 but was slowed by funding issues.   Our present church was not dedicated until 1884 and even then it would not be fully completed until about 1900.  Follow THIS LINK for more information about construction of our stone church.
​
For more information about Father Paul Ponziglione follow THIS LINK.
Picture
The original log church sat approximately 215 west of the existing stone church (just west of our rectory). Originally built in 1848, it was about 30' x 30' in size. Two additions took the final dimensions to 30' x 90'. The church was enclosed with clapboard siding during the last expansion.

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    Thoughts 'n Things

    Some 'Thoughts' and short articles about past and present-day St. Paul and the Southern Kansas - 4 State Region.


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acatholicmission.org is a privately hosted website.  We hope that our site will educate and entertain those who are interested in the fascinating Osage Mission - St.  Paul - Neosho County Kansas story.  Ours is a regional story that crosses state lines, ethnic groups, faiths and a variety of frontier and post-frontier interests.  Enjoy.

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  • Home
    • About
    • Contact
  • Our Story
    • 1. The Stage is Set
    • 2. The Osages Enter Kansas.
    • 3. Earliest Commerce
    • 4. Earliest Protestant Missions
    • 5. The Catholic Osage Mission >
      • 5A. The Mission Complex
      • 5B. The Osage Manual Labor Schools
      • 5C. A Beacon on The Plains ...
    • 6. Progress and Tragedy
    • 7. The Missionary Trails >
      • 7A. Missions, Stations, Churches
    • 8. A Dangerous Balance - The Civil War >
      • 8A. Confederate Officers Massacred
    • 9. The Osage Leave Kansas >
      • 9A. The Missionaries Did Not Abuse the Osage.
      • 9B. Fr. Schoenmakers Speech
    • 10. A Very Unique Community is Born >
      • 10A. A Church Raising
    • 11. Regional Boarding Schools >
      • 11A. St. Francis Institution for Boys
      • 11B. St. Ann's Academy for Girls
    • 12. Transitions
    • 13. The Passionists Era Begins
    • 14. Citizen Lawmen - The A.H.T.A. >
      • A.H.T.A. Chanute - October 1914
    • 15. The Passionist Influence is Expanded
    • 16. The Schools Today >
      • 16..1 Champions & Records
  • Characters
    • The Osages
    • The Missionaries >
      • Father John Schoenmakers >
        • Father Schoenmakers' Windows
      • Fr. John Bax >
        • Father John Bax II
      • Mother Bridget Hayden
      • Fr. Paul Ponziglione >
        • Father Paul's Memoir >
          • Index - Father Paul's Memoir >
            • Dedication & Introduction
            • IX. Construction & Acceptance of Mission Buildings.
            • X. Fr. Schoenmakers Arrives at Osage Mission
            • XI. Miss Lucille St. Pierre Came to the Neosho
            • XII. Progress of the Schools
            • XIII. Origin and Development of the Roman Catholic Church in Kansas
            • XXVII - Winds of War
            • XXVIII — Fr. Schoenmakers Return
            • Chapter XLII - Farming Issues, Death Of Father Colleton
            • Chapter XLIX - Includes The Death of Fr. Schoenmakers
            • Chapter L — Dedication of the New Church
            • Conclusion
            • Appendix I — Copy of a letter to Sister M. Coaina Mongrain about the coming of the Sisters of Loretto at Osage Mission
            • Appendix 6 — A Sketch of my Biography
            • Appendix 7 - Letter to W. W. Graves
      • Father Philip Colleton
      • Brother John Sheehan
    • W. W. Graves
    • 17 Sisters
    • 17 Sisters II - Fr. Fox's Sermon
    • Who's Behind the Window >
      • Who We Were 120 Years Ago
      • 1. The Thomas Carroll Window
      • 2. The W.W. O'Bryan Window
      • 3. The Jas. Owens & Family Window
      • 4. The C.P & C.J. Hentzen Windows
      • 5. The Dr. McNamara & Family Window
      • 6. The Fitzsimmons & Family Window
      • 7. The Parents of T.K. Joyce Window
      • 8. J.E. Sevart & Family Window
      • 9. The Rev. John Schoenmakers S.J. Window
      • 10. The Patrick Diskin and L&M George Window
      • 11. The J.A. Johnston & Family Window
      • 12. The Peter & Jacob Bonifas Windows
      • 13. The Mr & Mrs. Patrick Keeting Window
      • 14. The John Butler Window
      • 15. The Mr. & Mrs. Gutting Window
      • 16. Rosette Window Above Doors
      • 17. The Michael A. Barnes Window
      • 18. The Henry M. O'Bryan Window
      • 19. The John and Bridget McCarthy Window
      • The Sodality Windows
    • The Church Women's Bonfire (Graves)
    • Beechwood
    • John and Margaret Naudier
    • Fr. Tom McKernan - The Poet Priest of Kansas
    • The Dimond Family and Estate Sale
    • Dear Sister >
      • Friend Gertrude
    • A Year and a Day — Passionist Memories.
    • Mary Elizabeth Lease
    • K of C Council 760 - The Early Days
    • Our Hometown Boys
    • SPHS Class of 1956
  • Places
    • The Great American Desert
    • St. Francis Catholic Church
    • St. Francis de Heironymo Catholic Church Grounds
    • St. Paul - 135 Years Ago
    • St. Paul - 1890's as a Scale Model.
    • St. Paul - The Booming 60's
    • Osage Mission as a Statewide History Finalist
    • St. Francis Cemetery
    • Hope Cemetery
    • The Basement Chapel
    • World War I Museum Display
    • St. Paul Middle School >
      • Some Great Folks!
    • Ladore
    • St. Boniface, Scipio KS
    • Road Trip - Father Emil Kapaun
    • Exchange State Bank Robbery!
  • Thoughts ...
  • Links
  • Link Page