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St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral, Minneapolis

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Color image of the exterior of St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral in Minneapolis. Photographed by Paul Nelson on June 10, 2014.

Exterior of St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral in Minneapolis. Photographed by Paul Nelson on June 10, 2014.

St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral was completed in 1906. It is the home church of a small community of Rusyns (also called Ruthenians or Carpatho-Ruthenians) who immigrated to Minneapolis from the Austro-Hungarian Empire in the late nineteenth century.

In 1877 Northeast Minneapolis began to attract immigrants from a small Central European ethnic group. They were called, variously, Rusyns, Ruthenians, and Carpatho-Ruthenians (since many lived in or near the Carpathian Mountains). Rusyns today live mostly in Slovakia, Hungary, Romania, and Ukraine. In the late nineteenth century they were subjects of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

Rusyns belonged to the Eastern Rite Catholic tradition. They were part of the Roman Catholic Church, but only for political reasons rooted in the histories of their home countries. Rusyns considered themselves Orthodox—a tradition based in Constantinople rather than Rome. They did not use the Latin mass and their priests could marry.

Too few at first to support their own church, the religious among the Rusyns who came to the Twin Cities attended mass at a Polish Roman Catholic church in their Northeast Minneapolis neighborhood. They arranged occasional visits by Eastern Rite priests from Pennsylvania. By 1887 their numbers had grown to about eighty. In that year, a group organized to form and build a church. St. Mary’s Greek Catholic Church, a small frame building, opened in 1888 at the corner of Fifth Street Northeast and Seventeenth Avenue Northeast.

In 1889 St. Mary’s first resident priest, a widower named Alexis Toth, arrived from Austria-Hungary. He held his first services—not in Latin but in Church Slavonik—on Thanksgiving Day. A few weeks later, on December 19, Toth went to St. Paul to present his credentials to John Ireland, the Roman Catholic Archbishop of St. Paul and Minneapolis.

The meeting did not go well. Upon learning that Toth had been married, Ireland rejected his credentials and denied him the authority to act as a Catholic priest. Ireland forbade use of the Eastern Rite liturgy and directed the Rusyns to worship at the Polish Catholic Church.

With the support of the St. Mary’s congregation, Toth ignored Ireland. He took up the position of parish priest, supporting himself by running a grocery. At the same time, he and his parishioners looked for a solution to their differences with Ireland.

They found it in the Russian Orthodox Church. After exchanges of letters cleared the way, on March 25, 1891, St. Mary’s hosted a visit by Vladimir Sokolovsky, a Russian Orthodox bishop. In October 1892 St. Mary’s was admitted into the Russian Orthodox Church.

The original frame church burned in 1904. Most of the sacred decorations, imported from Europe, were lost in the fire. To rebuild, the congregation hired Minneapolis architect Victor Cordella to design something grander and more durable. Construction began in 1905.

Cordella reportedly based his design on the Saint Nicholas Cathedral in Omsk, Siberia. St. Mary’s does resemble it. Both have a portico with a steeple and bell tower in front and a tall dome rising behind it over the sanctuary. The base of the St. Nicholas dome, however, is circular, while St. Mary’s is hexagonal.

When the cathedral opened in 1906 its congregation had nearly nine hundred members. Still, the building’s $40,000 cost drained the church’s resources. Despite an annual subsidy of $1100 from the Russian government and a $1029 gift from Czar Nicholas II, the cathedral opened without furnishings, decoration, or central heating. Those arrived as money permitted. Pews were installed in 1934.

The decorations added over the years include a white icon screen at the front of the sanctuary, a large chandelier, a painted dome, and stained glass. There are also icon-style paintings—some life size—of Jesus, Mary, and Orthodox saints. A 1982 redecoration restored the building’s vibrant appearance for the twenty-first century.

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© Minnesota Historical Society
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  • Related Resources

Dyrud, Keith P. “East Slavs: Rusins, Ukrainians, Russians, and Belorussians.” In They Chose Minnesota: A Survey of the State’s Ethnic Groups, edited by June Drenning Holmquist, 405–422. St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society 1981.

Lathrop, Alan K. Churches of Minnesota: An Illustrated Guide. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota, 2003.

St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral. St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral 100th Anniversary, 1887–1987. Minneapolis: The Cathedral, 1987.

