A warehouse on Fifth Street purchased by John Dugan
in
1820 became the first Catholic church and was called "Trinity Church and
oftentimes
the "brick church". All catholics attended this church until 1842
when,
at that time, the German speaking catholics united and formed their own
church.
As the congregation grew in the "brick church" a larger one soon
became
necessary and the cornerstone was laid in March 1825 for a new
one.
When it was dedicated in 1827 it was named St John's Roman Catholic
Church.
The congregation continued to rapidly increase so it was decided in
1842
that another larger church was needed. The old church was demolished .
The
cornerstone for the present church was laid in March 1842 on the same
Fifth
Street site and was renamed St Thomas.
All catholics attended the fifth street catholic church until 1842
when
the German speaking members separated and united to form their own
church
at the head of Main Street and Greenwood Avenue .It was named St
Nicholas.
The present church was erected in 1898.
The "old" St Nicholas Cemetery was plotted on Wheeling Ave
and
burials were made there thru 1921. The cemetery has not been
maintained
and few legible stones remain. Even though the stones remain the bodies
may
have been moved. When the "new" cemetery land was purchased a number of
the bodies were removed from Wheeling Avenue and
re-interred
in Mt Olive- the name chosen for the "new" burial place. Mt Olive is
located
on Rt 40 East at the top of the hill just beyond the Sunrise Shopping
Center.
The St Thomas and St Nicholas cemetery transcriptions
have
been read and copied by the Muskingum County Genealogical Society and
can
be found in their library which is located on the second floor of the
John
McIntire library on Fifth Street. Some St Thomas baptism
and
interment records can be researched in the publication
MUSKINGUM
COUNTY FOOTPRINTS which is also available.