Holy Family Church, Detroit's first Italian Catholic parish, was organized in 1908 to serve the spiritual needs of
immigrants from Sicily and southern Italy. For 100 years the parish has played an important role in preserving the
cultural traditions of their native lands and its centennial anniversary has been celebrated throughout 2008. Completed in
1910, the pale yellow brick church was designed by Detroit architect Edward A. Schilling in an Italian Renaissance basilica style.
Although surrounded today by downtown Detroit's tall office buildings, Holy Family Church continues to be the spiritual home of many
Italian families in the greater metropolitan area. It was listed on the Michigan Registry of Historic Sites in 1989.
The stained glass windows of Holy Family Church were created at different times by studios not yet identified. The aisle windows,
installed in 1910 when the church was built, include scenes of the Holy Family, the life of Christ and revered Italian saints.
The clerestory windows, created in the early 1980s by perhaps another studio, depict Adam and Eve, several other saints, and
additional scenes from the life of Christ. Inscriptions on the aisle and clerestory windows record the names of many parishioners
during the past century. One other window, installed in the 1980s, may have come from a third studio. It is hoped that all makers
of the windows at Holy Family Church eventually will be known.
Fig. 2. Saint Anne. 1910. St. Anne, the traditional mother of Mary and grandmother of Jesus, instructs her young daughter in this scene. |
.Fig. 3. Saint Joseph. 1910. St. Joseph, the husband of Mary, with the young child Jesus. Joseph, a carpenter, is known as the patron saint of laborers and fathers. |
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Fig. 4. Santa Monica (St. Monica). 1910. St. Monica died in 387 A.D. in the Italian town of Ostia while traveling from Rome to her home in North Africa. She was the mother of St. Augustine, famous bishop of the Catholic Church. Monica is shown with her hands crossed in prayer to denote the years she spent praying for her son’s conversion to Christianity. |
Fig. 5. San Vittore (St. Victor). 1910. St. Victor was a Roman soldier of Italian ancestry who served in Damascus during the reign of Emperor Antoninus Pius. He was martyred in 160 A.D. for his Christian beliefs. |
Fig. 6. St. Michael the Archangel. 1910. St. Michael, one of seven archangels mentioned in the Book of Revelation, is known as a “warrior angel” who battles against the powers of evil. He is often pictured with a sword, casting a dragon (the Devil) into a fiery pit, or Hell (Rev. 20: 1-3). |
Fig. 7. The Resurrection. 1980s. This scene of Jesus rising from his tomb is different in style from all other windows in Holy Family Church. Although its maker has not been identified, the window is inscribed “Parducci.” The inscription may refer to Detroit architectural sculptor Corrado Giuseppe Parducci (1900-1981), whose work can be found in hundreds of churches and major buildings in Detroit and other Michigan cities. Born in Buti, Italy, Parducci immigrated to the United States in 1904 and moved to Detroit in 1924. He created sculpture for many buildings designed by well-known Detroit architects. |
Fig. 8. The Expulsion. 1981. According to the Book of Genesis, God expelled Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden for eating forbidden fruit from the Tree of Life. In the expulsion scene on this clerestory window, an angel with a flaming sword guards the tree, which is entwined with the serpent that tempted the couple to disobey God’s command (Gen 3: 23-24). |
Fig. 9. The Descent of the Holy Spirit. 1981. As related in the Book of Acts, this event occurred during the Jewish season of Pentecost, when the Holy Spirit descended like “tongues of fire” upon the Apostles as they gathered for prayer, enabling them to speak in various languages. Depictions of the Pentecost scene often include Mary, mother of Jesus, at the very center of the group (Acts 2: 1-43). |
Fig. 10. The Good Shepherd. 1981. This clerestory window presents the popular image of Jesus as the Good Shepherd, who watches over his flock and seeks for any sheep that have strayed. (Matt. 18: 12-14). |
Holy Family Church was registered in the Michigan Stained Glass Census by
Bonnie Leone of Detroit, MI (MSGC 08.0003).
--- Text by Betty MacDowell, Michigan Stained Glass Census
November 1, 2008
Bibliography:
Ashlee, Laura Rose, ed. Traveling Through Time: A Guide to Michigan's Historical
Markers, Rev. ed. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, 2005.
The Holy Bible, King James Version. (New York: American Bible Society, 1999). Published May 2000 by Bartleby.com; ©Copyright Bartleby.com, Inc.
Leone, Bonnie. Detroit's Holy Family Church: 100 Years of Sicilian Tradition (Images of America Series). Mount Pleasant, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2008.
Metford, J.C.J. Dictionary of Christian Lore and Legend. London: Thames and Hudson, Ltd. 1983.
Tutag, Nola Huse. Discovering Stained Glass in Detroit. Detroit,
MI: Wayne State University Press, 1987.
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