290 N. North Garden St., Marion
Sunday Masses: 9 a.m. (Traditional Latin), 11 a.m. (English) and 7 p.m. (Spanish)
Father William McShea, a priest who lived at the Hickory Hotel in the mid-1940s, traveled to Morgan, 22 miles from Marion, each Sunday to celebrate Mass in the home of a non-Catholic family. Later, his successor traveled to Marion to celebrate the first Mass there in the county courthouse on Jan. 21, 1951.
82 Lambert Branch Road, Cherokee
Currently not in operation.
Bishop Vincent S. Waters of Raleigh dedicated the mission in August 1966, placing it under the patronage of Our Lady of Guadalupe. The building was the first Catholic church to be constructed on the Cherokee Indian Reservation, on land donated by Leila Queen, a Catholic convert. Because the donated land rested in Cherokee territory, the Cherokee tribal council and principal chief had to approve before construction could proceed. Bishop Waters decided that the church’s design should reflect Cherokee culture. Built in the pattern of the ancient and sacred Cherokee council house, the church has seven sides and mosaic floor tiles representing the seven tribal clans: the Paint, the Deer, the Panther, the Wolf, the Bird, the Potato and the Blue Holly.
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