Originally home to the native
Dakota people until the signing of the
Treaty of Traverse des Sioux in 1851, St. Joseph was laid out in 1855. Writing in 1997,
Jewish-American historian of America's religious architecture
Marilyn J. Chiat described early settlement in the region, "Father
Francis X. Pierz, a missionary to [Native Americans] in central Minnesota, published a series of articles in 1851 in German Catholic newspapers advocating Catholic settlement in central Minnesota. Large numbers of immigrants, mainly
German, but also
Slovenian and
Polish, responded. Over 20 parishes where formed in what is now Stearns County, each centered on a church-oriented hamlet. As the farmers prospered, the small frame churches were replaced by more substantial buildings of brick or stone... Stearns County retains in its German character and is still home to one of the largest rural Catholic populations in Anglo-America." St. Joseph was named by early German and Slovenian settlers after the
patron saint of their newly erected log chapel. Pioneer settlement in St. Joseph is very important to the history of the
Slovenian diaspora. Pierz had previously brought with him from Slovenia his 12-year-old nephew Joseph Notsch Jr., the son of his sister, Apollonia Notsch. Notsch accompanied Pierz on trips, serving
Mass and cooking. In 1855, Notsch's parents and siblings became the first Slovenian family to emigrate to the
New World, and carried with them an altarpiece for Pierz painted by
Matevž Langus. The Notsch family was accused of foolishness by
Janez Bleiweis in the
Ljubliana newspaper
Novice. Apollonia Notsch later wrote a famous letter from her family's
homestead in St. Joseph, describing the family's passage on the immigrant ship, her impressions of frontier life in the
Minnesota Territory, and her joy at having emigrated to America. The letter was published in
Novice and convinced many other
Slovenes to follow the Notsch family's lead. According to Bruno Riss, a
Benedictine missionary priest from
Augsburg and founding father of St John's Abbey, the May 1856 arrival of the first Benedictine priests in the area at the invitation of Bishop
Joseph Crétin was opposed by some local Catholic pioneers. This was because many local settlers had been
tenant farmers in the
German States and had emigrated to America seeking to own the farmland on which they worked. Recalling that
religious orders in Germany had often been their landlords and fearing that the Benedictine order might turn them back into tenant farmers, the parishioners wrote to the Bishop "begging him not to impose monks on them". The Bishop was outraged and placed St. Joseph under an
interdict until the parishioners apologized in August 1856. The Benedictines won the trust of local settlers by regularly helping them to both choose and defend their new
homesteads. After the lifting of the interdict against St. Joseph, the first
Rocky Mountain locust plague to strike Central Minnesota began on the
Feast of the Assumption of 15 August 1856, during the preaching of a mission by Father
Francis Xavier Weninger inside the newly erected
log chapel. The locusts darkened the sky and pounded upon the rooftop of the chapel so loudly that they were mistaken for a hailstorm. Only after the mission did the real reason for the "storm" become apparent, and the clouds of "hoppers" swiftly devoured both the crops and much of the seed grain, leaving the newly arrived settlers destitute. St. Benedict's Academy at Saint Joseph was a
Native American residential school operated by the College of Saint Benedict, opening in 1884. The school held
Native American women and taught them traditional school subjects, like spelling, reading, and math, as well as sewing, ornamental needlework, baking, cooking, laundry, dairy-work, and gardening. St. Joseph was incorporated in 1890 ==Geography==