Premiered at the Fr. Samuel Mazzuchelli Day in Benton on November 3, 2024, this film was produced by Different Heart Productions and features Bishop Hying, Fr. Samuel Hakeem, OP, several Sinsinawa Dominican Sisters, and young people who attended a past Mazzuchelli Pilgrimage, all reflecting on the heroic witness to missionary discipleship that
Fr. Mazzuchelli has entrusted to us in the Diocese of Madison.
Start a discussion at your parish or enter into deeper personal reflection on the life and example of Fr. Mazzuchelli with the attached discussion and reflection questions!
Ideal for small groups or for those who are looking to deepen their commitment to missionary discipleship following the example of
Venerable Fr. Samuel Mazzuchelli
Carlo Gaetano Samuele Mazzuchelli was born November 4, 1806 in Milan, Italy, the 16th of 17 children, though only a handful of his siblings survived past childhood. He was educated at a boarding school in Switzerland, and at age 17, he decided to join the Dominican friars, at a time when the order was suffering from the effects of the French Revolution. During his studies, he heard the pleas of Bishop Edward Fenwick of Cincinnati, himself a Dominican, who begged for priests to serve in the remote stretches of his diocese where Catholics did not have a priest to minister to them. Brother Samuel requested to be assigned to this mission territory, and in 1828, he set sail for America. He completed his studies for the priesthood and was ordained in Cincinnati in 1830 at the age of 23. His first assignment was in Mackinac Island, Michigan and Green Bay, Wisconsin. He made several trips between these settlements in order to instruct both the white settlers and the Native Americans in the Catholic faith, and he built what would become the first Catholic church in the state of Wisconsin: St. John the Evangelist in Green Bay.
After 5 years in Mackinac and Green Bay, Fr. Mazzuchelli moved westward to the Mississippi River area of Wisconsin, Illinois, and Iowa. He ministered primarily to the Irish Catholics, who quickly adopted him as one of their own by calling him "Father Matthew Kelly."Lord Jesus, You called your servant Samuel, even in early youth, to leave home and all for a Dominican life of charity in preaching Your Holy Gospel. You gave him abundant graces of Eucharistic love, devotion to Your Holy Mother of Sorrows, and a consuming zeal for souls. Grant, we beseech You, that his fervent love and labors for You may become more widely known, to a fruitful increase of Your Mystical Body, to his exaltation, and to our own constant growth in devoted love of You, Who with the Father and the Holy Spirit live and reign, One God, world without end. Amen.
Those who receive favors through the intercession of Fr. Mazzuchelli are asked to communicate with:
MAZZUCHELLI GUILD
585 County Road Z
Sinsinawa, WI 53824-9701
The following churches were built by Fr. Mazzuchelli in Wisconsin and are still in existence today.
St. Augustine in New Diggings is no longer a functioning parish and is on the National Register of Historic Places. It is the only church built by Fr. Mazzuchelli that has not been altered or expanded in any way; it is a true Fr. Mazzuchelli original, and the Knights of Columbus have been maintaining and restoring it so that it looks exactly as the pioneer priest built it in the 1840s. It is open for tours on Sunday afternoons from the last weekend of May to the first weekend of October.
St. Patrick in Benton and St. Gabriel in Prairie du Chien are generally open during daylight hours for private prayer and exploration.
Shullsburg, WI 53586
Benton, WI 53803
Prairie du Chien, WI 53821
Benton, Wisconsin is where Fr. Mazzuchelli lived for the last 15 years of his life, in a small rectory that he built himself, and it is where he is buried. Fr. Mazzuchelli's rectory can be toured by request in the warmer months and is sometimes open for special events.
His grave can be visited at any time.
While these parishes in Wisconsin no longer retain Fr. Mazzuchelli's original church buildings, they all trace their foundations back to him and are still active parish communities today.
St. Michael, Galena, IL (second version of the church, built by Fr. Mazzuchelli after the first burned down)
St. Anthony, Davenport, IA (second-oldest Catholic church in Iowa and the oldest still in existence)
St. Mathias, Muscatine, IA (no longer a functioning parish; part of St. Mary and Mathias Parish in Muscatine)
St. Raphael Cathedral, Dubuque, IA: Fr. Mazzuchelli founded the parish and built its first church, which quickly became too small as its congregation grew. Shortly after its foundation, Rome created the Diocese of Dubuque, appointing Fr. Mathias Loras as its bishop and naming St. Raphael as its cathedral. The current cathedral was dedicated in 1861, and Fr. Mazzuchelli was present at its dedication.
Jo Daviess County Courthouse, Galena, IL: Fr. Mazzuchelli served as the contractor for the original building, which was completed in 1844.
Shullsburg, WI: In addition to building the original St. Matthew Church in Shullsburg, Fr. Mazzuchelli helped to plan the section of town surrounding the church, naming streets after Christian virtues such as Charity, Justice, and Truth.
The Sinsinawa Dominican Sisters began in 1847 when Fr. Samuel Mazzuchelli founded the congregation with two women, Sr. Seraphina and Sr. Ermeline. The Sisters and Fr. Mazzuchelli founded the St. Clara Academy for young women in Benton, which would become the forerunner of Rosary College (now Dominican University in Illinois) and Edgewood College in Madison, Wisconsin.
More women quickly joined the community, and its membership grew to 23 by Fr. Mazzuchelli's death in 1864. By the
mid-1870s, there were more than 100 sisters serving schools in five dioceses. Since its founding, nearly 3,400 women have taken vows as Sinsinawa Dominican Sisters, inspired by Fr. Mazzuchelli's legacy of preaching, teaching, and spreading the Gospel.
For the last few years the Vocations Office of the Diocese of Madison has offered a walking pilgrimage in the footsteps of
Fr. Mazzuchelli. The first pilgrimage route lasted for three days and started at St. Raphael Cathedral in Dubuque, Iowa and ended at St. Patrick Parish in Benton, Wisconsin. After a few years, a one-day route was added.
Venerable Fr. Samuel Mazzuchelli