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The St. Francis Xavier Shrine and Cemetery, known as Old Bohemia, stands refurbished for its 300th anniversary in Warwick. Jesuit Father Thomas Mansell purchased 1200 acres for the purpose of ministering to early Catholic settlers in 1704; Jesuit priests built the first shrine on the property in 1797. (CNS photo by Don Blake, The Dialog)

Georgetown Jesuits explore roots of Catholicism on Maryland’s Eastern Shore

October 10, 2022
By Connie Connolly
Catholic News Service
Filed Under: Colleges, Feature, Local News, News

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WARWICK (CNS) — About 30 Jesuit priests from Georgetown University in Washington spent a day exploring the roots of Catholicism in colonial Maryland.

The first stop on the field trip was St. Francis Xavier Shrine in the Cecil County’s rolling countryside.

That setting, and others on Maryland’s Eastern Shore, allowed the educators and their colleagues in the Society of Jesus to journey back to the days when their predecessors posed as gentleman farmers to minister clandestinely to Catholics in the English colonies.

Members of the Old Bohemia Historical Society hosted the casually dressed priests who arrived by charter bus at about 10:30 a.m.

Clarice Kwasnieski, the group’s publicity chairperson, greeted the guests seated in the straight-backed pews of the historic church, also known as Old Bohemia.

“A lot of churches were started from ‘Old Bo,'” Kwasnieski said.

This antique sanctuary bell was used at the St. Francis Xavier Shrine in Warwick, Md., as early as 1847. The shrine is located on Maryland’s Eastern Shore and is part of the Diocese of Wilmington, Del. (CNS photo by Don Blake, The Dialog)

The church is open for special Masses and is a mission of St. Joseph Church in nearby Middletown, Del., in the Wilmington Diocese, which covers the state of Delaware and Maryland’s Eastern Shore.

The restored church and rectory are surrounded by a well-manicured, fenced lawn, a cemetery, tenant house and barn, and 120 acres of farmland.

Missing from the landscape is the school established in 1745 by Jesuit Father Thomas Poulton: Bohemia Academy.

Archbishop John Carroll and his cousin Charles Carroll, the only Catholic signatory of the Declaration of Independence were educated at the school. In the existing school records, John Carroll is known as “Jacky,” who founded Georgetown University in 1789.

“What were his grades?” asked one Georgetown professor, to laughter from his colleagues.

“I’m sure they were excellent,” Kwasnieski replied, smiling.

According to charlescarrollhouse.org, “Young Charles Carroll, known as “Charley” to his parents, was sent in 1747, at the age of 10, to Maryland’s Eastern Shore, along with his cousin John Carroll, to study secretly at the Jesuit school at Bohemia Manor in Cecil County. By 1749, Charley and John, who would later become the first American Catholic bishop, were sent to study at St. Omer in French Flanders.”

Jesuit Father Gregory Chisholm, superior of the Jesuits’ USA East Province in Baltimore, was among the priests on the trip.

Originally from Harlem in New York City, he said he wanted to “see it rather than read about” the history of the colonial Catholic founders.

“This part of the province has a colonial history of ownership and operation of plantations, and a history of involvement in slavery, both the development of slavery in the church and also the end of that in the process,” Father Chisholm told The Dialog, Wilmington’s diocesan newspaper. “I wanted to see what this part of the world was like.”

Founded in 1704 by Jesuit Father Thomas Mansell, Bohemia Mission is one of the oldest permanent Catholic establishments in the English colonies.

“In some ways, this is where it all started,” Jesuit Father Leon Hooper said as he examined some of the shrine’s artifacts behind glass in the museum section of the old rectory.

Father Hooper is director of the Woodstock Jesuit Library at Georgetown University. He said the community goes on an annual field trip, and part of this year’s excursion included visiting colonial mansions with house chapels, including Bowlingly estate, granted in 1659 and located on the Chester River in Queenstown.

The Neale family, who owned the estate during the colonial period, sent two of their sons to school at Old Bohemia, according to Father Hooper. One died while he was a student, but Leonard Neale was the first Catholic bishop ordained in the U.S.

“So, the first two bishops went to school here,” Father Hooper said. “And the first one ordained in the U.S. was a student here. There’s huge history here. I mean, this is the (beginning of the) history of the church in the United States.”

“At that time, the bishop of Baltimore was the bishop of the U.S., basically — that was the first diocese,” he said. “The start of the church in this country was (through) people educated here.”

Two members of the Neale family became presidents of Georgetown University.

Georgetown University alumna Kathy Kobus is secretary of the Old Bohemia Historical Society and provided historical information to the Jesuits. The Middletown resident believes that Bohemia Academy played a pivotal role in the history of the university.

Following Mass celebrated by Jesuit Father Ron Anton, who organized the trip, the group continued their journey through Maryland’s rural Eastern Shore to visit St. Joseph Church in Cordova and St. Peter Church in Queenstown.


Connolly writes for The Dialog, newspaper of the Diocese of Wilmington.

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Copyright © 2022 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops

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