St. Martha Catholic Church
St. Martha Catholic Church is a parish in the Archdiocese of Chicago located in Morton Grove, Illinois.
History
German-speaking Catholic immigrants from Luxembourg had gathered for worship at least since 1866, initially traveling to Gross Pointe and later to Niles Center for their spiritual activities, although Morton Grove also had a Lutheran congregation by 1903. The village initially developed as an agricultural area, with truck gardens and flower farms in rich soil along the North Branch of the Chicago River well outside the Chicago city limits. It also developed considerable night life, including activities then illegal in Chicago and the North Shore, including many taverns, speakeasies and brothels. Cardinal Mundelein recognized the Morton Grove parish in November 1919, assigning Fr. Martin Schmidt to serve both it and the upgraded mission that became Our Lady of Perpetual Help in Glenview. Fr. Schmidt soon recognized the distances and different communities involved, and called for an additional priest from the Missionary priests of the Divine Word to serve the 43 Catholic families in Morton Grove. Since Prohibition had closed a nearby tavern, it was rented for services at $25/month, with first chairs borrowed from the village hall, then second-hand pews acquired from an Evanston parish. St. Martha's first resident priest, Fr. Frederick Bergs, had been a chaplain during the first World War, and was assigned in December 1922. Under his direction, the congregation built a brick church, which was dedicated on May 4, 1924, and a rectory two years later. The congregation had already become diverse, for the Poehlman Greenhouses imported many orchids from the Philippines, and the parish developed a Filipino-American fellowship in addition to heritage groups of Irish-American and German-American faithful, as well as more diverse fellowships.Fr. Lawrence H. Wand replaced the ailing Fr. Bergs in 1928, and served the parish through the Great Depression, before the archdiocese assigned him to a larger parish in 1941. His successor, Fr. Raymond Wilhelmi, served during the congregation's greatest growth. The church was renovated and decorated in 1944 and the following year a nearby residence purchased, which in 1946 became a convent for a teaching order of sisters. In 1947, the church basement was converted into three classrooms to serve 73 enrolled children. In 1950 a school was built with eight classrooms, library, music rooms and offices, by which time enrollment reached 270 pupils. The highest enrollment was nearly 800 pupils in the mid-1960s, after the parish built another building with an auditorium chapel and eight more classrooms.
The parish had 1,012 families in 1995, and currently remains large, diverse and active. The original 1924 church is used for smaller services, including early daily masses, the Sunday evening Latin Rite Malayalam mass, weddings and funerals. The Saturday evening and two largest Sunday masses are now held in what parishioners call the "big church", remodeled from what had been the school's gymnasium and auditorium dedicated on May 20, 1962, and now surrounded by displayed saints' relics as discussed below. During Lent, St. Martha's often hosts programs in conjunction with St. Isaac Jogues parish and St. John Brebeuf parish, in nearby Niles, Illinois.