The Church of St. Joseph began as a mission in Bronxville by neighboring
Church of the Immaculate Conception of
Tuckahoe in 1905. Having no dedicated structure, masses were celebrated in the ballroom of the illustrious Hotel Gramatan by Immaculate Conception pastor John McCormack who traveled by horse each Sunday. The first masses were attended by only seventeen families. In 1906, the mission purchased a former Bronxville schoolhouse on the corner of Park Place and Kraft Avenue, converting it into St. Joseph's Chapel. The once-small Bronxville Catholic community grew rapidly. In 1922, the mission was elevated to an official parish of the archdiocese by
Patrick Cardinal Hayes, Joseph L. McCann its first pastor. The church quickly outgrew its home and began construction on the present-day church building on the corner of Kraft Avenue and Cedar Street, having raised $50,000 over the preceding four years. The new building was designed by Yonkers architect William H. Jones in the
English Gothic Revival style, constructed from stones quarried locally in Westchester. In 1927, the church was dedicated by Hayes and was completed in 1928. The second pastor, Francis X. Scott, oversaw the opening of the school in 1951. Joseph Moore led the parish's transition following the
Second Vatican Council. Under Patrick J. Sheridan and James Connolly, the church and rectory were renovated and a pipe organ was installed in the church, as the staff was expanded. A parish center was constructed in 1986, which replaced the limited space of a previously used house on Meadow Avenue. During their time of residence in Bronxville, the
Kennedy family attended St. Joseph's Church. The young
Ted Kennedy was an
altar boy at St. Joseph's Church and in 1957 was married there to his first wife
Joan by
Cardinal Francis Spellman. St. Joseph's celebrated its Golden Jubilee in 1972 with
Terence Cardinal Cooke and
Theodore E. McCarrick (who would later become a Cardinal and
Archbishop of Washington) in attendance. == Parochial school ==