
Our Parish
Micheal J. Degnon Mansion built 1910. Served as Rectory and Monastery from 1924 to 1930. Served a a section of the Retreat House from 1924 to 1952 when it was demolished for new additon to the Retreat House.
![]()
Ministries
and Outreach
retreats to many organizations throught the year.
Immaculate Conception Convent.
Sisters of St. Joseph
Built in 1954.
Our Parish - Parish History
In 1923 Bishop Thomas E. Molloy of the Brooklyn Diocese
invited the Passionists to establish a new parish in Jamaica, Queens. On March
10, 1924 the order purchased the entire 16 acre Jamaica Estates hillside
property of NYC engineer and contractor Michael J. Degnon who had erected a
stately mansion in 1910.
On July 5, 1924 the
parish of the Immaculate Conception was formally organized when founding pastor,
Father Chrysostom Smith, C.P. celebrated the first Mass in the library of the
Degnon mansion. A small temporary framed church was erected on the grounds and
the first public Mass was celebrated on November 9, 1924.
On a chilly November weekend in 1924 the first cloistered retreat ever held in
the Brooklyn Diocese took place inside the Degnon mansion. The mansion would
also serve as rectory and monastery. In 1926 an addition was added to the wooden
church and in 1928 construction began on the monastery, retreat house and
basement church. The basement church was formally opened at the Christmas Eve
Mass in 1929.
The Monastery and Retreat House were dedicated on April
23, 1930. They were designed in a Romanesque style. The Monastery Chapel with
barrel vaulted ceilings features colorfully painted panels of the Stations of
the Cross in the Art Deco style. The stained glass windows detail scenes from
Passion of Jesus. The reredos behind the main altar displays an intricate glass
mosaic of the Immaculate Conception. At that time the original wooden church was
razed but the 1926 addition was moved to another site becoming a parish hall.
In the autumn of 1931 Father Chrysostom Driscoll, C. P. is added to the parish
staff. He organized a catechetical school with the Sisters of Saint Joseph
traveling from Flushing to give religious instructions. Father Driscoll engaged
the services of young men and women of the parish to serve as assistant
teachers. In 1936 Father Roger Monson, C.P. the 4th pastor of the parish, bought
the Adikes property opposite the Monastery to build a school. However, at the
suggestion of Bishop Molloy, the property was sold to the Sisters of St. Joseph,
in order that they might build a high school for girls. The Mary Louis Academy
opened their doors on September 12, 1936. The idea of a parish school was
finally realized in 1937 when the cornerstone was laid for the school. It opened
on September 12, 1938. Sister Mary Osmund, C.S.J. was the first principal with
two hundred and thirty-five pupils and five grades. The Sisters lived at the
Mary Louis convent until March 25, 1940 when a house on Dalny Road was purchased
to serve as a convent. Due to a lack of space the house adjoining was also
purchased.
Decades earlier in 1858 the
Church of the Immaculate Conception in Manhattan on 14th
Street became the first church in the world dedicated to the Immaculate
Conception and above the main entrance stood a limestone statue of the
Immaculate Conception. In 1945-46 the church was demolished for the creation of
Stuyvesant Town. Thomas Campbell Sr. had the statue saved and placed in the
schoolyard of the Immaculate Conception School, Jamaica Estates. It is an
important piece of church history.
On the grounds of the parish one can find a stone Grotto to Our Lady of Lourdes,
a large outdoor Stations of the Cross and a Passionist Cemetery. The gardens are
landscaped with trees, shrubbery and flowers and provide a meditative repose for
all who visit.
In 1950 the school was expanded adding an auditorium, gym,
library and additional classrooms.
In 1952 the Degnon mansion that served as part of the retreat house was demolished for an additional wing. The new facility has over one hundred rooms and offers
On July 1, 1954 the Sisters moved to a new convent erected for them by Father
Owen Doyle, C.P. the fifth parish pastor. It was voted in the 1954 Queens
architectural competition as the most outstanding structure erected in the
borough.
In 1960 the long awaited construction of the upper church began. It was dedicated on September 22, 1962 by Bishop McEntegart. The church is designed in the Romanesque style to accommodate 1,350 in the nave and features 35 17 feet by 3 feet stained glass windows designed by Albin Eiskus of the Durhan Studio. The story of the Immaculate Conception is told in the three windows in the front of the edifice. One depicts St. Catherine Laboure. On November 27, 1830 the Blessed Virgin appeared to her standing on a globe. An oval frame formed around her and written around it the prayer, "O Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to you." This Medal of the Immaculate Conception is now known as the Miraculous Medal. In the center window are Mary Immaculate, St. Pius V and Pius IX. St Pius V proclaimed the feast and Pius IX the dogma of the Immaculate Conception. The third window tells the story of Bernadette of Lourdes. She had a vision of
On August 7, 1970 the wooden parish hall that was the 1926 addition to the first
church was destroyed by fire. Father Peter Quinn, C.P. the seventh pastor,
created a new parish hall in the lower church, retaining a section for a chapel.
When the new parish hall was opened it was named the Father Owen Doyle Memorial
Hall.
In 1999 the parish celebrated its 75th anniversary. The main church was
renovated and made handicap accessible under Father Thomas Joyce, C.P. the ninth
pastor and the longest serving pastor with 25 years. The 10th pastor is Father
Jed Sumampong, C.P. who was installed in October 2007. Under his care the façade
of the church was restored and enhanced in July 2008.
A Brief History of Immaculate Conception Parish
By the Students of the Aquinas
Honor Society
Of the Immaculate Conception School
Moderator: Mr. C Ballenas


the Virgin Mary. On March 25, 1858 she asked the
vision to tell her who she was. The answer: "I am the Immaculate Conception."
The windows on one side of the church, is a complete Rosary in symbols. On the
other side the sanctifying power of the Church in the seven Sacraments and the
gifts of the Holy Spirit that goes with each Sacrament.
Monastery Chapel built in 1928 and dedicated in 1930. Romanesque in design with Art Deco features.
First Parish Church. Built in 1924, an addition was added in 1926. In 1930 the original 1924 Chapel was razed but the 1926 addition was saved and made into the Parish Hall. This Hall was destroyed by fire in 1970.
"O Mary conceived without sin pray for us who have turned to you."
Grotto to Our Lady of Lourdes
Immaculate Conception School opened 1938. Addition built 1950
Immaculate Conception Parish
Established 1924