MD to KY and Beyond, Inc

MD to KY and Beyond, Inc Bringing together descendants of Maryland to Kentucky and Beyond Pioneers. Our website for MD to KY & Beyond Inc:

https://sites.google.com/site/mdtoky3/home

09/11/2025

If someone is interested in becoming a treasurer or a part of our board, let us know and we can give you more details.

Sharing an upcoming event in Kentucky - Kentucky History and Genealogy Conference 2025We are excited to announce the Ken...
06/27/2025

Sharing an upcoming event in Kentucky -
Kentucky History and Genealogy Conference 2025

We are excited to announce the Kentucky History and Genealogy Conference 2025, taking place on August 8th and 9th, 2025 at Erlanger Branch of the Kenton County Public Library. This conference brings together historians, genealogists, researchers, and enthusiasts to explore the rich history and genealogical heritage of Kentucky.

Kentucky History and Genealogy Conference 2025

06/26/2025

Several members and former event attendees are attending the Southern Maryland to Kentucky Migration Families Conference in Newburg, MD, at the MD Veteans Museum @ Patriot Park.

Hello! Below is the Zoom Link for today. Thank you.Wanda Simmons is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.Topic: 6/14...
06/14/2025

Hello! Below is the Zoom Link for today. Thank you.
Wanda Simmons is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.
Topic: 6/14/2025 Meeting
Time: Jun 14, 2025 11:00 AM Eastern Time (US and Canada)
Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85259266880...
Meeting ID: 852 5926 6880
Passcode: 363263
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+13017158592,,85259266880 #,,,,*363263 # US (Washington DC)
+13052241968,,85259266880 #,,,,*363263 # US

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06/07/2025

From Wanda Simmons - (she is the host not the MD to KY & Beyond Inc board members),

You have until Monday, June 16th, 2025, to sign up for the 2025 Southern Maryland Genealogy and History Conference. As a reminder, we will NOT accept any payments at the door.

If you would like a copy of the Conference Package, which includes the confirmation form, please contact Wanda.

06/03/2025

Just a reminder, the Kentucky based MD to KY and Beyond Inc isn't the host of the Maryland event this month. Wanda Simmons is the host and you can email her for packet and further information. 😊 Thanks cbs6395@comcast.net

05/16/2025
https://www.facebook.com/share/p/16MyeyZJZL/
05/14/2025

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/16MyeyZJZL/

“Little St. Joe” – A Church That Refused to Be Forgotten 📍 St. Joseph Catholic Church – Raywick, KY

Tucked among the rolling hills of Marion County on St. Joe Road stands a humble white church that many locals still call “Little St. Joe.” Built in 1908, this country church once served generations of Catholic families in the Clear Creek and Horseshoe Bend areas. While its official life as a parish ended nearly 30 years ago, the spirit of St. Joseph Catholic Church never really left the land—or the hearts of those who loved it.

This is the story of that little church: how it came to be, how it flourished, how it was nearly lost, and how it still stands—rescued by the very people who built it over a century ago.

I have a personal connection to the cemetery as well. My first cousin, William Ernest, is buried there. I stop by to visit his grave from time to time because I’m fairly certain no one else in the family does anymore. In fact, I don’t think many even know where he’s buried.

🌾 A Church Rooted in Community

Before there was a church in Raywick, Catholic families in the area had to travel long distances—usually to St. Matthew’s on Finley Ridge, founded in 1874. When that church closed in 1907 and was relocated to Finley, the Clear Creek community petitioned the Diocese of Louisville for their own church.

Bishop William George McCloskey responded. In 1908, he established two new parishes—Our Lady of the Hills in Finley and St. Joseph’s in Raywick. The first pastor, Fr. J.J. Neafsey, acquired three acres of land from Henry F. Abell, and construction began that very year.

Local farmers, friends, and families came together to build it. They hauled timber with oxen, gathered stones from Sally Ray Pike, and donated wood, nails, labor, and know-how. Frank Brady provided shingles for the roof; the nails came from W.M. Webster Store in Raywick. Jack Mackin, Pat Brady, Charlie Jarboe, and Billy Woods—names that live on in local memory—helped shape the structure inside and out.

