- Source: St. Charles Borromeo Church (New York City)
- Basilika Santo Petrus
- Daftar katedral Katolik di Amerika Serikat
- Daftar katedral di Amerika Serikat
- Basilika Santa Maria Maggiore
- Junípero Serra
- Daftar kardinal kerabat
- St. Charles Borromeo Church (New York City)
- Charles Borromeo
- Charles Borromeo Church
- St Charles Borromeo, Hull
- Karlskirche
- St. Charles Borromeo's Church (Dover Plains, New York)
- St. Charles's Church (Staten Island)
- Scalabrinians
- Mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo
- St. Stanislaus' Church (Pleasant Valley, New York)
The Church of St. Charles Borromeo is a parish in the Archdiocese of New York, located at 211 West 141st Street in Manhattan, New York City. It was part of the Harlem Vicariate. The parish was established in 1888.
On May 8, 2015, the parish was merged with that of All Saints Church.
Buildings
In 1892, the address listed for the church was at 2660 8th Ave.
The church was built to the designs of George H. Streeton Pastor C. J. Drew had a four-story parish school at 216-228 West 142nd Street built in 1961 to designs by the architectural firm of Greenberg & Ames of 303 Park Avenue.
History
Eddie Bonnemère performed his "Missa Hodierna" at the church in 1966, the first ever Jazz Mass in a US Catholic church.
Emerson J. Moore succeeded Father Edward Dugan as pastor in 1975, becoming its first African-American pastor. Moore became the first Black monsignor in the United States in 1978. In 1982, Pope John Paul II appointed Moore a bishop and vicar of the Black community, after visiting the parish personally three years earlier.