My hometown, Oil City. Take a good look at the skyline. When you approach the town from afar, the first thing you see is St. Joe's double spires. They look just a little sinister. Many Western Pennsylvania towns have a redbrick Catholic church presiding over them from the upper reaches of some hillside. They're called "Mother Hens." New Bethlehem--where my other grandparents lived--had St. Charles presiding with only one tower, but in the same redbrick German style.
Of course, the majority of the population in these old industrial towns was always Catholic--mostly Italian, Polish, Irish, and South-German. Immigrants from southern and eastern Europe were enticed to this area and fed like so much fodder to its factories and the industrial plants. St. Joseph's Church was the original Catholic parish in Oil City, and it's located on the more working class North Side of town--which is where I'm from.
Back in the 1970s, The Rolling Stone reported on 3 suicides in Oil City--all were young men who belonged to St. Joseph's Church, and all died within a month of each other. They all three were seeing the same therapist, too. (This is an odd detail in the story because mental health therapy was not yet normalized in these industrial towns in the 70s--especially not for men.) I'd hate to be the priest who had to do all three of those funerals. But back in those days, St. Joe's still had a convent attached to the church and probably had three or four priests...
And this? This was St. Stephen's Catholic Church, on the wealthier Southside. It got closed down in 2020, and all of its members were sent to St. Joe's. Neither church has any parking at all, and St. Joe's is set back in a rundown residential neighborhood. Sucks to be a Catholic in Oil City--or anyone living on one of the steep, narrow streets where all those Catholics park on Sundays. 25 years ago, a man in a long brown hooded robe, with a staff, asked me how to get to St. Stephen's. He was making a pilgrimage to this now-abandoned church. Why?
The Episcopalians have a tidy little Anglophilic church on the more-fashionable Southside, of course. Their only weekly service is at 9:30 on Sundays, which makes me wonder if they're reduced to sharing a clergyperson with another parish... I've never been inside this building, but I think it would be worth a visit. I like Episcopalianism--with its glorious Book of Common Prayer--but they will try to make you think that they're the only alternative for progressive Christians.
This is 2nd Presbyterian Church, also on the Southside. It was always a church for the wealthy, when I was young. I know their current pastor and like him pretty well. I mean, we're all inveterate dorks, you know that, right?
Prominent men in the history of the town and region--including the Seneca Chief Cornplanter.
Oil City's central post office is a pathetic little garage-like structure. The old post office is now the Venango County Museum, pictured here. It's got its own understated grandeur... I've never been inside!
And this? This is the public library. I went inside today to get a library card. I had not been inside this building since I was about 15, when I decided that I wanted to remain a Christian but did not want to be an evangelical anymore. I borrowed three books: one about Episcopalianism, one about Lutheranism, and one about Presbyterianism.





