In March 1908, the first Mass was held. In August, Bishop McCloskey returned to dedicate the church.

From the very beginning, St. Joseph’s wasn’t just a place of worship. It was a reflection of the community’s strength, resilience, and faith.

📚 The Parish School – Educating in Faith

In 1920, the parish opened a small school on site, led by the Ursuline Sisters of Mount St. Joseph. They traveled from near Owensboro to teach 40 children in two simple classrooms. The school was expanded as enrollment increased, later adding high school grades—though that effort lasted only a few years.

Even still, by 1933, enrollment had reached 120 students. Many children walked or rode in wagons to school, often helping with farm chores before and after class. They were educated in both academics and faith, disciplined by the loving but firm Ursuline sisters.

For 50 years—until its closure in 1970—St. Joseph’s School educated children across southern Marion County. The school helped shape generations of farmers, teachers, and faithful men and women.

⛪ Parish Life and Devotion

Throughout the 20th century, the church thrived. Families gathered for homecomings, Christmas pageants, Lenten devotions, and fundraising socials. Parishioners maintained the grounds themselves, planted flowers, repaired steps, and trimmed the cemetery. The little white church on the hill became more than a spiritual home—it became the backdrop of life.

Though it was small and often linked administratively to nearby parishes, St. Joseph’s always held on to its identity. It was quiet but never forgotten.

⚠️ Closure and Determined Survival

But by the 1990s, things were changing. Priest shortages and demographic shifts forced the Archdiocese of Louisville to make painful decisions. Small churches across the region were merged or shuttered. In 1996, St. Joseph Parish was officially closed.

Masses ceased. The parish was suppressed.

But the building still stood—and so did the people.

Former parishioners refused to let the church decay. They organized community workdays to clean it, kept up the cemetery, and made sure it wasn’t just left to rot. In 2001, the Archdiocese deeded the property (excluding the cemetery) to the Marion County Fiscal Court, who in turn leased it to a newly formed nonprofit—St. Joe Community Center, Inc.—for $1 per year, for 100 years.

The building was transformed into a museum and performing arts space. The sanctuary now hosts plays, concerts, and even reunion Masses. The church may no longer function as a parish, but it continues to gather people—just in new ways.

🕯️ A Centennial Celebration and National Recognition

In 2008, a very special Homecoming Mass was held to celebrate St. Joseph’s 100th anniversary. Permission was granted to hold the Mass inside the long-closed church. The celebrant was none other than Fr. Charles Thompson—later Archbishop of Indianapolis—whose own First Communion had been celebrated at St. Joseph’s decades earlier.

That same year, the Kentucky Senate honored the centennial with an official resolution, recognizing the church’s historic role in Marion County life.

In 2010, the church and cemetery were added to the National Register of Historic Places—a rare honor for a structure that small, rural, and no longer functioning as an active parish. Volunteers now operate under St. Joseph Catholic Community Heritage, Inc., keeping the site preserved and spiritually active through occasional services and gatherings.

🪦 A Boy’s Grave and a Father’s Journey: Joseph Ernest Browning Jr.

Among the cemetery’s rows of headstones—names like Spalding, Brady, and Thompson—you’ll find one small marker that tells a unique and heartbreaking story.

Joseph Ernest Browning Jr. was only 11 years old when he died on February 11, 1937—not from the Ohio River flood that paralyzed the region, but from a sudden case of appendicitis. His death struck during a terrible moment. His father, Joseph Sr., was trapped on the Indiana side of the flooded river and couldn’t get home. He made it just in time for the boy’s burial.

Joseph Jr. was the only Browning ever buried in the church cemetery.

His mother, Mary Flora Thompson Browning, was a Marion County native from the area. Through her family ties—especially to the Thompsons of Clear Creek—Joseph Jr. was brought home to rest at St. Joseph’s. His grave lies quietly among relatives from his mother’s side, though his father and sister were later buried elsewhere.

His simple stone stands as both a tribute and a symbol—of family, of grief, and of connection to a church community even when geography seemed to place them elsewhere.

