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St Johns Historic Commission CBAC Comment April 1, 2021 Aelan Tierney, Chair Northampton Central Business Architecture Committee On behalf of the Northampton Historical Commission, I am writing to underline the historical significance of the St. John’s Cantius Polish Catholic Church, which the Commission understands may be demolished at part of an effort to redevelop the Hawley Street area. This letter reflects a discussion of the commission at its March 29, 2021 meeting, at which several Northampton residents expressed concern about the building’s fate. The commission understands that the Central Business Architecture Committee (CBAC) applies a specific set of guidelines that do not necessarily take historic values into account when evaluating applications within the district for projects that propose building demolition. However, as stewards of the city’s historic resources and overseers of community-wide preservation, the commission has a responsibility to inform the CBAC and the developer of a property’s historical significance. This property is both an architectural landmark and century-old social gathering spot for Northampton’s Polish immigrant community. As part of the Pomeroy Terrace National Register District, the church is associated with the broad architectural, cultural, and social history of Northampton, and represents the impact of changes in immigration on its neighborhood and on the city as a whole. Towards the end of the 19th century, the Polish immigrant population in the Ward 3 neighborhood increased, and by 1904 had reached a level that warranted a separate Catholic parish. The construction of the St. John Cantius Polish Catholic Church followed in 1912. Designed by John Donohue, a Massachusetts architect who acted as the Catholic diocese’s in-house architect, the brick church with limestone trim is in the form of a late-medieval Italian basilica with a campanile, or bell-tower, at its southwest corner. It is not only significant to Northampton’s architectural history, but also has served as a symbol of the City’s ethnic heritage. The commission urges the CBAC to consider this architectural and historical significance in ongoing review of proposed development plans. Sincerely, Martha H. Lyon Chair, Northampton Historical Commission