Chapter
One

Early Beginnings
In the year 1806, a large colony of
immigrants arrived from France
and settled at Shippingport and Portland, two
small hamlets along the south bank of the Ohio River
a mile or two below the falls. This
French colonization project was sponsored by two brothers, John A. and Louis
Tarascon.
An 1814 the site of Portland, which was the property of William
Lytle, was surveyed and plotted under his direction by Alexander Ralston. An addition was laid out in 1817, for
the same proprietor, by Joel Wright.
A peculiar division prevailed in the town–plot, the two parts
being known as ‘Portland Proper’ and ‘The Enlargement of
Portland.’ The lots in the
Proper plot or half acre size, and sold readily for $200 each, increasing in
price by 1819 to $500 and $1,000.
The Enlargement comprised lots
¾ of an acre in size, at the corresponding price, $300 apiece.
Dr. McMurtrie’s Sketches of Louisville in 1819 said:
“But a small portion of this extensive place is as yet occupied by
houses. Some very handsome ones,
however, are now erecting in Portland
proper and among the than a very extensive brick warehouse, belonging to
Captain H. M. Shreve. The property
in this place lately attracted the attention of a number of wealthy men, who
seemed determined to improve to the utmost every advantage in possesses, and as
it is not so subject to inundation as some of the adjoining places its future
destinies may be considered as those of a highly flourishing and important
town.”
Dana’s Geographical Sketches said of this village in 1819: began “It
is a flourishing place, a street ninety–nine feet wide, having
communication with Louisville,
extends along the highest bank above the whole length of the town. It contains three warehouses, several
stores and one good tavern.”
‘Personal reflections of Louisville’ in The
Courier Journal of May 12, 1935, gives a very interesting paragraph:
“Before the Louisville and Portland canal was finished in 1830, the first tramway in
the United States was built
connecting Louisville with Portland.”
The
Herald Post of February 19, 1935, under the caption ‘Relics of the
Old South Reclaimed,’ carries many points of historical interest to us:
The packet
trade centered at the foot of 34th
Street made this one of the busiest and most
popular sections of Louisville.
Situated on
Commercial (now 34th
Street) near First Street (Missouri) is the site of the St. Charles
Hotel, once the famous hostelry of the South, and the forerunner of the Galt
House.
There were many
river pilots among the residents of Portland,
and no wonder, at the close of 1855, forty–one steamboats had been built
in Portland.
It may be noted here that the St.
Charles Hotel was owned and operated by Charles Maquaire and later by his
son–in–law, Paul Villier, who originally built the hotel.
In the 1840s the river front in Portland had a far
different appearance from the one we view today. Then big steamboats piled the river,
receiving and distributing cargoes of freight from New
Orleans to Cincinnati; the staccato
whistle, the clanging bell, could be heard throughout Portland as the crews prepared to anchor the
boats. Many of the men would hasten
to the little church around the corner to assist at Mass after their boats tied
up.
Tradition tells us that the packets and
barges were not the only boats.
There was a ferry line between Portland
and New Albany. In later years, the ‘Tom
Connor,’ the ‘Frank McHarry’ and the ‘Music’
built with an upper deck, were sometimes used for excursions. It is said that the parishioners of Our
Lad’s Church would take the ‘Music’ to go to Sugar Grove, a
picnic–ground some twelve miles below Portland
on the Indiana
side of the river. Often the number
was so large that the ‘Frank McHarry’ was also pressed into service.
Charles Dickens, in his American Notes, writes of Portland as a
‘Suburb of Louisville,’ and mentions a delay in passing through the
locks.
From the year to 1806 to the year 1811,
Fr. Badin’s visits to Shippingport and Portland were frequent, most likely once a
month. Fr. Badin planned to build a
church in Louisville,
but his hopes were not realized until May, 1811, when the contract was made for
the erection of the building. This
church was dedicated to St. Louis,
King of France, and stood on the corner of Tenth and Main Streets. It was opened for services on the
following Christmas, but was not completed for several years. As time went on Louisville,
Shippingport and Portland
continued to grow. The immigration
from France had practically
ceased by 1826, and in its place had come natives of Ireland
and Germany.
