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Rev.
Demetrius Augustine Gallitzin
(1770-1840)
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Prince
Gallitzins early home site and
chapel in Loretto, Pa.
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An
historic marker in Loretto
pays tribute to Prince Gallitzin.
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The
story of Mount Gallitzin Academy dates back more than
300 years to the birth of a Russian Prince in 1770.
Called
to a life of service, Prince Demetrius Augustine Gallitzin
gave up all of his riches and journeyed to America to
study religion under Bishop John Carroll of Baltimore.
Prince Gallitzin became one of the first priests ordained
in America in 1795. About a year later, he was called
to minister in a frontier settlement near Ebensburg,
Pennsylvania, which he named Loretto.
Mother
Austin Keane, who became one of the founding Sisters
of St. Joseph in western Pennsylvania, was born in Loretto
in 1824. She was baptized by Father Gallitzin and received
First Communion from him.
In
1869, Mother Austin Keane and fellow Sisters Xavier
Phelan and Hortense Tello (for whom the school auditorium
is named), came to Ebensburg from Flushing, NY, to establish
a boarding school for boys. Mount Gallitzin Seminary
opened on Sept. 16 on Horner Street, and was named in
honor of Prince Gallitzin, the pioneering priest of
the Alleghenies.
In
1898, the Sisters of St. Joseph in Ebensburg were called
to educate children in the rapidly expanding Pittsburgh
area. Arrangements were made to purchase 86 acres near
the town of Baden in Beaver County. On Dec. 26, 1901,
the Sisters traveled to Baden to establish a school,
their Novitiate and Motherhouse at the present location
just off Route 65. Mount Gallitzin Academy officially
opened on Jan. 13, 1902, as a boarding school for boys.
Since
its founding, Mount Gallitzin Academy has served more
than 20,000 children of all ages and academic levels.
First it was a boarding school for boys, then a high
school for girls from 1934 to 1967. The school is currently
a co-educational facility for students in preschool
through eighth grade.
Because
of his faithful service and ministry, Rev. Gallitzin
is currently being considered for sainthood. Bishop
Joseph V. Adamec of the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese recently
announced that Prince Gallitzin, known as the "Apostle
of the Alleghenies," has attained "Servant
of God" status, the first of several steps in the
process.
Members
of theological and historical committees in and around
Loretto, appointed by Bishop Adamec, are continuing
to advance Rev. Gallitzin as a candidate for beatification
and canonization.

Mount
Gallitzin Academy in Baden, Pa.
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