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Wednesday, January 24, 2007 11:57 PM CST
Beginning of the end for Holy Family School
Demolition work continues on the former Holy Family Catholic School (Globe Gazette photo by Jeff Heinz)
MASON CITY — The Holy Family Catholic School gym, echoing with children’s voices only weeks ago, now is gone.

McKiness Excavating Inc. started demolition Jan. 12, said Neal Bohnert, Holy Family business manager. Its contract gives the firm 45 days for the project.

How long the project takes will depend at least partly on weather, said Bryan Lunning, working at the site on Wednesday.

Asbestos removal was completed in December, Bohnert said. Cost of demolition and asbestos work is estimated at $120,000.

Several workers from  McKiness finished cutting away the 1924 cornerstone at noon Wednesday. Decorative block bearing the school’s name also will be saved, Lunning said.

The cross from the top of the school, a set of limestone steps, pilasters from the front of the school and a Bible also were saved, Bohnert said.

A number of stone and brick components from the former St. Joseph Catholic School also were preserved,  including the doorway arch and stones bearing the school’s name.

Architectural stone and brick elements from the two former schools are expected to be incorporated into a sculpture on the Newman school campus, said Ed Wineinger, architect, who has been involved with the concept along with artist David Rottinghaus of Nora Springs.

On the northeast side of Holy Family School, two yellow backhoes with long extensions began biting away at the building’s fourth floor.

“I knew they were going to tear it down when they had our reunion,” said Janice Open of Mason City. Members of her Holy Family class of 1956 celebrated their 50th anniversary and toured the lower floors of the school last summer. Upper floors were off limits due to safety concerns.

“It’s too bad, but it’s in bad shape,” she said. “It was kind of interesting to go back and see what it was like.”

Holy Family Catholic School initially provided a Catholic education to northside Mason City students from kindergarten through 12th grade. When the two Catholic schools combined as Central Catholic in 1973-74, the building was home to  sixth through eighth grades, said Jodee Bryant, administrative assistant at Newman Elementary. It became Central Catholic Childcare/Newman Daycare in 1986, according to Globe Gazette archives.

The daycare center moved to a new addition to the elementary school on the Newman Catholic campus in late November.

Holy Family Catholic Church plans to create a parking lot for 116 cars on the school site “so that we can have off-street parking,” Bohnert said.

To view video of the demolition project, click here.

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Showing The Last 3 comment(s) Comments On This Story

Nicole wrote on Jan 25, 2007 5:03 PM:

" Lots of memories there. I haven't been back to visit Iowa in 10 years but had hoped to see this before it was bulldozed. I was also sad to see St. Joseph's school taken down. I guess that is what change and progress are all about, though. "

Pam Boster wrote on Jan 25, 2007 2:54 PM:

" I too remember the elementary school. When I was in the first grade I somehow got locked in the classroom and had to try to yell through the grate at the top of the door until an older student went and found a key to let me out. Oh the memories! "

Michael M. Kelly Sr. wrote on Jan 25, 2007 10:28 AM:

" So very sad. It brought tears to my eyes as I remembered the years that I spent there and all the people that walked it's halls and classrooms. "

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