, and its church The majority of Belgian Americans are
Roman Catholic although some are
Presbyterians and
Episcopalians. By 1900, Belgian religious orders were present in 16 states. The
Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur established bilingual schools in 14 of those states, and the Benedictines built missions in the
West. The Jesuits founded
St. Louis University in 1818, expanding the university's influence with Belgian teachers and benefactors. Belgian immigrants do not usually have churches of their own and attend Catholic churches that were founded by other ethnic Catholics. However, two more-homogeneous groups (in
Door County,
Wisconsin, and
Detroit,
Michigan) established churches of their own. Since then, Belgians have established several churches in the United States. In 1853, a Belgian missionary, Father Edward Daems, joined with a group of immigrants to establish a community in
Bay Settlement, Wisconsin known as
Aux premiers Belges (
Naar de eerste Belgen) ("to the first Belgians"). By 1860, St. Hubert's Church had been built in Bay Settlement and St. Mary's in
Namur. Also built in the 19th century were St. Michael's, St. John the Baptist, and St. Joseph's in Door County; the French Presbyterian Church in
Green Bay; and small roadside chapels for people who lived too far away to attend parish churches regularly. in Detroit, Michigan was built by Flemish immigrants in 1912 In 1834, Father Florimond Bonduel, from
Commines, was the first priest to be ordained in Detroit. The first Catholic college (1836) was operated by Flemish Belgian priests, and the first school for girls was founded in 1834 by an order of Belgian nuns. By 1857, Catholics in Detroit were a sizable group, and in 1884, the first Belgian parish was established. However, many Belgian Catholic parishes have disappeared or merged with other parishes because of the shortage of priests. == Military service==