St. Joseph's Church Complex (Cumberland, Rhode Island)

St. Joseph's Church Complex
Location: Cumberland, Rhode Island
Built: 1872
Architect: Page,F.E.
Architectural style: Gothic Revival
Governing body: Private
NRHP Reference#:

82000007

[1]
Added to NRHP: August 12, 1982

St. Joseph's Church Complex is an historic site at 1303 Mendon Road in Cumberland, Rhode Island which includes a Gothic Revival style Roman Catholic church along with two late nineteenth-century, clapboard-sheathed, wood-frame structures on the east side of Mendon Road.

The handsome, asymmetrical, twin-spired Gothic Revival St. Joseph’s Church was designed around 1888-1890 by architect F.E. Page. The building has a tall, end-gable-roof, rectangular mass with a polygonal, hip-roof apse at the northeast end. One-story, shed-roof side aisles continue around the apse as an ambulatory to connect to a projecting, rectangular chapel. The three-story, shorter corner tower has paired lancet windows, battlemented string courses, louver-filled Gothic arches, and is topped by a broach spire. The four-story tower has large, traceried Gothic windows, drip molds, and is surmounted by an octagonal belfry and spire.

St. Joseph’s Rectory (c. 1872) is two to three stories in height with a modified cruciform plan. It is a well-preserved example of bracketed style domestic architecture, with a wrap-around veranda and applied ornament of carved brackets and jigsaw work. The interior has been modified.

The relatively plain parish hall (c. 1872) has been removed and a modern structure has been built at the rear of the property.

History

St. Joseph’s Parish, established in 1872 in an earlier church constructed on the present site, was, at that time, the only Roman Catholic church between Valley Falls and Woonsocket. It served an extensive parish centered on the Irish, and later French Canadian and Italian, mill labourers of nearby Ashton and Berkeley, as an important religious and social center. By 1888, the parish’s growth necessitated construction of a new church, which replaced the original, although the rectory and parish hall were retained. According to the State Survey put out by the Rhode Island Historical Preservation and Heritage Commission in 1998, the present church is one of the finest wooden Late Victorian religious edifices in Rhode Island. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982 and underwent an extensive and sensitive restoration in 1995.

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