April 23, 2017
Camp Santo
St Roch Cemetary #1
1725 St. Roch Avenue
Camp SantoSt. Roch Cemetary #1
New Orleans, Louisiana
Cemetery Gate
"The cemetery and chapel also have a wonderful genesis myth all their own; as the Greater New Orleans website explains:
"At the height of the yellow fever epidemic of 1867, a German priest named Rev. Peter Leonard Thevis arrived in New Orleans. Faced with the severity of the yellow fever epidemic, he turned to God invoking the intercession of St. Roch, the patron of good health. He promised that if no one in his parish should die from the fever, he would erect a chapel in honor of the Saint. Amazingly, not one member of Holy Trinity died from yellow fever, either in the epidemic of 1867 or 1878.
Cemetery Cross
"In thanks, Rev. Thevis’s conviction was to build not only a chapel as a shrine to St. Roch, but also a mortuary chapel in a last resting place for members of his flock. The cemetery was called the Campo Santo (resting place of the dead). Rev. Thevis traveled to Europe to study the architecture and construction of many beautiful shrines and chapels before building the chapel. The chapel, completed in 1876, was considered a beautiful example of Gothic architecture.
Cemetery
"People came to the shrine in large numbers to ask St. Roch for help in cases of affliction, disease and deformities. At one time, the celebration of All Saints Day attracted thousands of people to the Shrine seeking guidance and help for themselves and others in distress. A small room on the side of the chapel holds a number of offerings left by visitors to the chapel. The tradition was to leave accouterments of the illness or disability (including, in the past, eyeballs, crutches, and false limbs!) in gratitude for recovery.
"Another New Orleans tradition related to St Roch that took place for many years is that on Good Friday young girls made a pilgrimage to St. Roch’s chapel because of a local legend, which promised a husband before the year was out to the maiden who said a prayer and left a small sum at each of nine churches. It was considered doubly lucky if St. Roch’s chapel was the end of the pilgrimage.
"The neighborhood got its current name in 1867 with the dedication of the St. Roch shrine and cemetery. St. Roch Chapel and Cemetery are a very important part of the history of the St. Roch neighborhood. At the height of the yellow fever epidemic of 1867, a German priest named Rev. Peter Leonard Thevis arrived in New Orleans. Faced with the severity of the yellow fever epidemic, he turned to God invoking the intercession of St. Roch, the patron of good health." (Link 1.)
Photos: Taken in April 2017 by Suzanne's daughter, Amy, while visiting
New Orleans.
Link 1:http://morbidanatomy.blogspot.ca/2009/05/st-roch-cemetery-and-chapel-new-orelans.html
Link 2: http://www.nola.com/religion/index.ssf/2014/03/i_left_my_leg_in_st_roch_cemet.html
God, be with persecuted Christians throughout the world. Amen (SW.)Link 1:http://morbidanatomy.blogspot.ca/2009/05/st-roch-cemetery-and-chapel-new-orelans.html
Link 2: http://www.nola.com/religion/index.ssf/2014/03/i_left_my_leg_in_st_roch_cemet.html
Prayer
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