St. Joseph’s Roman Catholic Church, Cohoes, NY

St Joseph’s Catholic Church was founded in 1868  to serve the FrancoAmerican textile workers and services sector in Cohoes.  Prior to that time, FrancoAmericans attended Catholic services at the Irish, St. Bernards.  Attending services in French was a very big deal to the Franco community. Elizabeth Bissonnette’s family gave their share to help build it.

This was the church where John Albert Wills and Elizabeth Bissonnette stood on August 26th, 1903 and promised to be husband and wife.  He promised to raise their children in the Catholic Church but would not, himself, convert.  He was 29, she was 23 years old.  This was the church my aunts and uncles were baptized in, where they made first communions and where they married.

First Communion
Etta (left) and Dorothy Wills making their first communion at St Joseph’s Church sometime in the 1920s

Since 2009, St. Joseph’s has been permanently closed as a church although used as an event site. In 2008, I attended a church service there.  It was probably one of the last Catholic services.  While it was an event site, I was able to visit and attend some events there.  I took photographs.

The architecture of St. Joseph’s was similar to many other catholic Churches built in this period.  Stripped of its ecclesiology adornments, it still remained a beautiful site maintaining its dignity whether empty or filled with community, voices, and sounds of its organ.

The exterior of St Joseph’s Catholic Church, Cohoes 2008
The altar and baptismal font when the church was still a Catholic community
The interior when the church functioned as an event site
Interior St. Joseph’s Church

Jack and Libby

Couple Portrait of John and Libby
Couple Portrait
John Albert Wills and Marie Elizabeth Bissonnette Wills

John “Jack’ Albert Wills (John A. Wills) and Marie Elizabeth ‘Libby’ Bissonnette married on 26 August 1903.  My mother told me they ‘honeymooned’ in Key West, Florida where John wanted to remain and make a living by establishing a photography studio where he would take portraits like this one.   I have no evidence of that but there is a small piece written on the back of a card indicating they were in Charleston, South Carolina for a period of time.

In 1903, marriages between a Protestant and a Catholic were rare.  They were called ‘mixed marriages’ and strongly discouraged, banned by Catholic and Protestant churches and outright opposed by parents of the couple.

That was the case for John A. Wills.  His parents JAB Wills and Anne Reed, devout Methodists, opposed the union of their son and namesake with a Roman Catholic.

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