Arson fire destroys St. Anne Church in New Castle 
			
			St. Anne Church after a devastating fire (Photo by Eric Atkins)
			By  Mary Ann Wyand
			(Listen to the author read this story)
			
NEW CASTLE—Fire destroyed historic St. Anne Church during the early  morning hours on Holy Saturday, April 7.
		    
			  Firefighters battled the blaze for five hours on Saturday morning and  afternoon in windy and unseasonably cold weather. (See also: More Reaction | Photo Gallery | Make a donation to support the parish)
		    
			  State Fire Marshal Roger Johnson and federal Bureau of Alcohol,  Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives officials are investigating the fire, which  gutted the interior of the 83-year-old brick church, burned through the roof  and melted stained-glass windows.
		    
			  Authorities told archdiocesan officials that they are conducting a  criminal investigation due to the suspicious origin of the fire. They restricted  access to the parish property, which was cordoned off with yellow crime scene  tape.
			  On April 11, investigators reported that the fire was arson, though they did not release any further details.
		    
			  Msgr. Joseph F. Schaedel, vicar general, said that he and Archbishop  Daniel M. Buechlein are “very upset, very distraught, over the loss of St. Anne  Church on Holy Saturday morning … but we’re thankful that nobody was injured in  the fire. … Our prayers are with the people of St. Anne Parish and [Franciscan]  Sister Shirley Gerth, the parish life coordinator.”
		    
Archbishop Buechlein visited the site on Tuesday to see the damage  firsthand.
		    
			  Although most of the church roof was gone, a cross mounted above the  front entrance of the church was not damaged. 
			  No estimate of damages was immediately available.              
		    
 Eric Atkins, archdiocesan  director of management services, said the archdiocese has insurance to cover  the loss.              
		    
 “We still need to do a thorough assessment  of the church building to determine what’s structurally sound and what if  anything can be salvaged,” Atkins said. “Because this is a crime scene, we have  not been able to do that yet.”              
		    
 Atkins said the sanctuary of the church was  poured concrete, but the main floor of the church was wood. The main floor was  destroyed in the fire and the pews are now in a heap of burned rubble in the  basement of the church.
            
			  Located at 102 N. 19th    St., St. Anne Church was a landmark in Henry County.  The parish has about 300 households and 700 members.
			  Throughout the day, parishioners came to the Parish Life   Center to mourn the loss  of their church, comfort Sister Shirley and support each other on the eve of the  Mass of the Resurrection of the Lord.
			  Visibly shaken, Sister Shirley said the first Mass was celebrated in  the church on Easter Sunday in 1924. St. Anne  Parish was established in 1873 and the first church was built a few blocks from  the present site.
			  
			  Sister Shirley discovered the fire at 7:40 a.m. when she went to the church to turn up the heat  [on] Saturday morning. Thick smoke billowed out when she opened the  back door of the church.
			  
  “As I opened the door, the smoke just engulfed me,” she said. “My eyes  smarted and I knew it was bad. So I ran over to the house and called 911, and  they told me someone had already called them. I think somebody went by and saw  the smoke. I didn’t see the flames yet, just all the smoke. But I’m sure it  started hours before that. Then things really happened fast. I’m very happy  that none of the police officers and firemen were [seriously] hurt.”
			  Sister Shirley has served as parish life coordinator of St. Anne  Parish and St. Rose Parish in Knightstown since 1995.
			  
			  
			St. Anne Church as it looked at a parish Mass in 2005 (Submitted photo)
			  After the Good Friday service at St. Anne Church on April 6, she  helped parishioners decorate the church for the Easter Vigil and Easter Sunday  Masses.
  “We decorated until 8:30   p.m. last night,” she said, “and everything was fine when I locked  the church.”
			  She lives at the former rectory next to the church, and didn’t hear  any unusual noises during the night.
  
			  While waiting for officials to take her inside the burned church so  she could remove the Eucharist from the tabernacle, Sister Shirley talked about  the sacrifices of the people who worked hard to build the second St. Anne Church  after the difficult years of  World War I.
  
  “I can’t imagine the sacrifices of the early parishioners,” she said.  “I guess that’s a consolation—our belief in the communion of saints and that  all those people that ever walked in those doors and that are now in heaven are  looking down upon us and praying for us.”
			  She also recalled countless memories of several generations of  baptisms, first Communions, weddings and funeral Masses celebrated there.
			  Sister Shirley said five adults and one child were scheduled to be  baptized during the Easter Vigil Mass at 8   p.m. at the church.
			  Instead, Father Joseph Rautenberg celebrated a shorter Vigil Mass at  St. Elizabeth of Hungary Church in nearby Cambridge City.  The church was filled to capacity with members of St. Anne, St. Rose and St.  Elizabeth parishes seated in the pews or on folding chairs while others stood  along the outside aisles.
			  
