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1 Rue St. François
Florissant, Missouri 63031
www.usgennet.org
TFlorissant, today the most populous city in St. Louis County, was
founded about 1786 by the Spanish colonial government as St. Ferdinand
de Florissant, named for Ferdinand III of Castile, a first cousin of St.
Louis IX of France. The valley here was called “fleurissant” by French
trappers for its flowering or flourishing vegetation. The official name
of the city remained St. Ferdinand until 1939. The first church was
built on the original town square, a few blocks northeast of here.
Philippine-Rose Duchesne began a convent for her Sisters of the Sacred
Heart on the banks of Coldwater Creek in 1819, a year after her arrival
from Grenoble in southwest France. Her Federal-style convent housed
parish and boarding schools and a novitiate. She later founded schools
in St. Charles and St. Louis, of which Duchesne Academy and Maryville
University are successors. St. Philippine was canonized in 1988. Her
shrine is in St. Charles, but the Florissant convent is one of only two
surviving buildings where she lived and worked.
In view of the sisters’ good works, the church fathers wisely decided to
move the church to this location in 1821. The new church was
Neoclassical in style, predating the Old Cathedral in St. Louis by more
than a decade. The new front and steeple added between 1877 and 1884
give the building an Italian Romanesque appearance, but it remains the
oldest church in the metropolitan area after the 1799 Church of the Holy
Family in Cahokia, Illinois. The church forms an interlocking complex
with the convent and the rectory added in 1840, as the side buildings
serve as transepts opening directly into the church. The sisters could
observe the mass from the ground floor or from a workroom on the second
floor. The Sisters of Loretto took over the parish in 1847 and over the
years added at least five large buildings, of which only the brick
school to the south of the rectory survives. The high altar, installed
about 1880, incorporates relics of St. Valentine in a life-size wax
figure in a glass crypt.
The church and its adjacent school served until 1955 when a large new
parish complex was constructed several miles away on Charbonier Road.
Three years later the Friends of Old St. Ferdinand stepped in to save
and maintain the historic buildings. The biggest challenge faced by the
Friends was a fire in 1966 that extensively damaged the roof, but that
was repaired with donations received from as far away as Switzerland.
The land surrounding the church buildings is now a city park.
The Chamber Chorus is pleased to pay its first visit to the Shrine in
2008, the fiftieth anniversary year of the Friends of Old St. Ferdinand.
Notes by
Esley Hamilton and
Philip
Barnes
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The Saint Louis Chamber Chorus
PO Box 11558, Clayton, MO 63105
636.458.4343
stlchamberchorus@gmail.com
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© 1955-2009 The Saint Louis Chamber
Chorus
Amanda Verbeck, Web Designer & Administrator
John Wahlers, Web Engineer
Roger Hill, Web Archivist
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