Holy Trinity is unique among the Roman Catholic
parishes of the nation’s capital. A church that has numbered slaves and
presidents alike as parishioners over its history, it has been an integral part
of the story of Washington, DC.
The first church (the building just
renovated as the Chapel of Saint Ignatius Loyola) was completed in 1794, with
Father Francis Neale, S.J., one of four brothers of an old Maryland family, its
first pastor. Father Neale’s parish covered what is now Montgomery and Prince
George’s Counties in Maryland as well as the present District of Columbia,
extending south to Alexandria, Virginia. From its inception Holy Trinity had a
close association with Georgetown College, with Sunday Mass at Trinity
obligatory for all of the College’s boarding students who regularly marched from
campus to the church. That close association continues to this day.
Holy Trinity has played an important role in
the development of Catholicism in America. When
the parish was founded, eighty percent of the Catholics in English-speaking America
lived in Maryland. Over the decades after its founding, the parish's influence
was felt far and wide. The second pastor of Holy Trinity, Benedict J. Fenwick,
S.J., became the second Bishop of Boston and founded Holy Cross College.
A later pastor, John McElroy, S.J., founded Boston College. The first
bishop of Cincinnati was a parishioner of Holy Trinity. In the immediate area,
Jesuits from Holy Trinity founded Gonzaga College High School in Washington,
DC and Old Saint Mary's Church in Alexandria, Virginia. The first mayor
of Washington was a parishioner, and President John F. Kennedy and his family frequently
worshiped at Holy Trinity.
The first contribution for a second and
larger church came only 35 years after the construction of the first. The cornerstone
of the new church was laid in 1849. In 1851 the Greco-Roman adaptation that
is today’s Holy Trinity main Church was dedicated by Bishop Armand Charbonnel
of Toronto, followed 18 years later by the construction of the rectory building
next to the church on 36th Street. It
continues as today’s rectory, having survived a move around the “O” Street corner to its present location.
In 1862, following the Second Bull
Run battle, government forces requisitioned the Church
for hospital use, with temporary flooring laid on top of the pews and the
Sanctuary used for surgical procedures. In the course of 3 months, some 220
sick and wounded Union soldiers were treated at the church-hospital. The District
Military Headquarters returned the church to its owners in 1863; eleven years later
the federal government reimbursed Holy Trinity $350 for the use of its
church.
Towards the close of the 19th century, Holy Trinity’s
first census revealed a congregation of approximately 2,000 parishioners. Today, over 3,500
households are registered in the parish representing, as in earlier times, the
District of Columbia, Northern Virginia, and suburban Maryland.
From its inception, the Jesuits have been associated with Holy Trinity Parish. It has
profited greatly from their tradition of intellectual excellence in its schools
and spiritual life. That tradition continues today with the rich variety
of liturgies, inspiring preaching, stimulating educational programs, and
outstanding community action/social justice programs.
Adapted from material in William Warner’s
At Peace With All Their Neighbors: Catholics and Catholicism
in the Nation's Capital, 1787-1860 (Georgetown University
Press, 1994).