St. Augustine’s
was not the first parish to be founded in
the district, still designated by the local
civil authority as Monklands, a name that
reminds us that all this district belonged
to Newbattle Abbey in the Middle Ages. St.
Margaret’s in Airdrie had already
been in existence since 1839, to be followed
in quick succession by St. Patrick’s
Coatbridge (1845), St. Mary’s Whifflet
(1874), St. Joseph’s Stepps (1875),
Our Lady and St. Joseph’s Glenboig
(1880), St. Augustine’s Langloan (1892),
All Saints Coatdyke (1902).
After that things settled
for a few decades to be followed, under
the impetus of the foundation of the new
diocese of Motherwell (1947) and of the
Holy Year of 1950, by further energetic
development in the second half of the twentieth
century, with the establishment in the same
area of Lanarkshire of a further five parishes:
St Monica’s Old Monkland (1950), St.
Bartholomew’s Townhead (1950), St.
James the Greater Kirkshaws (1956), the
Xaverian Missionary Community (1958). St.
Stephen’s Sikeside (1973), St. Bernard’s
Shawhead (1973). An important part of that
development was the arrival of the De La
Salle brothers to take up residence within
the community of St. Augustine’s in
1974.
The church census for the
year 2006 shows the present Coatbridge Deanery
to be composed of 9 parishes with an estimated
Catholic population to be 25,600 in the
pastoral care of 11 Priests, 2 Deacons and
3 Religious Sisters.
The Irish Priest who founded
St. Augustine’s was followed by a
German, Peter Muller, remembered as a gifted
musician from Luibsdorf Koblenz, Germany,
who installed the fine organ and founded
a musical tradition that is still valued
in the community. His arrival is explained
less by the number of German émigrés
in the district than by the fact that the
German Catholic Church had fallen victim
to a bitter conflict between church and
state which led to the exile of innumerable
German priests. This, combined with the
appeal of Charles Eyre, archbishop of Glasgow,
to the bishops of the Netherlands and Belgium
to release priests with a command of English
to serve the increasing demands of the Scottish
Mission, appears to explain the presence
in the West of Scotland of a number of priests
from the continent of Europe.
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