Fr. Badin has long seen the need of a
church in Portland. The distance from Portland to Tenth and Main Streets proved a
hard–ship for many, especially to the old and feeble. This distance became a greater when the
site of St. Louis
was transferred to the east side of Fifth
Street, where the Cathedral of the Assumption now
stands. It was at this time,
1837–38, that as it is supposed, he inaugurated the movement which
brought about the organization of the congregation and subsequent erection of Church of Our Lady. He encouraged the people of Portland to petition the Bishop, and so I came to pass
that in 1839, Bishop Chabrat nominated a pastor for Portland in the person of the Rev. Napoleon
J. Perche, he was then president of the diocesan seminary at Bardstown.
At the time, the names of the three
ecclesiastics were outstanding in Kentucky:
Bishop Flaget, his Coadjutor, Bishop Chabrat and the proto sacerdos, Fr.
Badin. As all three were intimately
connected with the formation of the parish of Our Lady, this is an account of
their lives.
Benedict Joseph Flaget
First Bishop of Bardstown &
Louisville
‘The
Saintly Flaget!’ is the epithet all posterity applies to the first bishop
of the first diocese west of the Alleghenies. Right Rev. Benedict Joseph Flaget was
born in Billom, France, November 8, 1764. Ordained at 24 years of age at Issy, France,
he came to America as a
missionary in 1791 and was stationed at Vincennes,
Indiana. He visited Louisville for the first time in 1792.
When
Pope Pius VII erected Bardstown into an episcopal see, he appointed Rev.
Benedict Joseph Flaget, a Sulpician, April 8, 1808, as its first bishop. The new diocese embraced the states of Kentucky and Tennessee,
and its Bishop was given spiritual jurisdiction not only over his own diocese
proper, but also, until other diocese might presently be formed, over the whole
Northwest Territory. From this Mother–See of the West
were formed ten dioceses during the life of its first saintly Bishop. Though the bulls for his consecration
reached him in September 1808, the consecration did not take place until
November 4, 1810, when Bishop Carroll consecrated him in St. Patrick’s
Church, Baltimore.
The
record of Bishop Flaget’s trials and triumphs is written not only in the
history of the foundation and development of this diocese through its first
fifty years, but in the histories of many other diocese and in those of the
Orders of Sisters founded under his jurisdiction. This saintly son of France toiled almost sixty years and firmly
planting Catholicity in Kentucky and the
Middle West, and carefully and untiringly covering his vast diocese from the
Allegheny Mountains to the Mississippi,
when the bishop’s carriage was the horse’s saddle.
He
died in Louisville,
February 11, 1850, during the construction of the present Cathedral of the
Assumption, and was buried, at his own request, and the plot of the Sisters of
the Good Shepherd, Eighth Street. His remains were later transferred to a
crypt in the Undercroft of the Cathedral of the Assumption.
Rev. Guy Ignatius Chabrat
Guy Ignatius
Chabrat (photo left) was born in the village of Chambre, France, where he was carefully
reared and educated. He was
ordained sub–deacon at one of the French Sulpician seminaries in 1809,
and, at the earliest solicitation of Bishop Flaget, who was in France
at this time, the young sub–deacon resolved to share his arduous
duties. So it was that in company
with the Bishop and Fr. John B. David, he came to Kentucky in the summer of 1811. The succeeding seven months were devoted
to study and he was ordained priest by Bishop Flaget on December 25, 1811, in
the Dominican Church
of St. Rose. This was the first ordination that had
taken place in Kentucky and in the territory
of the United States west of
Baltimore.
Fr. Chabrat’s first charge was
St. Michael’s in Nelson County and St. Clare’s in Hardin County. An 1824 he was appointed ecclesiastical
superior of the Sisters of Loretto.
