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New England Chapel to be Blessed, Named for Our Mother of Perpetual Help
June 26, 2019
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When ϲ, New England, hosts its first-ever Convocation on August 24, the Most Rev. Mitchell T. Rozanski, Bishop of Springfield, Massachusetts, will bless the campus’ century-old chapel in honor of Our Mother of Perpetual Help.
“Thanks to the great generosity of an anonymous couple, for several months now workers have been preparing the New England chapel for Catholic worship,” says Vice President Paul J. O’Reilly. “Our tradition at the College is to name buildings for saints, and our benefactors requested that we name this one for — a fitting choice, given how Our Lady has continually aided the College, first in obtaining, and now in launching, this second campus.”
Icon of Our Mother of Perpetual HelpConstructed in 1909 on what was then the campus of the Northfield School for Girls, the chapel was originally named for Russell Sage, an American financier, railroad executive, and member of Congress. His widow, Margaret Olivia Sage, erected the building in honor of her late husband as part of a broader philanthropic effort in support of women’s education.
Renovations of the chapel began earlier this year, when workers installed a tabernacle and sanctuary lamp in anticipation of the first regularly scheduled Mass in March. More recently, an alumnus of the College, George Krestyn (’03), has overseen the reconfiguration of the chapel’s pews, so as to make room for a center aisle, which will facilitate processions.
By summer’s end, work crews will also add kneelers; refinish the wood floors; install an altar, altar rail, and confessionals; renovate the sanctuary and sacristies; and replace the chapel’s lighting. “Our aim is to retain the elegance and charm of Sage Chapel,” says Dr. O’Reilly, “while making it a suitable home for the sacramental life of ϲ, New England.”
Regrettably, the renovations have required the removal of the chapel’s 81-year-old, two-story organ, given in 1938 by the wife of Wilfred W. Fry, a longtime member and onetime president of the Northfield School’s Board of Trustees, and restored in 1997 by the Class of 1941. “The organ, although grand and beautiful, was incompatible with use in the Mass, as it occupied almost the entirety of the sanctuary, including the space where the altar belongs,” says Dr. O’Reilly. “For the time being it is in storage, but our hope is to install it in an appropriately dignified spot elsewhere on the campus.”
Bishop Rozanski will bless Our Mother of Perpetual Help Chapel at the Mass of the Holy Spirit, which inaugurates the start of the new academic year, on Convocation Day. “On the very day that ϲ begins its first year, our students will witness the transformation of this historic building into what will be their spiritual home for years to come,” says Dr. O’Reilly. “We are profoundly grateful to our benefactors, who have made this transformation possible.”