St. Peter’s Celebrates the Centennial of the Dedication of the Second Church
St. Peter’s second church was dedicated on June 25,1871, according to an article in the Catholic Mirror which reported on the event 7 days later. Consequently, the centennial of that dedication should have occurred in 1971. However, when the date of the dedication was memorialized on the foundation of the Statue of the Sacred Heart (which become the Statute of St. Peter in the 1950’s), it was the year 1870 – not 1871, which was displayed. Maybe that is why the centennial was celebrated in 1970, rather than in 1971. Or perhaps the Parish needed a reason to celebrate something in 1970. Earlier that year it was announced that St. Peter’s school – the former Notre Dame Academy, would permanently close its doors at the end of the 1969-1970 school year, after nearly 80 years.
But regardless of the reason that 1970 was chosen, that was the year St. Peter’s celebrated the centennial of the dedication of its then existing (second) church - on Sunday, June 21, 1970 with a Mass at 4PM and a buffet dinner afterwards.
Similar to our current Bicentennial celebration, a centennial committee was set up to plan the celebration. Invitations were mailed to all parishioners who, along with local businesses, become patrons by purchasing ads in the Centennial Program. Tickets to the dinner were available for $1 per person (children under 10 were free). The event was held at the Libertytown Fire Hall; no doubt because St. Peter’s Hall could not hold the over 200 people who had purchased tickets (and the Parish Center had not yet been built).
Both the Catholic Review in Baltimore and The Post in Frederick, reported on the celebration. His Eminence Lawrence Cardinal Sheehan was the chief celebrant of the Jubilee Mass and Fr. Edward Sargus, former pastor at St. Peter’s, was one of the concelebrants. Fr. Richard Mitchell, former assistant pastor at St. John’s in Frederick also assisted. Fr. Herbert Jordan, former pastor at St. John’s in Frederick delivered the sermon.
In the weeks leading up to the celebration, the weekly bulletins contained a list of ‘do’s and don’ts for the day, to ensure a successful event.