Black parish work in the Rust Belt begins
By 1922 it had become clear St. Monica’s facilities were too old and too small for the congregation, and the parish had begun raising funds for a new church and school. The SVDs continued to win praise from their parishioners by actively pushing the archdiocese for a solution. Finally, on December 6, 1924, after two years of negotiations, Mundelein transferred responsibility for a nearby formerly white parish, St. Elizabeth’s, to the SVDs. St. Monica’s was then merged with St. Elizabeth’s over the next two years, and the former was shuttered. The latter became the Black mother church of Chicago, and the SVDs have remained in service there to the present day.
Based on their success at St. Monica’s and St. Elizabeth’s, other Black parishes were placed into SVD hands in the decades that followed: St. Anselm (1932) and Our Lady of the Gardens (1949) in Chicago; St. Nicholas in St. Louis, MO (1926); Our Lady of the Divine Shepherd (1941) and St. Peter Claver (1943) in New Jersey; and St. Rita in Indianapolis, IN (1973).
Out of the dozens of SVD priests and brothers who have served the people of these parishes, the one most synonymous with the early growth of the community’s Black apostolate is Rev. Joseph Eckert. Ordained in 1909 at St. Gabriel’s Mission House in Austria, Fr. Eckert arrived at Techny that same year. He taught at St. Joseph’s Technical School and later St. Mary’s Mission House before being named pastor of St. Monica’s in 1921. He was the one who successfully spearheaded the parish’s merger with St. Elizabeth’s, and after an incredibly successful tenure as pastor there he became the first SVD pastor of St. Anselm’s in 1932. In 1940 he was appointed the first superior of the SVD’s new U.S. Southern Province, where he oversaw not only a network of Black parishes, but St. Augustine’s Mission House, the first Black Catholic seminary in the United States. By the time of his death in 1965, he had devoted over 40 years to African American Catholics.