Good Shepherd, Pendleton NY
1859 The Good Shepherd Parish
A year after the Church on the Canal was finished Fr. Uhrich was transferred to Sacred Heart Church
in Tonawanda. He was replaced at Pendleton by Fr. Zachary Heimbucher, who stayed for only a short
period. Then Fr. Zachary Kunze replaced him, remaining for only six months. Then Fr. Heimbucher
returned again in November 1858 and remained until 18 March 1860. The church family was dedicated by
Bishop Timon on August 28, 1859. On that day the church was given its
name, The Good Shepherd.
Civil War Impact on Parish Communities
The U.S. Civil War (1861-1865) brought economic and social
hardship to local communities throughout the nation. Conscription laws
impacted local parishes as men were called away into military service.
Bishop Highes called upon priests to serve as chaplains and nuns to
serrve in nursing. These sudden changes demanded large scale
adjustsments within the diocese of Buffalo. As a result, the assignment
of priests to various parishes rapidly fluctuated. During the Civil War
years more than 7 parish priests were consecutively assigned to administer
at the
Good Shepherd parish. Some were assigned for only a few months, while
serving at other parishes. Fr. Uhrich left Good Shepherd church in 1861
and did not return until 1880. During that 19 year period 12 different
priests had administered to Good Shepherd parish.
Bishop John Hughes of New York called on Catholics as
a moral issue to support the Union effort to save the nation