St. Andre' Bessette Roman Catholic Parish

Notre Dam​e Church
Malone, NY

St. Helen's Church 
Chasm Falls, NY

United States Conference of Catholic Bishops

Our Mission

"With Jesus Christ as our center, and the Holy Spirit as our guide,
we are called to be a community of saints making saints--
encountering the Lord in Word and Sacrament,
and opening doors for our neighbors to experience the loving mercy of God."

Mass Times

Sunday: (Ant) 4pm, 8am, 11am
Monday: 12:05 pm
Tuesday: 7 am, 12:05 pm
Wednesday: 7 am
Thursday: 7 am, 9:30 am at Nursing Home
Friday: 7 am, 12:05 pm
Holy Hour: daily 11 am- 12 pm

Sunday St. Helen's Church: 9:30 am

Confession

Monday:     11:15-11:45am Tuesday:     11:15-11:45am 
Friday:         11:15-11:45am 
Saturday:      3:00-3:45pm

St. Helen's Church: First Sunday of the month before mass

Bulletin

Please click above to access current bulletin.

Contribute

Please click on button above if you would like to donate online.

If you would like to mail your contribution, mail to St. André’s  Parish, PO Box 547, Malone.

If you would like you can drop off your envelope at the Parish office on 12 Homestead Park.

Or you can put your envelope in the collection basket during Mass.

Do you know my brother?

Meet our holy patron

Learn  more

A Brief History of Catholicism in Malone, New York

The first Catholics of Malone settled here as early as 1820, and were cared for by the pastor of St.Patrick’s Parish in Hogansburg (1827-2013). It was not uncommon for these pioneering souls to walk the twenty-five miles between the two settlements in order to attend Mass at Christmas and Easter. The first Mass offered in Malone was likely said in the John McFarlene home in June of 1831.

The first Catholic church in Malone, a wooden structure capable of seating 150 people, was constructed in 1837. Having grown, the former mission of Hogansburg became an independent parish and St. Joseph’s Church was incorporated on July 26, 1848, with some 600 families within its territory, which extended as far as Chateauguay. The community’s first resident priest was Fr. Bernard McCabe, who died in a rectory fire in November of 1857. As the parish increased in membership and prosperity, property was secured for a larger, brick church on Main Street, and the cornerstone was laid on September 11, 1859. A time of turmoil followed, including legal difficulties and a string of priests offering temporary service to the parish. Still incomplete, the brick church was destroyed by fire on September 4, 1870. A cornerstone was again laid on July 4, 1871, but tragedy struck once more when a severe windstorm toppled the unfinished structure on October 15 of the same year. In the spring of 1872, yet another building was begun, and Mass was said in its basement for eleven years as the parish recovered from financial disaster. Work resumed in 1880, and the completed church was dedicated on October 22, 1882. This church burned on July 2, 1968. A new church was dedicated on June 3, 1970.

In order to care for the French-speaking Catholics who had come to populate the village in greater numbers, a second parish--Notre Dame--was incorporated on May 24, 1869, with Fr. Jean Baptiste Legrand as the first pastor of its over 500 families. The foundations for a church were laid on May 16, 1869, the cornerstone was blessed on June 13, and the first Mass offered in the rough building on August 15 of the same year. The exterior was finished before winter.

In 1877, Fr. Legrand began work on a church dedicated to St. Helen in Titusville (now Chasm Falls), nine miles south of Malone, to serve more than 70 scattered Catholic families on the edge of the Adirondack mountains. The parish was incorporated on June 21, land was donated for a church on September 7, and the church itself was dedicated on October 2. Fr. Legrand had collected most of the funds for construction from benefactors in his native France. St. Helen’s received its first resident pastor in 1888 with the appointment of Fr. Donald Halde. St. Helen’s would go on to establish mission churches in the surrounding communities of Mountain View (St. Elizabeth’s, 1907), Owls Head (St. Joseph’s, 1923), and Lake Titus (St. Mary’s, 1925); St. Elizabeth’s closed in 1959, and the last regularly scheduled Masses were offered in St. Joseph’s and St. Mary’s in 2007. St. Helen’s and its mission churches began to share a pastor with Notre Dame in 1985, as was originally the case when the parish was formed.

A third parish was begun within the village of Malone as St. John Bosco Church was incorporated on June 23, 1935, with Fr. Euclid Elie as its first pastor. Mass was offered in an open field on September 1 of that year to mark the formal beginnings of the parish, and land was acquired on September 5. An abandoned schoolhouse would be the parish’s first chapel, and Mass was later offered for a number of years in the finished basement of the church while construction progressed slowly through the Great Depression. The completed building was dedicated on June 15, 1952. The care of St. John Bosco Parish was entrusted to the Pallottine Fathers from 1963 until 1990.

