Nagyboldogasszony R. K. Egyházközség
Directory of Diaspora Pastors
Parish (Roman Catholic)
Description
The Hungarian Catholic community in Roebling, New Jersey, formed in the early 20th century around the town’s famous wire rope and steel factory. For a long time, there was a tradition among the local Hungarians that some of the chain links for the Széchenyi Chain Bridge in Budapest were made by Hungarian workers at the Roebling Company factory. As early as 1912, the growing Hungarian community began organizing an independent parish, which was officially established in 1913 under the title of Nagyboldogasszony (Holy Assumption).
The first Hungarian-language Mass was celebrated for the congregation by Rev. Pál Csizmadia, pastor of nearby South River, celebrated the Mass for the congregation, and later Fr. Lőrinc Horváth regularly visited the community from Philadelphia. Fr. Ferenc Gross became the parish’s first permanent pastor in 1921. He was responsible for the construction and consecration of the church, as well as for organizing the school system. At his invitation, the Sisters of Divine Love began their teaching ministry during the 1923–1924 school year.
In 1939, the parish came under the care of the Hungarian Franciscan Province named after St. John of Capistrano, and in 1940, the bishop declared it a territorial parish. The Franciscans established a friary, and a convent was built for the nuns. Due to the growth of the community, the church was expanded in 1948, and five hold of land were purchased for use as a cemetery.
In the decades following World War II, several well-known Hungarian Franciscans served at the parish. Fr. Tarzíciusz Gerencsér, OFM, took over leadership of the community in 1944; he was succeeded by Fr. Kapisztrán Petrie, OFM, and then, from 1950 to 1960, by Fr. Dr. Julián Füzér, OFM. During Fr. Füzér’s tenure, a modern school with nine classrooms was built in 1957. Among his successors were Fr. Alpár Forró, OFM; Fr. Ödön Illés, OFM; and Fr. Jenő Lenner, OFM. In accordance with the reforms of the Second Vatican Council, a new altar was erected, the liturgy in the national language was introduced, a carillon was installed, and in 1969 a parish council was formed to manage the affairs of the parish.
A vibrant community life flourished around the parish. Active groups included the Franciscan Third Order, the Rosary Society, the PTA, the altar servers’ group, the Society of the Blessed Virgin Mary, and the Catholic Youth Organization (CYO). Several Hungarian Franciscan friars were laid to rest in the cemetery next to the church.
The Hungarian Franciscan presence reached a turning point in 1993, when the St. John of Capistrano Hungarian Franciscan Custody was dissolved. The care of the parish was subsequently taken over by the Immaculate Conception Province, based in New York. The Hungarian pastoral tradition, however, lived on; a symbolic event in this regard occurred in 1990, when Bishop Attila Miklósházy, S.J., ordained the locally born Franciscan Father Louis Pintye, OFM, to the priesthood here.
By the end of the 20th century and the beginning of the 21st century, the size of the Hungarian community in Roebling had declined significantly, yet the parish survived. In the 2010s, as part of the reorganization of Catholic communities in the area, the formerly independent parish was merged into a larger parish structure. The Holy Assumption Church continues to function as a place of worship today, though it now serves the faithful as part of the Mary Mother of the Church Parish, established in 2022. Holy Masses are still held regularly in the church, so the building has not suffered the fate of many Hungarian-American churches, which lost their original function after being closed or repurposed for secular use.
Today, the church remains one of the centers of Catholic life in Roebling and is also an important reminder of the religious and community heritage of Hungarian immigrants in New Jersey. The cemetery next to the church and the graves of the Hungarian Franciscans continue to preserve the memory of the community’s more than 100-year history.
Related persons
Parish priests
Grosz Ferenc
1922 | alapító plébános
Hajós Antal Márk OFM
1937 | plébánoshelyettes
Gerencsér István Tarzicius OFM
1940 - 1946 | segédlelkész, majd plébános
Petrie Gyula Kapisztrán OFM
1946 - 1950 | plébános, a Kapisztrán Szent János provincia komisszáriusa (vezetője)
Füzér István Julián OFM, dr
1951 - 1960 | plébános, iskolaépítő
Forró János Alpár OFM
1956 - 1957 | plébános, a Camp Kilmer menekülttábor lelkésze
Forró János Alpár OFM
1960 - 1963 | plébános
Illés Ede OFM
1963 - 1965 | plébános
Lenner Jenő Arkangyal OFM
1965 - 1969 | plébános
Dám Antal Ince OFM, Dr.
1967 | plébános
Füzér István Julián OFM, dr
1972 - 1984 | plébános
Assistant priests
Kiss Máté János OFM
1970 - 1972 | segédlelkész
Csorba László Domonkos OFM
1972 - 1974 | segédlelkész
Assisting priests / without specific function
Andrássy Béla Oresztes
1929
Blihár Viktor Barnabás OFM
1938 - 1947
Gergely Gyula Gaudens OFM
1939
Forró János Alpár OFM
1945 - 1948
Füzér István Julián OFM, dr
1947 - 1948
Doveson Dezső OFM
1948 - 1955
Gergely Gyula Gaudens OFM
1949 - 1953
Forró János Alpár OFM
1952 - 1953
Ferenczy Géza Ipoly OFM
1953 - 1954
Kecskés József Attila OFM
1953 - 1956
Mandl József Maximilián OFM
1954 - 1955
Gergely Gyula Gaudens OFM
1956
Máriaföldi Péter Lukács OFM
1958
Pier György Márk Piusz OFM
1961 - 1962
Mandl József Maximilián OFM
1965 - 1967
Csorba László Domonkos OFM
1983 - 1986
Other ministers
Hédly Ferenc Jeromos OFM
1928 - 1933 | misszionárius
Hajnal Imre Zénó OFM, Isten szolgája
1934 - 1935 | misszionárius
Kiss János Ábel OFM
1936 - 1937 | orgonista
Király Ferenc Kelemen OFM
1947 - 1948 | lelkipásztor
Kilián János Csaba OFM, Dr
1953 | lelkipásztor
Borsy György Engelbert OFM
1956 | lelkész
Juhász István Ágoston OFM
1959 - 1985 | lelkész
Borsy György Engelbert OFM
1981 | lelkész
Kaczián Alfonz József OFM
1982 | szerzetestestvér
Sources
- Miklósházy:2008 — A tengerentúli emigráns magyar katolikus egyházi közösségek története Észak- és Dél-Amerikában, valamint Ausztráliában, 1–5. Összeáll. Miklósházy Attila, sajtó alá rend. Ligeti Angelus, Kiss G. Barnabás, Szent István Társulat, Budapest, 2008.