During the early 1800s, the first Catholics in Columbus were visited only occasionally by traveling priests of the Dominican Order. When Father Thomas Martin, OP visited Columbus on May 15, 1833, a group of five local landowners (Samuel and Margaret Crosby, Nathaniel and Caroline Medbury, and Phoebe Otis) met with him and proposed to gift property at Fifth and Walnut streets to the Catholic Church provided that a church building be constructed and in use within five years’ time. That building, Saint Remigius Church, was dedicated on April 29, 1838.
Measuring at just 55 feet long and 30 feet wide, Saint Remigius Church was planned as a temporary place of worship that would later be turned into a school. The pastors at Saint Remigius also served the Catholics in neighboring cities in addition to the parish's own primarily German congregation.
Father William Schonat became the first resident priest in 1843, the same year the first rectory at the site was finished.[7] By then, the growing Catholic population in Columbus necessitated a larger church building. At Father Juncker's request, the parish was renamed “Holy Cross”. The present structure was completed and consecrated by bishop John Purcell on January 16, 1848,[7] just as Irish immigrants began to arrive in Columbus to escape the Great Famine. This influx of migrants eventually split off to form Saint Patrick Church, though they continued to share Holy Cross while the new church was being built.[8]
A fire in June 1877 burned most of the high altar and caused $20,000 of damage. Following repairs, bishop Augustus Toebbe of the Diocese of Covington rededicated the church in 1880.[7]
Columbus native and humorist James Thurber resided in the neighborhood around Holy Cross in his childhood, and made reference to its clock and bell in his works.[9][10]
Holy Cross School
A frame school for the parish - the first parochial school in Columbus - was built in 1843, and initially staffed by lay teachers. In 1856, Fr. Casper Borgess, the pastor of the church, brought Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur from Cincinnati to teach, the first religious women to teach in the city.[7] The Sisters of Notre Dame left in 1961 after the closure of the school making their tenure at Holy Cross the longest in the community's history in the United States.[11] Beginning in 1872, the boys of the parish were taught by Marianist brothers from Dayton.[7] The enrollment of the school peaked at about 450 students early in the 1900s, declining following World War I.[11]
Santa Cruz parish
Beginning in 1993, the growing Spanish-speaking Catholic population in Central Ohio was served at Holy Cross by the non-geographic personal parish of Santa Cruz, established by bishop James Griffin. Holy Cross was selected because of its central location for Latinos living in Franklin County.[12] In 2001, due to the congregation's continued growth, its worship site moved to Holy Name Church in the Old North Columbus area.[13]
Suppression and Merger with St. Joseph Cathedral
Citing "demographic changes... a decline in the number of registered parishioners, a decline in Mass attendance, decline in offertory revenue, and the shortage of priests..."[5], bishop Earl Fernandes suppressed the parish and merged its territory with that of St. Joseph Cathedral on April 5, 2023. Holy Cross will continue to serve as a site of worship.[6]
Exterior
The property is located on 0.165 acres at the corner of South 5th and East Rich Streets in Columbus.[14] The church is constructed of over 800,000 bricks. It features a prominent statue of Jesus on the Via Dolorosa with the inscription “Follow Me”, and clock tower with a steeple and belfry. The “Follow Me” statue covers an inscription that reads “God forbid that I should glory, but in the Cross of Our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom the world is crucified to me and I to the world”, a quote from the Epistle to the Galatians.[15]
The rectory and the school were built of brick in 1861 and 1871, respectively.[16]