
One
Hundred and Twenty Five Years of Faith and Service Chicago was only 38
years old as a city, and the great fire was merely four years in the past when a
Vincentian priest came to establish the new parish of St. Vincent de Paul. As he walked
toward what was then vaguely recognizable as Webster and Osgood (now Kenmore), he could
see little save truck farms, dirt streets that became rivers of black mud in the spring
rain and the winter snow, and an occasional home to break the monotony of the sweeping
prairies. With $5,000 in his pocket to purchase property and to begin a new parish that
was on the very fringe of the city, which was in many respects largely uncivilized, the
41-year-old Rev. Edward Smith, C.M., could think of few reasons for joy. He had no home
and no church, save in his imagination. For almost an entire year, his church would be the
small chapel of the Daughters of Charity a quarter of a mile away in St. Josephs
Hospital. But he had good will, boundless enthusiasm, endless zeal, the luck of the Irish,
and most important of all, 75 parishioners who knew as well as he the meaning of poverty.

Laboring together, Rev. Smith and his dedicated parishioners commissioned the
construction of a small brick combination building on the corner of Webster and Osgood. On
Christmas Day of 1875, Rev. Smith and his first parishioners were able to celebrate the
first Mass in the as yet uncompleted building. There was no roof over their heads to cover
them from winters storms and only a temporary floor beneath their freezing feet to
stem the bitterness of the cold. The building had little to recommend it either
artistically or architecturally. When it was dedicated on April 30, 1876, one of the local
papers asked sneeringly, What is it? A good question, Rev. Smith himself would
undoubtedly have said. The building was everything. It was the parish church, the
pastors home, the parochial school, and the parish hall. And it was to remain
everything except parochial school until Rev. Smiths second stint as pastor. For
early in 1891, Rev. Felix Guedry, the third successor of Rev. Smith, established the first
St. Vincents School.
 After Rev. Smith returned from New
Orleans in 1891, where he had served as a chaplain and pastor, he saw a city that had
mushroomed almost miraculously overnight. His little church and combination parochial
residence was woefully inadequate. Expansion was impossible; a new church was an absolute
necessity. Perhaps the taunting words of 1876 induced him to plan the splendid structure
that would be the best that human ingenuity and artistry could devise. The result was the
magnificent (even by todays standards) church that graces the corner of Webster and
Sheffield. When it was dedicated on May 1, 1897, there were few churches that could rival
it in grace or architecture. Unfortunately, Rev. Smith never lived to officiate in the
church that he had planned with loving care. He died before the church could be dedicated,
and his was the first funeral to be held in the beautiful sanctuary to which he had given
his life.
Some two years later, there came to St. Vincents as pastor Rev. Peter V. Byrne,
president of the newly established St. Vincents College and superior of the
Vincentian Fathers in Chicago. Rev. Byrne deeply respected the designs and ideals of the
first pastor. Rev. Byrne selected the exquisite Stations of the Cross that line the walls
of the church. He installed the wonderful Lyon & Healy organ, whose beautiful music we
still hear today. He erected the Lyceum and the Auditorium, which during the early 1900s
were perhaps the first parochial community center in the city of Chicago and were
cultural, intellectual, and social outlets for the entire North Side community.
When Rev. Byrne retired because of ill health in 1909, Rev.
Francis Xavier McCabe succeeded him. Rev. McCabe was an able administrator and prominent
orator who drew crowds into the church. Under him the parish thrived and prospered. He
paid off a great portion of the parishs debt that had hung over it since the days of
Rev. Byrne. He tiled the spacious sanctuary, installed the marble altar rail, erected the
Holy Agony altar, and encouraged the foundation of the Day Nursery (now the St. Vincent de
Paul Center).
Succeeding Rev. McCabe in 1920 was Rev. Thomas Levan. Under him the parish would grow
and expand. He partially restored the church, renovating the vestibule and sacristies. In
conformity with his extraordinary talent as a great educator, he also added six classrooms
to the overcrowded parish school. When Rev. Levan departed for St. Marys Seminary in
Perryville, Missouri, in 1930, he left behind him a legacy of learning and a parish that
was flourishing.
Since the pastorate of Rev. Levan, the parish has endured if not always thrived. Each
succeeding pastor has contributed his special talents to the parish and has left his
imprint on the parishs spiritual and material life. Rev. Francis Corcoran guided the
parish through the beginning of the dreaded days of the Great Depression. Rev. Michael
Ries steered the parish through the latter days of the Great Depression, organizing parish
bazaars and carnivals to keep the parish solvent and to keep it focused on the Vincentian
mission of ministering to the poor. After a fire destroyed a large portion of the interior
of the church in the mid-1950s, Rev. James Flannery replaced the beautiful but damaged
Rose Window. He also added a modern convent and a new addition to the school.
Since then, the parish has undergone a vast number of changes. Both the grammar school
and high school have closed. Beginning in the 1970s, the regentrification of the Lincoln
Park neighborhood gradually brought more affluent parishioners into the parish. In the
1980s, the worship space was reconfigured to better reflect the thinking of Vatican II.
And beginning in 1997, Rev. Don Ours initiated a major capital campaign to fund a major
renovation of the church, with the work scheduled to begin shortly.
While the brief history just recounted is important, it nevertheless forms but one part
of our parishs marvelous story. The rest is written and continues to be written in
the hearts of parishioners past and present. How has the Spirit graced your life through
this parish? Were you educated here? Perhaps you received the sacraments of initiation
here. Perhaps here you shared a moment of richness with the Lord or with a friend that
shaped or changed your life. Maybe it was here that you met your spouse. It is these
Spirit-graced experiences, together with those of parishioners past, that join us all to
the rich history of St. Vincent de Paul Parish.
|