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Iowa City 

Parochial Pioneers


It is possible that the first parochial school founded in Iowa City was also entitled to the honor of being designated properly the first of its type in the state of Iowa. The birth year of the institution was 1846. This was two years after its founder, the Rev. Anthony Godfert, came here as the first resident pastor of St. Mary’s church.

He came in 1844 and had been preceded by the Rev. Samuel Charles Mazzuchelli, a native of Milan, Italy, the first regularly assigned priest to become active in the future state of Iowa.
Also serving before Father Godfert were the Rev. Anthony Pelamourgues and the Rev. A. G. Alleman. The Godfert school, it is believed, was really a stepping stone to St. Mary’s school, the modern parochial institution that blossomed out to become one of the finest of its type in the Hawkeye commonwealth.

The school opened the very year that Iowa was admitted to the Sisterhood of States. Its first home was in the basement of St. Mary's
church. Miss Norma O’Connor was the teacher.   A few years later, in

St. Mary's Catholic Church

  as it was completed in 1863 

the first lustrum of the 1850’s, its faculty was several hundred per cent larger.

Aftr Father Godfert, Fathers B. M. Puet and J. P. McCormick served. Then the Rev. Mathias Hannon came. In his administration (1853-1855) the faculty personnel roster carried the names of Miss Ellen McCadden – a kinswoman, we assume, of Samuel P. McCadden, who was sheriff of Johnson county some years later.

With her served Messrs. Martin Doran and Alexander Hill. John Neider conducted a school where in German was taught, at Linn and Bloomington, in 1854, but that building was taken over by the Asylum for the Blind.

Enroute to the St. Mary’s school of today, the promoters and developers traveled, step by step, to the St. Mary’s free school, the St. Agatha’s seminary, and the Sisters of Mercy (B.V.M.) school.  The Sisters conducted their early school in Conrad Dunkel’s residence, between St. Mary’s church and the modern Economy Printing Company the south part of whose plant occupies the ancient Dunkel site.

Oddly, that school building became the Humphrey-Moore meat market in after years. That was a curious metamorphosis. St. Agatha’s Seminary was located in the present day Burkley Apartment house, across the street, due west, from the Methodist church, Sister M. Agatha (Hurley) was its first Sister Superior.

Prof. Bronson conducted a school in the same era at the intersection of Linn and Market, where now stands the grocery store and residence of Mrs. Philip Unrath.

The Burkley apartment building, owned by Frank P. Burkley, a pioneer hotel man, whose name is perpetuated by the present day “Imperial”, south of the campus, on Washington street, was also a hotel building once, as Ferdinand Haberstroh built it for that purpose, in territorial capital days.  His wife, Mrs. Mary M. Haberstroh, deeded it to the parish, in 1861, and it became the Sisters’ property, in 1864. St. Joseph’s Institute, west of St. Agatha’s was razed in 1892, and on its site and near thereto the splendid parochial schools of 1952 were duly reared.

The first St. Mary’s school came in 1892, where the corner stone was laid on Sunday, September 11. Classes began work the following year, in the building, and Sisters of St. Francis were their instructors.

The graded schools of the parish were founded by Sister  M. Etienne (Fleming) in 1896, and St. Mary’s high, the finest of the Marian group, came into being, in 1897. The first commencement excercises of the high school were held in June, 1900.

The Sisters were not alone in their instructional labors. They early utilized the skilled services of members of the laity – including such capable educators as Misses Matie Mueller, Mamie Speidel, Dell Metzger and Grace Rock, and Homer V. Speidel, long a clothing merchant in Iowa City. – J.E.R.

Source: "A Fact A Day About Iowa City." Iowa City Press-Citizen, 24 Oct. 1952, p. 6


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