The "Boy Priest" as he was called, arrived in Chippewa Falls on May 25, 1869 and two days later said mass at the old St. Mary's of the Falls Church.
His first big work was the construction of Notre Dame Church. He began collecting money by visiting lumber camps and pioneer farms throughout the Chippewa Valley. Construction of the church began in the spring of 1870 and was completed in August of 1872.
In 1884 he helped build St. Charles Church and plan a permanent hospital, which was staffed by the Hospital Sisters of St. Francis. In 1886 he helped build Holy Ghost Church. He also established a newspaper called "The Catholic Sentinal".
According to his doctors, Father Goldsmith died in 1890 at the age of 44 due to a stomach hemorrhage. He was buried near Notre Dame Church. After this, Goldsmith Chapel was built in his honor in 1894; later his body was was exhumed and placed in a crypt under the altar. The four smaller stained glass windows, each represent one of the four local Catholic organizations he founded: Saint Jean Baptiste Society, the Catholic Knights - now called the Knights of Columbus, the Rosary Society, and the Ancient Order of Hibernians. Goldsmith Street on the northside of the city is named after him.
--Chippewa County Historical Society
Parents: John Baptiste Goldsmith and Mary Magdalen Stoffel
(one of five children)
A book was written in 1895, "A Life and Memoirs of Rev. C. F. X. Goldsmith, Late Pastor of Notre Dame, Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin."
By J. A. Anderson. Publisher: Milwaukee: Press of the Evening Wisconsin Company.
--courtesy of contributor #46865269
The "Boy Priest" as he was called, arrived in Chippewa Falls on May 25, 1869 and two days later said mass at the old St. Mary's of the Falls Church.
His first big work was the construction of Notre Dame Church. He began collecting money by visiting lumber camps and pioneer farms throughout the Chippewa Valley. Construction of the church began in the spring of 1870 and was completed in August of 1872.
In 1884 he helped build St. Charles Church and plan a permanent hospital, which was staffed by the Hospital Sisters of St. Francis. In 1886 he helped build Holy Ghost Church. He also established a newspaper called "The Catholic Sentinal".
According to his doctors, Father Goldsmith died in 1890 at the age of 44 due to a stomach hemorrhage. He was buried near Notre Dame Church. After this, Goldsmith Chapel was built in his honor in 1894; later his body was was exhumed and placed in a crypt under the altar. The four smaller stained glass windows, each represent one of the four local Catholic organizations he founded: Saint Jean Baptiste Society, the Catholic Knights - now called the Knights of Columbus, the Rosary Society, and the Ancient Order of Hibernians. Goldsmith Street on the northside of the city is named after him.
--Chippewa County Historical Society
Parents: John Baptiste Goldsmith and Mary Magdalen Stoffel
(one of five children)
A book was written in 1895, "A Life and Memoirs of Rev. C. F. X. Goldsmith, Late Pastor of Notre Dame, Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin."
By J. A. Anderson. Publisher: Milwaukee: Press of the Evening Wisconsin Company.
--courtesy of contributor #46865269
Family Members
Advertisement
Records on Ancestry
Advertisement