History
Getting started
The history of St. Thomas Aquinas parish begins around 1942. By then, the
Catholic student population at Iowa State College, spurred by interest in the
naval training program, had grown to a number that no longer could be
reasonably accommodated at Ames' lone Catholic parish, St. Cecilia, which was
located at that time just west of downtown.
Rev. John Brickley and later Rev. Joseph Kleiner received permission to hold weekend liturgies in the Memorial Union Great Hall at Iowa State and keep an office on campus for the pastoral care of students. During these years, Archbishop Henry Rohlman corresponded with Rev. Nicholas Steffen, pastor at St. Cecilia's, about purchasing property near the campus.
In 1945, St. Cecilia parishioner and real estate professional John Judge negotiated for the purchase of Porter Lodge on Lincoln Way between Ash and Lynn avenues for $13,800. With two interior walls removed, the building became a chapel in which daily Mass was celebrated and private instructions and counseling were available to students.
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St. Thomas Aquinas Church and Catholic Student Center was incorporated on
April 8, 1947. Rev. James Supple, following two years as an Army Air Corps
chaplain and a short appointment in La Porte City, was appointed as the first
pastor. The parish consisted of 75 families and 1,154 students who worshipped
in what would become known as "The Old House."
The St. Thomas Aquinas campus: Four building phases
First
Ground was broken for the Newman Student Center and Chapel on Sept. 14, 1948.
The chapel, located in the basement and seating 300, was dedicated on Dec. 11,
1949, by Archbishop Rohlman. The rest of the building, which included offices,
lounge and the priests' living quarters, was dedicated May 4, 1950, by
Archbishop Leo Binz.
Second
1953 brought two changes to the face of St. Thomas: "The Old House" was torn down and construction began on the basement of the new church -- which actually served as a second (but larger) basement church for a decade. This basement church seated 400 and was dedicated on May 24, 1954. The space previously occupied by the student center chapel became a lounge, kitchen and social facilities.
Third
With resident families numbering 175 and Catholic student enrollment exceeding
1,300, erection of the church -- above the "basement church" -- began in July
1962. The 900-seat facility, built at a cost of $450,000, was dedicated on
Feb. 2, 1964, by Archbishop James Byrne. James Thompson & Sons, Ames
(precursor to Story Construction) was the contractor on all three projects. A
remodel of the sanctuary a decade later moved the altar from the center of the
space to the east wall.
Fourth
By 1994, the parish included 800 families (including 250 graduate student
families), and Iowa State enrolled an estimated 6,000 Catholic students. The
need for more space, particularly for campus ministry and religious education
programming, was evident. That year, the parish purchased from Phillip
O'Berry a boarding house at the corner of Ash Avenue and Lincoln Way, clearing
the way for a major expansion of the St. Thomas Aquinas building. Six years
later, on April 29, 2000, Archbishop Jerome Hanus visited Ames to dedicate
renovated (28,400 square feet) and new (18,100 square feet) worship and office
space. New construction added religious education classrooms, staff offices,
an apartment for the peer ministers and a spacious gathering and sacramental
area to the east side of the worship space. It also made nearly all areas of
the building accessible. Story Construction was the general contractor on this
$5.2 million project, for which a capital campaign had begun in 1994. The debt
was paid off in 2008.
A few milestones of the St. Thomas Aquinas community
Lay council
St. Thomas Aquinas' parish council was formed in 1966 to coordinate student and resident parishioner participation with the work of the staff in the responsibilities of the parish. St. Thomas Aquinas was one of the first parishes in the Archdiocese of Dubuque to form a parish council. A Vatican II directive urged Catholics to assume a more personal responsibility for the effective functioning of their parishes.
Student peer ministers
The 1976-77 academic year marked the first year of the
peer ministry program, which began
under peer minister Tom Cordaro. In the early years, peer ministers visited
Catholic students at Iowa State in their residence halls, personally inviting
them to a Thursday Night Liturgy (also initiated at this time) or, on a
smaller basis, to a weekly meal the peer ministers served in a lounge of the
building. In the mid-1990s, peer ministers' assignments became more focused,
and each peer minister had a team of student volunteers that helped him or
her. With the 2000 expansion of the St. Thomas Aquinas facility, free housing
on site became an added perk for peer ministers.
Local social justice
The parish's Love your Neighbor program assists local people in need, typically by providing funds for rent and utility bills. It is funded by a percentage of the weekend liturgy collections (currently 4 percent), donations from individuals and, occasionally, grants from other sources.
The fund was established, circa 1980, with a gift from parishioner Esther Burns, who wanted specifically to help Vietnamese refugee families who were resettling in Ames. The Parish Family Life Commission petitioned the Parish Council to tithe, initially 2.5 percent, from the offertory collection to add to the fund. For the first few years, a staff member interviewed potential recipients when a need for financial help arose. In 1987, parishioners Mary Terpstra and Mary Concannon helped move the program in a new direction with trained volunteer interviewers and scheduled interview times. In recent years, $70,000 from the fund is awarded annually to assist families and individuals in the Ames area.
Catholic studies at Iowa State
The Monsignor James Supple Chair of Catholic Studies at Iowa State
University was established in 1997
to provide funding for a faculty member in the department of philosophy and
religious studies who teaches courses in Catholicism. It also supports a
lecture series at the university. A theology chair in Catholic studies had
been a dream of founding pastor Fr. Supple for nearly 30 years. The $1 million
endowment for the chair was created through gifts from the Supple Endowment
Fund at St. Thomas Aquinas, ISU alumni and Ames residents. Jaime Vidal was the
first holder of the chair (1997-1999). The Supple Endowment provided $100,000
for a visiting Catholic scholar program at the university (1994-1997) prior to
the successful creation of the endowed chair.
Clergy who have served St. Thomas Aquinas Parish
- Pastors
- Rev. Jon Seda, 2009 to present
- Rev. Everett Hemann, 1993 to 2009
- Rev. Daniel Knepper, 1987 to 1993
- Rev. Patrick Geary, 1980 to 1987
- Rev. James Supple, 1947 to 1980 (pastor emeritus 1987 to 2003)
- Associates
- Rev. Richmond Dzekoe, 2012 to present
- Rev. Jim Dubert, 2011 to present
- Rev. Jack McClure, C.PP.S., 2010 to 2011
- Rev. Dennis Miller, 2005 to 2010
- Rev. Scott Boone, 2003 to 2005
- Rev. Jim Hayes, 1998 to 2003
- Rev. Jon Seda, 1990 to 1998
- Rev. Michael Tauke, 1987 to 1990
- Rev. Dick Ament, 1984 to 1987
- Rev. John Tilp, 1980 to 1987
- Rev. James Duster, 1978 to 1980
- Rev. Ernest Engler, 1976 to 1984
- Rev. Patrick Geary, 1975 to 1977
- Rev. Richard Schaeffer, 1972 to 1975
- Rev. David Manders, 1970 to 1976
- Rev. Clarence Willging, 1969 (July-August)
- Rev. Daniel Tarrant, 1969 to 1978
- Rev. John Paar, 1968 to 1969
- Rev. Melvin Hemann, 1965 to 1972
- Rev. John Kissling, 1965 to 1968
- Rev. Joseph Heineman, 1960 to 1965
- Rev. Roger Sullivan, 1957 to 1965
- Rev. David Voels, 1955 to 1960
- Rev. John McGregory, 1948 to 1955
- Rev. J. Duane Raftis, 1948 (February-July)
- Rev. Joseph Kleiner, 1947 to 1948
* From 1973 to 1987, St. Thomas Aquinas used a "team ministry" style of pastoral leadership; thus, there is some overlap among appointments.