🕊️ “Little St. Joe” Today

Today, the old white-frame church still watches over the countryside from its perch on St. Joe Road, just nine miles from Lebanon. Behind it, the cemetery remains active. Inside it, the memories linger in the pews and floorboards. (As a side note: new hardwood floors were recently put down throughout the church.)

You can visit the church and cemetery by turning east off Route 412 into a large parking lot. A narrow driveway leads to the gate, where “St. Joseph Cemetery” is spelled out in iron letters. The building itself rests on a stone and mortar foundation, a testament to the labor of those early farmers and parishioners from 1908.

Volunteers continue to host special events, prayer services, and public programs. The building, lovingly preserved, remains open for the living, not just the dead. Thanks to their work, “Little St. Joe” lives on—not just as a memory, but as a presence.

📅 A Timeline at a Glance

1874 – St. Matthew Church founded (precursor to St. Joseph’s) 1908 – St. Joseph Church built; March: first Mass; August: dedication 1920 – School opens, staffed by Ursuline Sisters 1924 – Brief high school added 1970 – School closes 1995–96 – Parish officially closed 2001 – Property leased to St. Joe Community Center, Inc. 2008 – 100th Anniversary Homecoming Mass 2010 – Church added to National Register of Historic Places Today – A museum, performing arts space, and heritage site

From logs pulled by oxen to letters etched in stone, from school bells to final prayers, from the laughter of Christmas plays to the silent tears of a father at his son’s grave—St. Joseph Catholic Church in Raywick is more than a building.

It’s a story. It’s a memory. It’s ours.

🙏 Want to experience more stories like this? Join us on a guided journey through Kentucky’s Holy Land. Walk the paths, hear the voices, and stand in the places where history lives on.

📍 Visit HistoricHeartlandTrails.com or follow us right here to learn more, book a tour, or just share in the stories that connect us.

Come ride along. The story’s not over yet. 🕊️💒

05/09/2025
05/02/2025


from Wanda Simmons
If you are interested in learning more about the 2025 Southern Maryland Genealogy and History Conference, being held from Thursday, June 26th, 2025, to Monday, June 30th, 2025, at the Maryland Veterans Memorial Museum, please join our Facebook Group, Southern Maryland Families, on Saturday, May 3rd, 2025, at 11am EST, for our open group forum! We will provide more information about the conference, answer questions, and go over the conference agenda.
Hope to see you on Saturday!

https://fb.me/e/3aMMEthHj

04/20/2025

Sharing from Wanda Simmons who is the contact for 2025 event in Maryland -

Attention Group Members!
Urgent update for our upcoming Southern Maryland Genealogy and History Conference!
All attendance confirmations and payments, including for the conference book, must be received by mail by June 1st, 2025. No walk-ins, payments, or conference book sales will be accepted at the front door.
The change has been made to allow full participation in the conference without the need for attendees to volunteer their time at the front desk for an extended period. This also ensures efficient attendee sign-in. The check-in will be completed by 9:15am each day, after which the doors will close to begin the day's activities.
Once again, all signed agreement forms and payments must be received by 6/1/2025. No payments and walk-ins will be taken at the door. Additionally, all participants MUST be 18 years of age or older to attend the conference. THERE WILL BE NO EXCEPTIONS!
If you have any questions or comments, please contact me through PM and/or my email, cbs6395@comcast.net.

03/27/2025

Please note Kentucky group is sharing info for Maryland group event lead Wanda Simmons -
ATTENTION!!! INFORMATION ABOUT 2025 SOUTHERN MARYLAND CONFERENCE UPDATE MEETING!!
Our next Conference Update Zoom Meeting will be on Saturday, March 29th, 2025, at 11:00am EST. We will provide the latest updates, our Conference package, list of confirmed guest speakers, etc. The Link is posted below.
Hope to see you at our update meeting on March 29th!
Take Care!
Wanda
Wanda Simmons is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.
Topic: 3/29/2025 Zoom Meeting
Time: Mar 29, 2025 11:00 AM Eastern Time (US and Canada)
Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84268221944...
Meeting ID: 842 6822 1944
Passcode: 249954
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One tap mobile
+13017158592,,84268221944 #,,,,*249954 # US (Washington DC)
+13092053325,,84268221944 #,,,,*249954 # US

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Shepherdsville, KY
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