Joseph Gentille,
second pastor of Holy Trinity Church, was born in Dongas, France, January 8th,
1829. Upon graduation from the Grand Seminary of Nantes, he was ordained to the
holy priesthood in December 1855 and appointed curate of a small village. In 1860,
Father Gentille responded to a request for priests to serve the American missions.
He chose to join several of his former seminary classmates who were working in the
Diocese of Natchitoches, and for about eight months he assisted the pastor of the
church at Campti. Gentille served as vice president of St. Joseph College, Natchitoches,
from 1861 until its occupation by the Confederate Army medical department in 1863.
From 1863
to 1869 Father Gentille assisted the pastor at Monroe and visited Catholic communities
in the Mississippi River district. He was appointed chaplain-general of the Trans-Mississippi
District of the Confederate Army in 1865, but the Civil War ended before he was
able to report for service. In 1869 he was assigned pastor at Lake Providence and
was serving there when he received his appointment to Shreveport.
During his
22 year ministry at Holy Trinity, Father Gentille maintained a diary recording challenges
and difficulties he encountered. The pastor of Holy Trinity at that time was pastor
of all Caddo Parish as well as Bossier, Webster and Claiborne Parishes. Gentille's
rectory was located on the corner of Marshall and Fannin Streets right next to the
church. The housekeeper lived at the back of the lot in a small cottage. The church
was apparently in poor condition, and Gentille made every effort to improve both
the structural problems and the furnishings. Gaslights were added to the church
on Ash Wednesday 1888.
In 1879 the
church bell cracked, and its sound became so offensive that Father Gentille stopped
its ringing. An appeal was made for funds to replace the bell, but an insufficient
amount was collected. In February 1880 the bell was loaded on a river boat to be
taken for repair to Troy, New York. That bell, however, proved irreparable, and
a new one was ordered arriving in Shreveport in June 1880. The inseription on the
bell reads “Our Lady of
Lourdes; Sponsors Jules Guerre, Mary T. Copes, C. Horan; Father J. Gentille, 1880,
Clinton H. Meneely Bell Company, Troy, New York.”
As early
as 1886, Father Gentille felt the need of a new church and endeavored to arouse
the enthusiasm of the congregation to the point where they would generously support
a building fund. The ladies of the Altar Society held numerous fund raising events
and suppers to assist this work.
After several
attempts, Father Gentille finally managed to return to his native country for a
visit in May 1887. While in France he interviewed an architect and had plans drawn
up for a new Gothic style church in Shreveport. Apparently this was not the plan
used by Father Gentille's successor, but it shows that the old pastor had set his
heart on building a temple worthy of the God he loved so much.
The last
paragraph of his diary for the year 1894 reads:
“We had resolved to lay the foundations of our new church early
in the Spring of 1895. We found it impossible for several reasons. First, we have
no money in the bank. Second, it would have proved a failure to attempt to collect
the interest on our church fund...With God's help what was delayed is not abandoned.
Next Spring we shall witness a grand ceremony of blessing the cornerstone of a beautiful
Catholic Church.”
The spring
of 1895 came, but Father Gentille did not see his dream come true. Ill health came
instead, and Holy Trinity's second pastor died in New Orleans, October 15th,
1895. He was buried in St. Joseph Cemetery, Shreveport. In the parish records it
was noted that “Reverend
Father Granger, of Marshall, Texas, buried in St. Joseph's Cemetery, the Rev. Joseph
Gentille...Present at the funeral: Rev. L. Enaut of Monroe, Orator: J. Roulleaux
of Fairfield, A. Thiollierre of Pineville, S.B. Scharl of Pineville.”