About Our Lady Star of the Sea

History of Our Lady Star of the Sea Parish

Our Lady Star of the Sea Parish was established on August 21, 1964 by Bishop Walter W.
Curtis, the 2nd Bishop of the Diocese of Bridgeport. Its territory, bounded on three sides by
the waters of Long Island Sound, encompasses Shippan Avenue and its side streets, beginning
at Cummings Park and extending south to the tip of the Shippan peninsula. The parish property
comprised five acres, with beach front (now West Beach) as its eastern boundary. The first
parish Mass was celebrated by the newly appointed pastor, Father Edmund Hussey, on Sunday
August 28, 1964 in the auditorium of Roosevelt School, a private school located on Shippan
Avenue.


A month later, on September 28, 1964, Sunday Masses were transferred to the Naval Training
Station on Magee Avenue. In that same month, a house at 1189 Shippan Avenue directly across
the street from the parish property was purchased for $27,500, where weekday Mass was held in
a tiny chapel located in the walk out basement. By October of 1965 Mass was being celebrated
in a combination chapel/auditorium within a newly constructed parish school dedicated by
Bishop Curtis on January 30th 1966. For the next 23 years Mass was celebrated in this
facility, requiring portable pews and kneelers to be set up and taken down each weekend.
Finally, in 1989 on January 15, a newly constructed church building was blessed and dedicated
by the recently installed 3rd Bishop of Bridgeport, Most Reverend Edward M. Egan, future
Cardinal Archbishop of New York.


In 1977, 13 years after the founding of the parish, the first pastor, Father Hussey, took a
new assignment. He was succeeded by Father Edward Horan (1977-78) who died within a year. A
temporary Administrator was appointed for a few months, Father William Scheyd, who oversaw
the completion of a convent for the Ursuline Sisters who served the school and parish from
1965 until 2003. The next pastor, Father Roger Watts, served six years (1978-1984) until his
appointment as pastor of St.Cecilia parish in Stamford. In June of 1984 Father Edward Surwilo
was installed as the 4th pastor. In his time a new church (1988), rectory (1990), parish
office (2003), school classroom wing (2004), architecturally stunning enhanced brick
entrance, covered walk and courtyard (2004), and glass enclosed lobby (2006) came into being
along with numerous other interior and exterior upgrades of the parish facilities and
property. The parish continues to thrive thanks to the generous participation, commitment and
support of many dedicated, energetic and talented parishioners


Features of Our Lady Star of the Sea Church


As you enter the church proper, take note of the construction material ambience; the
salmon-pink Verona marble sanctuary floor and altar, oak pews, arching floor to ceiling
driftwood-grey beams and ceiling, antique white walls, sand-gray carpet and sand-pink ceramic
flooring, suggesting stone, soil, shells, driftwood and ships of the sea.

The brick rear wall, with original custom-designed mosaics of Saints Angela, Anthony,
Patrick, Francis of Assisi, and Mary Magdalene present us with a parade of saints. Looking
down to the end of the center aisle we see a raised marble sanctuary floor supporting a
substantial yet simple altar of pearl-like Verona marble. On the recessed wall directly
behind, hangs a large wood-carved crucifix suspended between a striking circular stained
glass window above and a silver cedar-lined Tabernacle below, flanked by an originally
designed hanging Tabernacle Oil Lamp.

Centered in the north alcove to the right is a hammered-silver Baptismal Font set
beneath a carved woodenstatue of Jesus and Children. Directly opposite on the south alcove
wall, hangs an imposing life size 19th century oil reproduction of Murillo's Assumption of
Mary. Recessed along the walls of both side aisles are fourteen small wood-carved Stations
of the Cross from the original chapel.Looking up towards the ceiling, you will count eight
triangular stained-glass windows that bring sea and sky, sails and gulls to our view in a
vivid spectrum of color. In addition we see three large circular windows.


The center window above the altar frames a salvaged 19th century European stained-glass
treasure depicting Mary and her Child. A red rose, the Pro-life symbol depicted in the south
circular window, represents Mary the Mother and Mary under her title of "Mystical Rose". The
lilies in the north circular window are a traditional symbol of purity and of St. Joseph,
patron and model of chastity. On the rear upper wall to the east are four stained-glass
windows from the original chapel, depicting a star and a lil, representing Mary Star of the
Sea and Joseph Most Chaste Spouse, respectively. Bringing the whole message together above
the Sanctuary is the eye-catching circular stained-glass image of the Mother and Child, with
its backdrop of sky, sea and STAR - of the Sea.


Constructed July 1987 through November 1988

 

Click on the above image to view a YouTube video of our church building under construction.

Parish Advisory Council

Our Lady Star of the Sea Parish Advisory Council (PAC), an active and deeply involved parish resource for over forty years, is an advisory body committed to assisting the Pastor in whatever way possible to fulfill his canonically mandated teaching, sanctifying and administrative responsibilities. The PAC also often serves as a sounding board and channel of information and dialogue between the clergy leadership and the congregation. The status of every aspect of parish life and operation is of interest to the PAC. Faith formation and practice, membership, finances, buildings and grounds, youth, social events and social outreach, family life, vocations, Liturgy, spiritual growth and more are objects of focus and concern. Many successful parish initiatives have emerged and continue to emerge from PAC meetings and their follow-up implementation. The membership itself is made up of 9 elected parishioners at large, the two lay members of the church corporation (trustees), the parish clergy, and a number of ex officio nonvoting members including the school principal, the finance committee chairman and heads of various ongoing parish ministries. Three new members from the parish at large are elected annually to serve a three year term, replacing the three outgoing members who have completed their term. Meetings are held on the first Monday of each month from September to June. All registered parishioners are welcome to attend.