aint Timothy's was established in 1943 to serve the people the Rancho Park/Cheviot Hills area of Los Angeles. Its boundaries include Olympic Blvd. to the north, Westwood Blvd. to the west, Beverwil Drive to the east, and National Blvd. to the south.
The first pastor was Fr. William Thomas O'Shea (1902-1963). The first masses were celebrated in an ice cream parlor on Pico Blvd. Fr. O'Shea and the parishioners set about the task of putting together enough money to build a temporary church. This temporary church, which is the present parish hall, was completed in 1946. In the process of building this facility, an antique Spanish altar piece was obtained at auction and installed in the building. Not long after this, construction began on a new permanent church that would house this altar piece and would architecturally complement it.
On Christmas Eve 1949, the first Mass was said in the permanent church at midnight. About the same time, the Sisters of Notre Dame opened a grammar school (Notre Dame Academy) and the Sisters of Nazareth opened a Catholic Retirement Home within the boundaries of the Parish.
Additional furnishing and art, including the stained glass windows were added throughout the fifties. Because there were artisans from MGM and Fox studios among the parishioners, they crafted many of the items in the church including most of the metal work, the tabernacle (gold and silver was collected from parishioners), the pews, and many of the paintings.
In the fall of 1958, St. Timothy's School opened under the leadership of the Sisters of Notre Dame. This school has provided education to members of St. Timothy's from grades Kindergarten to Eighth. Many of its graduates have gone on to distinguish themselves in higher institutions of learning. Currently, there are 184 students in nine grades, and the present principal is Mrs. Lena Randle.
In 1963, the first pastor, Fr. O'Shea, passed away. The second pastor appointed was Bishop John J. Ward, who had been recently named auxiliary Bishop for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles. He was ordained bishop on December 12, 1963, and a window on the Pico side of the church depicting the Virgin of Guadalupe commemorates this event. St. Timothy's was one of only two parishes in the Archdiocese having a bishop for a pastor.
Bishop Ward served as pastor until 1996 when he celebrated his golden jubilee as a priest and retired. Fr. William J. Brelsford served as pastor from 1996 until 2009. Fr. Paul E. Vigil was appointed pastor in 2009 and was succeeded by Fr. Joseph M. Visperas in 2021. Currently, there are 833 registered households in parish.
St. Timothy's Parish was founded in 1943. Shortly thereafter, plans were approved for the construction of a church, rectory, and parish hall at the corner of Pico and Beverly Glen Boulevards. At first, services were held in a store building on Pico Boulevard, a few blocks west of the present church. Later, the parish hall, the first structure completed, served as the parish church until Christmas of 1949 when the doors of the present church were opened for the first mass. During the six-year interval between the founding of the parish and the completion of the present church, the parish acquired many of the decorative furnishings that adorn the church today. As will be seen, St. Timothy's has been blessed, not only in its loyal and dedicated clergy and parishioners, but in its associations with good people of other religious traditions.
The church was designed by architect Harold Gimeno, AIA, an architect based in Orange, Californa, who was well-known for his ecclesiastical architecture. The contractor was Robert B. Hedberg. Some of the work was subcontracted to a Mormon, the builder of the Mormon Temple in Westwood. On several occasions, his all-Mormon workmen, apart from their regularly scheduled work, donated their services on Saturdays to speed completion of the church for the opening mass on Christmas, 1949. The founding pastor, Father O'Shea, was able by taste and circumstances to blend unusually fine altars, windows, and other decorative effects with the architecture of the church. Some items he obtained through the generosity of motion picture studios. Others he obtained at auction or through donations by individuals.
The second pastor, Bishop John J. Ward, added to the artistic effect of the church with the mosaic wall decoration behind the main altar, the re-arranged altar table, additional stained glass windows, and wall paintings of ecclesiastical coats-of-arms on the north and south walls of the sanctuary. The orginal leaded glass, incandescent light fixtures in the nave were replaced with the current fluorescent fixtrures during Bishop Ward's tenure due to a trade-off between artistic integrity and greater energy efficiency.
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