			  Father Joseph Rautenberg, pastor of St. Elizabeth Parish and sacramental  minister of St. Anne and St. Rose parishes, said it was “a real shock” to see  the fire-ravaged church on Saturday morning and hours later he was still  feeling “kind of numb.”
			  
			  But even in the midst of the smoke and ashes from the still smoldering  church, Sister Shirley talked about hastily made plans to celebrate an 8 a.m.  Mass on Easter Sunday at Bundy Auditorium adjacent to New Castle Chrysler High School.
			  
  “Parishioners have come all day to see the church,” she said. “All  this morning, they were just lined up here. They continued to come all day, and  that was certainly a source of comfort for everyone, a source of support. Their  faith is strong.
  “We’re going to celebrate new life tomorrow,” Sister Shirley said. “We’re  going to sing our Alleluias tomorrow. It’s Easter Sunday. It’s the feast of the  Lord’s resurrection. It’s new life, and I think out of those ashes new life  will come. We’re the people of God and our faith is strong. We are the Church  and—as important as that building is—when we leave those doors we become Christ  to others. Our faith will deepen. Surely we’ll grieve, but at the end of grief  comes new life.”
			  She said New Castle Mayor Tom Nipp was on the scene for several hours  as firefighters worked to extinguish the blaze. Pastors of several area  churches offered their facilities.
  “The community is reaching out to help us,” Sister Shirley said.  “Their support has been wonderful.”
			  Father Rautenberg said Masses will probably be celebrated in the cafeteria  of the former St. Anne  School, now the Parish Life   Center.
  “Sister Shirley has certainly shown great faith,” he said. “This time  of the year we celebrate new life out of dying. I think that’s our hope and our  confidence for St. Anne’s—that new life will come out of this dying.”
			  A St. Anne parishioner lamented  that “a lot of history is gone,” he said, “but I think the history is still  there. This is a part of that history and the parish continues ... the faith  goes on. But if I feel like a little bit of home was lost, I can imagine people  who were there all their life feeling that way. There was certainly sadness.  There was grief.
  “It is a tragedy, but it has triggered a great outpouring of community  support,” Father Rautenberg said. “It is also reassuring that when tragedy happens  we’ve got people to help take care of it. We thank the archdiocese for their  support, and ask our brothers and sisters in the archdiocese for their prayers.”
			  Purdue University sophomore Kevin Cool has  helped serve at Masses at St. Anne Church since he was a fifth-grader. He came  home to spend the Easter holiday with his family and had planned to serve at the  Easter Vigil Mass.
			  Instead, he and his father, Bill Cool, spent Saturday morning and  afternoon at the Parish   Life Center  with other parishioners watching firefighters pour water on the blackened ruins  of their church.
  “During college, I’d serve at Christmas and Easter Masses,” Kevin Cool  said. “Luckily, I was able to come last night for Good Friday, which turned out  to be the last service in the church. I wish that I’d served then. … I was  baptized here. I had first Communion here. … It was a very bright church  inside, and the brightness is what I’ll always remember.
  “Sometimes tomorrow isn’t always like today,” he said. “It brings new  events and obstacles you have to overcome, but the world keeps turning. We have  our community. We have each other. … It was a building, but the Church—that’s the  people, that’s us together.
  “This morning, parishioners were here for each other, watching it go down  together,” he said. “We read in one of the [parish] directories that the first  Mass was on Easter. It’s kind of ironic. It’s still not even real yet. I don’t  know when it will sink in. If you’re trying to put it into words, I think  you’re kind of cheating the situation a little bit because you can’t.”
  
			  Parishioner Twilla Deaton was baptized at St. Anne Church 50 years  ago.
  “I made all my sacraments here,” Deaton said. “… Our grandfather helped  build this church. It felt like a death today. We’ve all been mourning the loss  of our church. It’s like losing a family member. There’s so much history, and  part of us is here. It’s the only parish I’ve ever known. It’s my home church.  … But we’re OK. We’ll celebrate tomorrow on Easter Sunday. We’re going to sing  joyful songs and we’re going to be OK.” †