Parishioners would arrive at the riverside church by boat. Today, the Restoration Chapel is an ecumenical church.
The first Roman Catholic church built in New York was was St. Peter’s on Barclay Street, New York City, whose cornerstone was laid in 1785. But soon enough, the arrival of thousands of Irish immigrants pushed the diocese to build a large church, today known as Old St. Patrick’s, located in Mulberry Street. And the arrival of Irish immigrants shaped the spread of Catholicism outside the boundaries of Manhattan, too.
Between 1820 and 1860 thousands of Irish immigrants relocated to Cold Spring to work for the West Point Foundry iron factory. The factory owner, Gouverneur Kemble, decided that workers and their families needed a place of worship and donated both the land and funds to build the first Catholic Church north of Manhattan.
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