Belmont Abbey, North Carolina
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Belmont Abbey is a small community of Benedictine monks living outside of Charlotte, North Carolina in the town of Belmont, North Carolina, in the United States. Founded by Bishop Leo Haid in 1876, it is the daughter abbey to St. Vincent's Abbey in Latrobe, Pennsylvania, and mother abbey to St. Leo's Abbey in Tampa, Florida. The monks also are the benefactors of Belmont Abbey College; a four year Catholic liberal arts school. Belmont Abbey's full, proper name is, "Mary Help of Christians Abbey."
[edit] Dates of Interest
- April 21, 1876 The first Benedictine monk to serve at Belmont arrived, accompanied by the first two students for the new college.
- July 10, 1886 For the first time an alumnus of our college was received as a novice in the monastery.
- July 11, 1886 The first three novices professed vows for the new abbey in North Carolina.
- May 7, 1891 The monastery's Grotto of Our Lady of Lourdes was blessed by Abbot-Bishop Leo Haid, O.S.B. It was designated as a pilgrimage shrine.
- June 8, 1910 The 'diocesan' jurisdiction of Belmont Abbey was erected by decree of the Holy Father in Rome.
- July 27, 1998 The Vatican issued a decree elevating the Abbey Church at Belmont to the rank of a minor basilica.
- July 14, 1993 The central campus was entered on the National Register of Historic Places as the "Belmont Abbey National Historic District."