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Categories: PostcardsWindsor

Our Lady Of The Lake – Walkerville

A postcard showing the interior of Our Lady of the Lake Church, c. 1910. The photo above is undated, but the church was built in 1907, and it was a Pesha postcard, and Mr. Pesha, passed away in a automobile accident in 1912. So the photo was taken sometime in that five year window.

The interior prior to closure, looked different than in the first photo. At time of closure the church was known as Our Lady of the Rosary. While a designated site, it is protected from demolition, but the longer it sits empty, the more precarious its future is. Hopefully a use for it is found soon.

Andrew

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  • It's too bad they knocked down Ford City Hall for the parking lot across the street from the church. Hope it doesn't happen to the church too. What's the story behind how Ford City was able to split from Walkerville anyway?

  • Actually, the Ford City Hall was next door to the Church, the Church parking lot. Across Drouillard road was the Ford factory and the assembly plant along the river at the foot of Drouillard and Riverside Drive.

  • The church is not owned by the city, any work, reair or alter is the owners responsibily.
    The building a reguesterd site.

  • The owner doesn't have the money? BS. How many millions or billions does the catholic church scam yearly from their parishioners? I'm sure they can come up with some money to maintain their properties.

  • Why should they come up with the money?? The Diocese closed this church to consolidate their declining membership and doesn't want this property anymore and is willing to give it to the city for free (a buck has to transferred to make it legal). If you want it fixed, pony up your own money. Buy it and get a group together with the money to fix it and turn it into a theatre like downtown Mission or something. If you don't want to pony up, then STFU.

  • All I'm saying is that the church probably made a pile on money for a very long time from this particular church alone! I'm sure the Catholic church could help pony up some cash to help a community maintain a historic building. It's about being a good member of your community. They take in money for so many years and when the money stops coming in.. They pack up shop and move on. If you are part of the community you don't just take, you give a little too!!

  • Shane, most parishes are poor (except for the suburban ones...go figure on that!). The oppe had decreed some 20-30+ years ago that parishes needed to be solvent and if they weren't able to afford their repairs and/or expenses then those parishes would be "clustered" into other parishes.

    While you are correct that the catholic church is rich (lets say the Vatican because they had trillions of $$) the fact remains most parishes and even the diocese are rather poor.

    What galls me is the fact ehy keep opening suburban churches and let inner city churches rot and then close them. Last time I checked the Bible, Jesus didn't say "you will be saved if only if you have X amount of dollars."
    IMO, the church are hyprocrites about this problem.

    This, coming from a regular chruch attendee

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Andrew

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