An 1834 he received from Rome the bulls for his
consecration as Bishop of Bolina and coadjutor of the Bishop of Bardstown. He was consecrated bishop at Bardstown,
July 20, 1834. When Bishop Chabrat
was forced to resign by reason of his approaching blindness, he retired in 1847
on a comfortable pension to his old home in France. He died in the thirty–fourth year
of his episcopate.
Rev. Stephen Theodore Badin
Born in the
beautiful and historic city of Orleans,
France, on July 17, 1768, this child of destiny was privileged to grow up under
the influence of God–fearing parents. Because he refused to forswear his
conscience and promise allegiance to the government Napoleon had set up, and because
he refused to accept the priestly ordination of the hands of his disloyal
bishop who had taken the odious constitutional
oath, persecution stretched out to seize him. The experience was soul–harrowing,
but the Providence of God awakened in his soul the divine call to spend his
life and be spent in molding the destiny of the Catholics in the New World.
Received as sub–deacon by the
venerable Bishop Carroll of Baltimore,
he completed his ecclesiastical studies and mastered the rudiments of
English. The diocese of Bishop
Carroll Embraced the whole United
States, and Fr. Badin was the first fruits
of his consecrated hands. He was
ordained in St. Peter’s Cathedral, Baltimore,
Maryland on May 25, 1793. In after years, Fr. Badin always signed
his name in the Church records, “S. T. Badin, Proto Sa (credos) Baltim
(orensis), First priests of Baltimore.” To him will always remain the glory of
being the first priest ordained in the United States.
From the day,
September 6, 1793, when Fr. Badin first turned his face toward Kentucky, he answered up
on the career of zeal and self–sacrifice which continued until he laid
down his worn and wasted body in death.
During his missionary journeys, he traveled 100,000 miles in the saddle. Often a sick call required a journey of
fifty or even seventy–five or eighty miles into the forest, on the
darkest nights, in the piercing winter, sometimes without a guide and always
over rough roads. When he came to Kentucky, a young,
active and energetic priest, even the strongest man wondered how he could
endure so much, but even unto his patriarchal years he continued the herculean
labors and almost incredible hardships of his youth. Archbishop Spalding tells us that the
often suffered from the very necessaries of life, that his clothing was scant
and fashioned from the rough fabrics of the country, that his food was of the
courses and seldom of sufficient quantity.
Instead of settling down in a single parish, he moved from place to
place covering all of Kentucky and large parts
of Illinois, Indiana
and Ohio in
his labors.
Fr. Badin (photo right) has often been likened to St. Paul. Both men were of small stature, both
were intense temperaments. St. Paul tells us in his
second Epistle to the Corinthians that he suffered from many perils. Fr. Badin was, likewise, often in peril
of death from the white man and the red, from hunger and cold. The howl of the wolf and the shriek of
the panther often awoke him from his slumber on the cold, hard ground, and the
swollen, impassable river frequently bore him close to death.
Again and again he found himself alone
on the Kentucky
mission. Once he was for nearly
three years the only priests in this vast region; once he was so remote from a
brother-priest that for twenty–one months he could not go to confession. He stands forth a self sacrificing
priest, a courageous pioneer who knew no fear, a missionary to whom the saving
of a soul was more than the conquest of an empire or the riches of kings, a
pastor who showed the tender affection as well as the sternness of a real
father, the proto–priest whom Fr. Nerinckx calls ‘The Founder of
the Church in Kentucky.’ He
was absent from the diocese from 1830 till 1837, and on his return became Vicar
General.
Fr. Badin’s last public
appearance in Louisville
was on the fifteenth of August, 1849, on the occasion of the laying of the
cornerstone of the Cathedral of the Assumption. He died April 21, 1853, and was buried
in the former Cathedral of Cincinnati.
His body was moved to the University of Notre Dame in 1904. Fr. Badin had donated land from a farm
he owned to the university.
