top of page

The Full Story

Our Lady of Pompei was founded as a parish in 1923 in order to serve the Italian immigrant community in Baltimore. Construction of the church began on January 16, 1923 and was completed the next year; the first mass was held on June 1, 1924. The church was founded by the Vincentian Fathers. The first pastor and founder was Fr. Luigi Scialdone, C.M. (Congregation of the Mission).


After spending 17 years of missionary work in the land of China, Fr. Luigi Scialdone, C.M. came to Highlandtown. The archbishop at the time, Michael J. Curley, appointed Fr. Scialdone pastor of the scattered Italian flock. Archbishop Curley reflects on Fr. Scialdone’s work in his letter of April 7, 1934: "He began his work under the most difficult circumstances.  The Italian flock was scattered. Very little attention had been paid to them."

Our Lady of Pompei quickly became an anchor for the Highlandtown community, and over the next 50 years, Our Lady of Pompei continued to be an anchor. The parish school offered K-12 education and Sunday School. Parishioners enjoyed the feast day celebration and procession, the annual bull roast, and the summer street carnivals, where the best fried dough in town was served!

In the early 1990s, both the parish and the neighborhood were currently experiencing very difficult times. Enrollment in the parish school was declining and families were leaving the city. New realities were setting in - the polarization of the population which consisted of two groups, the very young and the very old, the increased presence of transients, and growing financial difficulties for the parish and the people.


In 1991, the Vincentian Fathers made the decision to no longer administer Our Lady of Pompei.  Fr. Lou Esposito, pastor at the time, petitioned Archbishop Keeler to take charge of Our Lady of Pompei.  Fr. Esposito had been part of Our Lady of Pompei for 27 years since first being assigned to the parish.  He made the difficult decision to request a dispensation from his religious vows with the Vincentian Fathers in order to be incarnated into the Archdiocese of Baltimore.  Fr. Lou led the parish in a time of rebuilding.

In 2008, in response to the growing Hispanic community, Our Lady of Pompei began its Spanish ministry, offering mass in Spanish. Fr. Luis Cremis joined the parish, from our sister mission, in Peru, operated by Operazione Mato Grosso.  Fr. Cremis assisted with the expanded ministry.  Parish life was reinvigorated!  The parish school combined with the parish school of St. Elizabeth's of Hungary to form Archbishop Borders School. This was a K-8 school administered by the Archdiocese of Baltimore operated in the Our Lady of Pompei school building. 

 

A few years later, the Archbishop Borders School was moved to the recently renovated school building of Sacred Heat of Jesus just up the block.   The sale of the school building was finalized in August 2014.  With the absence of the school hall, he Parish Council started to have discussion of how to best utilize the gymnasium building to its full potential to be the center of church activities.

 

Our sister mission group, Operation Mato Grosso, sent Fr. Giuliano to Our Lady of Pompei in 2016.  His arrival was in the nick of time, because Fr. Lou entered the hospital for a hip replacement.  Fr. Giuliano is an Italian priest who speaks Spanish (and Italian), and was learning English at the time.  A life-long parishioner commented during the Easter Vigil Mass in 2016, saying, "I am listening to an Italian priest, speaking broken English on the altar.  The church has really come full circle." 

 

During the summer of 2018, the church began a rebuilding campaign discussed and planed for the past few years by the Parish Council.  The campaign was entitled Rebuilding Pompei.  The primary goal is to renovate the aging infrastructure and transform unused church property for parishioners use and for the ongoing mission.  Secondary, we are rebuilding the faith community to be a strong presence in the Highlandtown community for future generations.  In the autumn of 2018, twenty volunteers from Italy, who are part of the Operation Mato Grosso group, arrived at Our Lady of Pompei for three months.  They came to provide renovation assistance as part of the rebuilding campaign.  A group of parishioners invited the volunteers for Thanksgiving dinner so that they could experience an American tradition during their visit.  A new group of volunteers arrived in January 2019, for three months, to continue their service with the church's renovations. 

​

In June 2022, Fr. Claudio who joined the parish in 2018 with the Italian volunteers, was appointed pastor of Our Lady of Pompei.  Fr. Giuliano was assigned to Our Lady of Fatima as that church did not have a priest.  In the summer of 2022, then Deacon Matteo, who had visited Pompei a few times, was ordained.  He returned to Pompei in the autumn of 2022 and was appointed associate pastor.  in On October 8, 2022, he celebrated his first Mass at Our Lady of Pompei. 

​

In 2023, Our Lady of Pompei started to celebrate it's 100th anniversary of ministry in Highlandtown!  We kicked things off with a 100th anniversary bull and shrimp feast.   We wrapped things up celebrating an anniversary Mass, with Archbishop Lori, on June 2, 2024 to commemorate the first Mass inside the church building.  The first Mass was celebrated on June 1, 1924.  Our celebration was 100 years + 1 day after the very first Mass.  The Mass was a joyous celebration with good food and music and fellowship following the Mass.

​

The joy and happiness of our 100th anniversary Mass was overshadowed by the sadness of the decision to close the church in the same month that we wrapped up our 100th year celebrations.  In 2022, the Archdiocese of Baltimore began their Seek the City to Come initiative.  It was a program to review churches in Baltimore and re-imagine how ministry looked in Baltimore City.  The final outcome sought to close approximately 40 of the 61 parishes in Baltimore City and bordering Baltimore County.   This was a two year program where the Archdiocese met with pastor and church leaders at various sessions to discuss the next steps.  The recommendations were released in May 2024 and the final decision was confirmed in June 2024.  Of the 61 parishes in Baltimore City and bordering Baltimore County (Dundalk, Essex, Northpoint). 38 churches were closed.   Each of the churches would close on a different schedule.  At the very latest, churches could be open until June 2025.  On July 1, 2025, only 23 parishes will remain in Baltimore City and bordering Baltimore County.

​

Our Lady of Pompei was one of these churches.  Originally the plan was to merge Pompei with Sacred Heart of Jesus.  But after review and feedback from parishioners, a change was made to merge Pompei with Our Lady of Fatima.  Effective July 1, 2024, Mass schedules were reduced at Pompei to 2 Masses a weekend, one in English and one in Spanish, and just one weekday Mass in English.  The church was still open for sacraments, weddings, and funerals. 

​

Tentatively, the final Masses will be celebrated on Saturday, November 23 and Sunday, November 24.  The church was still available for sacraments, weddings, and funerals for a period of time.  The pastor, Fr. Claudio, desired to keep Our Lady of Pompei open as a worship site.  This means the parish would still be merged under Our Lady of Fatima, but Mass would continue to be celebrated at Our Lady of Pompei.  This is a work in progress.

​

Our Lady of Pompei is grateful for the 101 years of ministry in Highlandtown and is happy for the faith formation, friendships, and memories made at the parish.

​

The pastors of the parish since 1923 have been:

Rev. Luigi Scialdone, C.M. (founding pastor)

Rev. Giuseppe Tomaselli, C.M.

Rev. Roberto Petti, C.M.

Rev. Luigi Esposito, C.M. (1984-2018)

Rev. Giuliano Gargiulo, O.M.G (Administrator, 2018-2022)

Rev. Claudio Piccolongo, O.M.G (2022 - 2024)

 

bottom of page