In June of 2003, while not formally merging, the more than 2,000 families of St. Joseph’s, Notre Dame, St. Helen’s, and St. John Bosco Parishes all began to share a single pastor, a common staff, and a coordinated schedule and services under the name, “Malone Catholic Parishes.”

In August of 2013, Fr. Joseph Giroux, pastor of the Malone Catholic Parishes, announced that the four parishes would be consolidated into a single new parish. On February 28, 2014, Bishop Terry LaValley issued the decree uniting the parishes as one in the new St. André Bessette Parish, effective July 1, 2014.Sample text. Click to select the Text Element.

Directions
Go to “formed.org” on your internet browser.
Scroll down the formed.org page and choose the “Sign Up Today” option - click on the blue “sign up” rectangle. 
A new page comes up. Choose the “Sign Up As A Parishioner” option.
A new page called “Create A New Account” comes up. Type in “St. Andre Bessette Malone, NY” for a parish and then click on that when it appears below. Then click “next.”
This will bring up a page that asks you to type in your name & email address. Type them into the appropriate boxes. Click on the “Sign Up” option.
This will then bring up the FORMED site. Watch, Listen, and Enjoy!

The Coat of Arms of St. André Bessette Parish, Malone, NY


Blazon

Azure, saltire sanguine, a tree eradicated of four roots argent, leaved vert, and in chief a mullet of eight points.

“Lord, your mercy reaches to heaven; your faithfulness, to the clouds.” —Psalm 57:11.

     The shield is blue, the color of the heavens, signifying the faith which characterized St. André Bessette and which unites the Church as one.

 “Andrew first found his own brother Simon and told him, ‘We have found the Messiah’ (which is translated Christ). Then he brought him to Jesus.” —John 1:40-42

 The red St. Andrew’s Cross points to the Apostle whose name Br. André took as his own when making his religious vows. Like his Gospel namesake, Br. André        spent his life bringing Christ to other people and bringing other people to Christ.

“He is like a tree…that yields its fruit in season; its leaves never wither; whatever he does prospers.” —Psalm 3:1

The birch tree is taken from the Bessette family name, which comes from the French for “little birch.” Its four roots recall the four original parishes from which a new parish has grown. The tree is likewise symbolic of three of the patrons of those original parishes: St. Joseph, the wood-working carpenter; St. Helen, who discovered the relic of the True Cross, which is the Tree of Life; and St. John Bosco, whose Italian surname means “woods.”

“A great sign appeared in the sky, a woman clothed with the sun, …on her head a crown of twelve stars.” —Revelation 12:1The golden star is for Malone, known as “The Star of the North.” It also represents the patron of the fourth original parish, Our Lady (“Notre Dame”), the Virgin Mary, whose name is traditionally thought to mean “star of the sea.

If you have a complaint of suspected misconduct involving diocesan clergy, religious, employees or volunteers, contact Victims Assistance Coordinator, Terrianne Yanulavich, Ph.D., LMHC, 5050 Route 374, Merrill, NY 12955; This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.; Phone: 518-569-0612 or Father Christopher Carrara, the Episcopal Vicar for Clergy; This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.; Phone: 315-393-2920 ext. 1340.  If you have a complaint of suspected sexual abuse or related misconduct by the bishops, contact the Catholic Bishop Abuse Reporting Service at 800-276-1562 or www.ReportBishopAbuse.org.
 
As part of the efforts of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Ogdensburg to protect children, young people and other vulnerable people in our schools, parishes and ministries, it is important that your report identify:
— the child or children in danger,
— the name of the suspected abuser,
— as well as your name, address and phone number.
 
Making a report to the Diocese of Ogdensburg, in no way, means that you should not make a report to police or child protective agencies.

To read the diocesan Child and Youth Protection Policy, visit the Safe Environment webpage: https://www.rcdony.org/safe-environment.html

St. André Bessette Roman Catholic Parish 
Notre Dame and St. Helen's Church

12 Homestead Park
 PO Box 547 
Malone, NY 12953

Main Office: 518-483-1300
Cemeteries: 518-651-4175

Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

PASTOR: Father Scott Seymour 
PAROCHIAL VICAR: Father Matthew Conger 
DEACONS:
 Deacon Bryan Bashaw, Deacon Brent Charland and Deacon Nicholas Haas