Rev. Napoleon
J. Perche
The first pastor of the Church
of Our Lady, Rev. Napoleon J. Perche (photo left), was born January 10, 1805,
at Angers, France. He was a most precocious child and could
read at four. At eighteen he was
professor of philosophy and at twenty–four he was ordained at the
seminary of Beaupre, September 19, 1829.
He served in various pastorates in France
until 1837, when he came to America. It was, doubtless, at this time that he
met Bishop Flaget who had gone to Europe in
1835. The Bishop became ill while
visiting Angers
in 1837, and remained there some time.
He induced the Rev. N .J. Perche to come to Kentucky with him and assist him in his vast
territory. His first appointment
was as teacher in St. Thomas Seminary.
Later, in 1839, he was given charge of Portland with its missions.
Wishing
to raise money to build a church for his parishioners, Fr. Perche obtained
permission to go to New Orleans. There in St. Louis Cathedral he preached
such eloquent sermons in French that the Creoles soon subscribed the money he
needed, and Archbishop Antoine Blanc offered him an appointment and urged him
to come to Louisiana permanently, where he
could accomplish more good than he was likely to effect and Kentucky. Fr. Perche, however, asked to be allowed
to go back to Kentucky
and finish the church he was building.
This work accomplished, he returned to New Orleans, and in 1842 he
became Chaplain of the Ursuline Convent, a post he filled for twenty-eight years,
seeking no advancement and ever ready to preach when summoned. His eloquence acquired for him both fame
and influence.
Archbishop
John Mary Odin petitioned Rome
for the appointment of Fr. Perche as his coadjutor with the right of
succession. His request was granted
and, May 1, 1870, Fr. Perche was consecrated with imposing ceremonies in the
Cathedral of New Orleans. On that
occasion the orator, the Rev. Jeremiah Moynihan, spoke in eloquent terms of the
admiration, love and veneration entertained by the people of the diocese for
the new bishop. He was a man of
great energy, far–seeing judgment and great eloquence. His great charity and his personal interest
in the poor endeared him to all the people.
The
new Bishop was not long coadjutor bishop, as Archbishop Odin died on May 25,
1870, and Perche became Archbishop and assumed in the direction of the diocese
of New Orleans. He endowed his diocese with a
contemplative community, the Carmelite nuns of the reform of St. Teresa, an
affiliate of the convent in St. Louis;
and one of his last acts was an appeal in their behalf on the occasion of the
tercentenary of the great Spanish Carmelite nun.
Under
his zealous direction Thibodeaux College and St. Mary’s Commercial
College were opened, the ladies of the Sacred Heart established a third
academy, three other academies and thirteen parish schools were opened in his
time, and the Little Sisters of the Poor founded an asylum for aged colored
women. Ten new churches and many
chapels marked the growth of the diocese, and the number of priests increased
one–fifth.
In 1872 he inaugurated an annual service of
thanksgiving for the victory of the Battle of New Orleans, January 8, 1815.
Archbishop
Perche was a great scholar. His
gentleness, energy, sound judgment, and eloquence, caused Pope Leo XIII to call
him the ‘Bossuet of the American
Church.’
Toward
the close of the year 1883, his vital powers began to fail, and though removal
to the country seemed to invigorate him, he grew weaker on his return to the
city. In December he saw that the
end was at hand; fortified by the Sacraments, he died of old age on Thursday,
December 27, 1883.
His
death occasioned a profound sensation throughout Louisiana. In New
Orleans the grief was universal. The remains lay in state at St.
Mary’s Archepiscopal
Church, and thousands
paid him a last tribute of respect.
The obsequies, which took place on January second, were of very imposing
character. The procession included,
in addition to the Catholic clergy, the state and city officials, military
officers, the various Catholics societies, the Sisters of Charity and of Mercy
in charge of the Catholic asylums in New
Orleans.
The Right Rev. F. X. Lerdy officiated at the Cathedral of the
Assumption, assisted by the clergy of Louisiana
and other states.
The mortal remains of Fr. Perche, the first pastor
of the Church of Our
Lady, rest in New
Orleans Louisiana.
