Nicholas
DeMita
REV. NICHOLAS DE MITA,
pastor of the St. Vitus Catholic Church, at New Castle, was born in
Italy, November 29, 1875, and is one of a family of four children born
to his parents, who were Michael and Philomena De Mita.
Father De Mita secured a
collegiate education in his native country and was graduated from an
Italian college in 1893. For four years he studied for the priesthood
and was ordained to the same in 1898 by Bishop Michael Pirone and was
first assigned as assistant pastor of St. John the Evangelist’s
Church, in his native town. He performed the duties of his priestly
office in this church for six years
and in the meantime, on account of his proficiency in the classics, he
was appointed teacher of Greek and Latin in a seminary, located in his native place. Prior to coming to America in May, 1904, he
filled other responsible positions connected with the Catholic Church.
Father De Mita located at the Mount Washington Apostolate, Pittsburg,
and found so many of his countrymen scattered throughout the diocese,
and under no particular charge or mission, that he organized the Italian
Mission, which he conducted for eighteen months, this being the most
successful of its kind organized in the Pittsburg Diocese. In conducting
this mission, Father De Mita had to contend with a class of people who,
at first, were not willing to yield to his authority, and on numerous
occasions even his life was threatened when he persisted in his
attempts to suppress wrongs of many kinds. He accomplished
wonderful results, however, and became a power for good among the
Italian colonists. In September, 1905, he was appointed pastor of the
St. Vitus Catholic Church at New Castle, a church which he virtually
organized and built up. For seven years this congregation had been
holding services in a little church which had been purchased from the
Methodists. Within little more than a year Father De Mita has
accomplished the wonderful work of building a splendid new church, a
school and a convent, and purchasing a large and commodious playground
for the children. He has 400 families under his spiritual direction.
St. Vitus Catholic Church
was dedicated August 15, 1907, by Bishop Reges Canevin. It is a fine
brick structure which was erected at a cost of $70,000, for church,
grounds and other buildings pertaining. The cornerstone was laid August
15, 1906. School accommodations are provided in the basement for
400 pupils, under Sisters of the third order of St. Francis, and the
church has a seating capacity of 700. In architecture and finish this
church is an ornament to the city and a credit to the congregation.
Reverend De Mita is the
originator of the Catholic Anti-Black Hand Society, which has a
membership of 300, with time following leading Italian citizens of the
United States as its officers: Nicholas Faella, president; Vito De
Simone, vice-president, and Louis Tardelli, secretary. The object of
this organization is to suppress the society known as the Black Hand,
which has brought terror to many civilized sections of the United
States. While the Catholic Anti-Black Hand Society is made up entirely
of Catholics, it has the sympathy and moral support of every
right-thinking and orderly member of every other religious body.
History
of New Castle and Lawrence County, 1908, pages 565-566