In 1951, a time of Soviet persecution of Ukrainian Catholics in their homeland, Ukrainian exiles settling in the New Britain area founded Saint Josephat’s Ukrainian Catholic Parish. The growth of the parish led to the purchase, in 1955, of a former Assyrian Church on Beatty Street, soon enlarged with materials from a dismantled six-family building from East Hartford, that had been purchased by the parish. In 1966, a house was purchased on Eddy Glover Boulevard to become a rectory and, in 1974, there was a ground breaking on the same Boulevard for the building of a new church. The church was designed by the James P. Cassidy architectural firm of West Hartford and parishioners of St. Josephat’s provided most of the labor for its construction. Completed in 1975, the church has three gold and blue domes, copied from those in St. Sophia Church of Holy Wisdom in Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine. In 1985, St. Josaphat’s Ukrainian Catholic parish and St. Mary’s Ukrainian Orthodox parish worked together in having a new section of Route 9 through New Britain named the Taras Shevchenko Expressway, in honor of the great Ukrainian poet. In 1991, the parish celebrated the independence of Ukraine from the old Soviet Union.
St Josaphat’s Ukrainian Catholic Church (1975)
Interested in coming to your Liturgy on Sunday for the English celebration at 8:00, I am Roman Catholic for 68 years and disillusioned with the division and lack of guidance from Rome on many subjects. Bishops are more interested in protesting these days than praying and taking care of their laity and the deeply paralyzing issues they need guidance on. Would like to going you for Sunday at 8:00.
Hi Janet,
I’m Roman Catholic of Ukrainian and Polish heritage. You mentioned being disillusioned from lack of guidance from Rome. Are you familiar with the newspaper “National Catholic Register” or the Catholic news station EWTN? You’ll find many programs or articles with guidance from Rome on current topics f the day. Marge