Just
as divine providence gave us worthy and capable ecclesiastics to meet the
conditions of those pioneer days, so it likewise raised up among the laity, men
gifted with unusual ability and leadership. This was especially true of Portland. Blessed indeed was the early
congregation In having such man as Charles Maquaire, Eugene Perrot, Louis Fosse
and William Banon, who were the first trustees and comprised the committee of
the management of the newly formed parish.
The First Trustees
Charles Maquaire
Companionship
has a marked effect on character; in frequent association with friends we are
slowly but surely fashioned to their likeness, and sooner or later we find the
good or evil of their lives present into our own.
It
is natural that, measured by this standard, Charles Maquaire, who “was a
fast friend of Fr. Badin,” should be zealous for the spread of religion
in the new settlement. Fr. Badin
was a frequent visitor at the Maquaire home, and had a room at his disposal at
all times.
Mr.
William Banon, Mr. Eugene Perrot and Mr. Charles Maquaire were appointed by Fr.
Badin as members of a provisional committee of management for the building of
the church in the town of Portland, Kentucky, and later
Charles Maquaire was one of the first trustees of the parish.
According
to tradition he was likewise an intimate friend of Bishop Flaget, who not only baptized
his granddaughter, Josephine Villier, but was also her godfather, while Sr.
Eulalie (the bishop’s niece) stood for her as godmother.
Notwithstanding
the fact that he was a merchant and not a civil engineer, Mr. Maquaire Is given
credit for having laid out that section of the old town which was known as
Portland in the 1830s. The old
streets are straight and wide, running from the river south, Fulton (33rd), Commercial (34th),
Grove (35th), and Ferry (36th), to Market Street (Rudd Avenue). Trees were planted too, many of which
remain today, beautiful still, especially on the site of the old St. Charles
Hotel.
Charles
Maquaire was born in Paris
in 1803. With a Frenchman’s
innate love and appreciation of liberty, he came to America and became an American
citizen in 1835.
The
Louisville Directory of 1836 gives
“McQuaire (the name mutilated then as now) clothier on Water between 5th
and 6th Streets.” In the 1838 Directory the name is given as “McQuain, Chas. & Co.,
grocer and clothier, Water cor. 3rd house in Portland.” The 1843–44 Directory lists: “Maquaire &
Villier, Merchants, Portland,
house at store, Water and Commercial Streets.”
When
his daughter, Thaise Eugenie, finished school in France, he sent for her. She married Paul Villier, according to
the church records, on May 27, 1843.
Mr.
Maquaire was accidentally drowned in the neighborhood of Aurora,
Indiana, while on his way to meet the brother
who was coming from France. The first intimation that something had
happened to him became evident when the brother arrived in Portland unaccompanied by Mr. Maquaire. A search was begun at once but in vain,
and it was only after a reward was offered by the body, which had been buried
near the scene of the accident, was recovered, disinterred and brought home.
Mr.
Maquaire retained many of the French customs, and had always expressed a desire
to be carried to the grave according to the manner of the French. Accordingly on Thanksgiving Day, 1853,
twelve men carried the casket from the house to the church and from the church
to the Portland Cemetery.
Eugene C.
Perrot
Eugene
C. Perrot, member of the provisional committee of management, and the second on
the list of the first trustees of the Church
of Our Lady, was likewise a native of France. He was born in Lacote, France,
1789. In the early part of 1806, he
came to Shippingport with the Tarascons.
He resided in this vicinity over a quarter of a century before the
erection of the church. Holy Mass
Was frequently said in his home during that time.
In
the 1832 Louisville Directory, the
earliest on record:” Eugene Perrot, dry goods; Water St., between 4th &
Donne’s Alley.” He also
listed in the 1836 directory as “retail merchant N.S. Main cor.
Sixth.” According to the Directory of 1838 he was established as
merchant in Portland,
with Peter Marchand as his clerk.
