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Founded in 1950, Saint Thomas More Parish began with
a temporary store front church on 19th
Avenue. Our first pastor, Rev. John J. Scanlan,
resided on Randolph Street.
Within two years,
a church and rectory were built on land purchased
from the San Francisco Golf Club.
The Reverend John Scanlan also began building the
school while he served as the first pastor.
In 1954, Monsignor
Vincent Carroll succeeded Fr. Scanlan, who had just
been named Bishop of Hawaii. Msgr. Carroll, who
served as pastor from 1954 until 1985, oversaw the
opening of the school in 1954.
In 1965, plans were undertaken to build a larger
church. The original church building was moved to
its present location next to the school. It was
renamed Carroll Hall after our second pastor,
Monsignor Vincent I. Carroll.
Our present church was dedicated by Archbishop
McGucken on April 23, 1967.
Fr. John Ring
succeeded Msgr. Carroll and served as the third
pastor of the parish until 1993.
Under Archbishop John
Quinn and as part of the Archdiocesan Pastoral Plan
announced in 1993, St. Thomas More Parish was
suppressed, closing in June of 1994. Fr. Donald S.
D'Angelo served as the last pastor of the parish
from early 1993 until its closure.
Archbishop William
Levada, who succeeded Archbishop Quinn in 1995,
reopened St. Thomas More Church in 1996 as a campus
ministry center for San Francisco State University
and to assume the pastoral responsibility for St.
Thomas More School. Fr. Jerome Foley was then named
as campus minister and head of the pastoral center
of St. Thomas More Church. In 1998, Archbishop
Levada announced that he was raising the status of
St. Thomas More to a University Parish.
July 1st
2002, Monsignor Labib Kobti was welcomed as pastor
of STM Church. Monsignor Labib continues his
ministry to Arab- American Catholics in Northern
California. Besides serving the San Francisco State
University community, St. Thomas More Church is the spiritual
home to people of all ages from several ethnic communities, and the
Eucharist is celebrated in English, Arabic,
Portuguese, Burmese, and Tagalog. |