Related Images

Color image of the exterior of St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral in Minneapolis. Photographed by Paul Nelson on June 10, 2014.
Color image of the exterior of St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral in Minneapolis. Photographed by Paul Nelson on June 10, 2014.
Black and white photograph of the original St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral building in Minneapolis, 1888.
Black and white photograph of the original St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral building in Minneapolis, 1888.
Black and white photograph of St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral, Minneapolis, 1905.
Black and white photograph of St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral, Minneapolis, 1905.
Black and white photograph of the interior of the sanctuary in St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral, Minneapolis before decoration, 1905.
Black and white photograph of the interior of the sanctuary in St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral, Minneapolis before decoration, 1905.
Black and white photograph of the interior of the sanctuary in St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral, Minneapolis with an icon screen and banners, c.1906.
Black and white photograph of the interior of the sanctuary in St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral, Minneapolis with an icon screen and banners, c.1906.
Black and white photograph of the interior of the sanctuary in St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral, c.1910.
Black and white photograph of the interior of the sanctuary in St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral, c.1910.
Black and white photograph of a procession in front of St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral in Minneapolis, May 4, 1936.
Black and white photograph of a procession in front of St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral in Minneapolis, May 4, 1936.
Color image of a banner inside St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral in Minneapolis. Photographed by Paul Nelson on June 10, 2014.
Color image of a banner inside St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral in Minneapolis. Photographed by Paul Nelson on June 10, 2014.
Color image of a banner inside St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral in Minneapolis. Photographed by Paul Nelson on June 10, 2014.
Color image of a banner inside St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral in Minneapolis. Photographed by Paul Nelson on June 10, 2014.
Color image of the dome and chandelier inside St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral in Minneapolis. Photographed by Paul Nelson on June 10, 2014.
Color image of the dome and chandelier inside St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral in Minneapolis. Photographed by Paul Nelson on June 10, 2014.
Color image of the exterior of St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral in Minneapolis. Photographed by Paul Nelson on June 10, 2014.
Color image of the exterior of St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral in Minneapolis. Photographed by Paul Nelson on June 10, 2014.
Color image of an icon inside St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral in Minneapolis. Photographed by Paul Nelson on June 10, 2014.
Color image of an icon inside St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral in Minneapolis. Photographed by Paul Nelson on June 10, 2014.
Color image of the sanctuary inside St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral in Minneapolis. Photographed by Paul Nelson on June 10, 2014.
Color image of the sanctuary inside St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral in Minneapolis. Photographed by Paul Nelson on June 10, 2014.
Color image of a stained glass window inside St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral in Minneapolis. Photographed by Paul Nelson on June 10, 2014.
Color image of a stained glass window inside St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral in Minneapolis. Photographed by Paul Nelson on June 10, 2014.
Color image of the sanctuary of St. Mary's Cathedral after renovation, 2015.
Color image of the sanctuary of St. Mary's Cathedral after renovation, 2015.
Color image of a side wall of St. Mary's Orthodox Cathedral sanctuary after renovation, 2015.
Color image of a side wall of St. Mary's Orthodox Cathedral sanctuary after renovation, 2015.

Turning Point

On January 24, 1904, the original St. Mary’s Church is destroyed by fire. Construction on a new church begins the next year.

Chronology

1877

The first known Rusyn, or Carpatho-Ruthenian, immigrant to Minneapolis, George Homzik, arrives in the city.

1887

The original St. Mary‘s Church is built and consecrated as an Eastern Rite Catholic Church.

1889

Father Alexis Toth, a Rusyn priest from Austro-Hungary, conducts his first services at St. Mary’s on Thanksgiving Day.

1889

On December 19, Father Toth presents his credentials as pastor of St. Mary’s to Archbishop John Ireland. Ireland rejects them and refuses to recognize Toth as a Catholic priest.

1891

Vladimir Sokolovsky, Russian Orthodox Bishop of Alaska and the Aleutian Islands, visits St. Mary’s on May 25.

1892

In October, the parish is officially received into the Russian Orthodox Church.

1892

On December 13, Father Toth is called to a new parish in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania.

1904

The original church is destroyed by fire on January 24.

1905

Construction of a new church building begins. Czar Nicholas II of Russia contributes over $1000 of the $40,000 total cost.

1906

The new building is consecrated as St. Mary’s Orthodox Cathedral.

1934

Pews are installed. Until that time, all masses had been conducted with the congregation standing, per Orthodox tradition.

1967

The church’s spire is torn off in a windstorm and replaced.

1982

The church undergoes a major redecoration. Father John Matusiak, its head priest, paints a mural and the portraits of four American Orthodox saints in the rim of the dome.

2006

The congregation celebrates the centennial of the consecration of the cathedral.