Evidently Mr. Perrot was a charitable man and strove to lay up treasure
in heaven, for on his tombstone in the Portland Cemetery
reads:
Died October 20, 1856
– He was the protector of the widow and orphan – Pray for him
Louis Fosse
Louis Fosse was also one of the first
trustees at the establishment of the church in Portland. When quite young, Louis Fosse was
enrolled in Napoleon’s corps of bridge–builders, and followed his
general to Moscow. In that famous retreat, being attacked
by the Cossacks, and wounded in the thigh by a lance, he was stripped and left
for dead in the snow. Revived he
made his way to a shepherd’s hut where he procured a garb of sheep
skins. He finally made his way to his
native land, and during many hardships on the way. He married at twenty–seven. In 1835 he and his wife Margaret, and
five children immigrated to America. When they first came to Portland, they lived in
the old brick house in Cedar Grove.
After the Sisters of Loretto acquired the property, this house became
known as the ‘wash–house.’ A few years ago, it was remodeled and is
one of the most attractive houses in Cedar
Grove Court today.
The Louisville
Directory of 1848 gives: “Louis Fausett, merchant, house market above
railroad, Portland.”
Mrs. Margaret Fosse celebrated her hundredth birthday in 1888. She lived to be 103 and died in the
house on market street (Rudd
Avenue) above the railroad.
When Louis Fosse visited France
in 1850, he was decorated by Napoleon III.
He died in 1865 and is buried in Portland Cemetery. He lies near Mr. Maquaire, Mr. Banon and
Mr. Perrot.
John Edward Fosse, son of John and
Josephine the Delora Fosse, and grandson of Louis and Margaret Fosse, was
instrumental in procuring the present Stations of the Cross for the
church. He canvassed the parish,
and having some money remaining after paying for the Stations, he purchased the
statue of St. Anthony, which was destroyed in the 1937 flood.
William Banon
William Banon, member of the
provisional committee of management, and forth on the list of trustees, was
born in Ireland
in 1801. He married Helen Kelly and
moved to Canada, and thence
to Louisville, Kentucky,
where he established a home at eighth and Jefferson. The Louisville
Directory of 1836 lists him as a
‘retail grocer on the north side of main between 10th and 11th
Sts.’ He moved to Portland in the latter
part of 1836.
Before he moved from Main Street he bought a plot of ground in
Portland,
consisting of 100 acres, laying north of what is now Main Street and south of Bank Street, known
as Banon’s Thicket.
Banon’s Lane, running through the tract, is now 38th Street. After he came to Portland,
Mr. Banon must have made an offer to farm a part, at any rate, of his hundred
acres, as for some years in the Louisville
Directories, he is listed as a
Farmer. In a later Directory he is given as gentlemen, most
likely because of this tract of land.
In Portland the Banons lived at the corner of
Ferry and Front Streets, and a large building of three stories and a half, the
lower part of stone. Mrs. Banon
occupied this house until her death in 1881. Before the parish was founded in 1839,
Holy Mass was often said in this home on a bureau, which was the treasured
possession of the children until it was lost in the flood of 1884.
An intimate friend of Mr. Banon, Mr.
Thomas Drew, bequeathed $1,000 for the establishment of a free school for
Catholic girls. It is suppose that
Mr. Drew made this request at the request of Mr. Banon, who also left $1,000
for this purpose. (Court House Record,
Deed Book 4).
Mr. Banon was small in stature, a
typical Irish gentlemen, meticulously careful of his personal parents, and
usually seen on horseback. He died
in 1852 at the age of 51 years and is buried in the Portland Cemetery. Ten children were born to William Banon
and Ellen Kelly. Several died as
small children. Only one continued
to live in Portland,
Thomas, born 1835, died at the age of 84 years. He, holding tightly to his Sr.
Catherine’s hand, saw the cornerstone of the church lady in 1840. He remained a member of the congregation
until his death in 1919. Mr. Banon
always signed his name Banon by his descendants of the name Bannon.

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