One
hundred twelve years ago a pint-sized church in Dayton served a handful
of pioneers. “If the parishioners of that early era suffered hardships,
so did the priests.” Catholics on Robinette and Jasper mountains, and
on Lewis Peak rose at 4 a.m. to hitch up the team, and make the two-hour
trip in open buckboards to church.
Some
especially hazardous
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rides
had to be made through deep snow and ice, to attend Midnight Mass. The
parishioners would come down from the mountains, tie their horses up at
Ed Hines’ place, and walk one mile to old St. Joseph for Mass.
Reverend
Van Holderbeke was first to serve the area. From 1882 to 1893, while assisting
at St. Patrick in Walla Walla, he
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would
travel to Dayton and Waitsburg by rail. Waitsburg’s first mass was said
in the Parnell Hays home. Later services were held in the Knights of Pythias
Hall. Several priests from Walla Walla assisted during the intervening years.
In 1899, Rev. Guilelmi Auschwand began a nine year stint in the area, residing
in Pomeroy. |
In
1908, Rev. Herman Loeffler, a native of Barvaria, Germany, assumed duties
briefly, followed by the first main builder, Father Patrick Flavin. A quiet,
prayerful, Irish priest stationed in Walla Walla and seeing the need for
other churches in the many-miled area, Rev. Flavin began what was considered
a vast building program with edifices shooting up as St. Catherine in Prescott,
St. Mark in Waitsburg and St. |
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Joseph in Dayton.
A
jolly, well-liked Irishman, Father J.L. Campion arrived in 1916 for a
ten year stay. Making his home in the sacristy of Dayton church, he managed
to complete the building program and pay off the then huge debt of 12000.
Our parishes were without a resident priest until July, 1946 when Father
Ralph Schwemin arrived.
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In
1950, Fr. Schwemin purchased a large site on West Fifth Street in Waitsburg
and built a modern parish hall with a knotty pine interior. Work commenced
on the new St. Mark Church in 1953. The first mass was said February 7,
1954. The cost of the new church was $ 25,000. Rev. Schwemin spent countless
hours building pews, making crosses and doing finishing work. |
| A two year project
began march, 1966 with the addition of four classrooms, storage room and
the expansion of the kitchen area. The
congregation of St. Joseph outgrew the 1916 original structure and in
1985 plans for a new expanded complex were begun. Completed in May, 1987
the new church boasts 1,056 feet on the main level and the same on the
lower level.
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The lower level
provides the space for three classrooms. The entire cost for construction
of the new church was $ 300,000.
Parishioners
of St. Mark and St. Joseph take great pride in their churches and spend
countless hours helping to maintain not only the buildings but also the
growth of the Catholic religion in their communities.
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