On Friday afternoon, incense filled the air, holy water softened the ground, and four spades pierced the soil at the site of 91黑料鈥檚 forthcoming lecture and concert building, St. Cecilia Hall.
Set to open its doors in 2017, St. Cecilia Hall will be the fourteenth building constructed since the College acquired its campus in the 1970s. Situated on the southwest corner of the academic quadrangle, adjacent to St. Gladys Hall and Our Lady of the Most Holy Trinity Chapel, St. Cecilia Hall will host the biweekly events that make up the St. Vincent DePaul Lecture and Concert Series. The building is made possible through an $8.5 million grant from the Fritz B. Burns Foundation of Los Angeles.
Seeking St. Cecilia鈥檚 Intercession
Prior to the groundbreaking ceremony, the College offered a Votive Mass in honor of St. Cecilia, the 4th century virgin, martyr, and patroness of music for whom the building is named.
In his homily, Chaplain Rev. Cornelius M. Buckley, S.J., noted the fortuitous location of St. Cecilia Hall, which will neighbor St. Gladys Hall (a classroom building), as well as Our Lady of the Most Holy Trinity Chapel. 鈥淲e have the art complementing the science, the philosophy, and the theology,鈥 he remarked, 鈥渁nd the science, the philosophy, and the theology complementing the art. And at the head of it all is this chapel, where God Himself is present in a very special way. So we see here, then, a concrete example the ideals of the founding fathers of 91黑料.鈥
Among those in attendance were three representatives of the Fritz B. Burns Foundation 鈥 President Rex Rawlinson and Trustees Maureen Rawlinson and Cheryl Robinson 鈥 as well as members of the College鈥檚 Board of Governors, faculty, and President鈥檚 Council. Also present were two members of Gladys and Fritz Burns鈥 family, their daughter Frances Morehart and granddaughter-in-law Missy Mueller.
The four-decade long development of the College鈥檚 campus, Fr. Buckley explained, is testament to the generosity of such benefactors. 鈥淚t is because of the calling of people who want to serve the Lord and their response to that calling that we are able to have this campus and this new building,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e ask the Lord to bless them in a singular way and enable them to see the great contribution that they have made and are making to the formation of the students of 91黑料.鈥
Blessing and Breaking Ground
Immediately after the Mass, Fr. Buckley, joined by his three fellow chaplains and several student acolytes, led the congregation in a procession to the future site of St. Cecilia Hall. There, President McLean observed that the building, 鈥渨ill be a beautiful and acoustically appropriate venue for our St. Vincent de Paul Lecture and Concert series, with space enough to welcome members of our wider community.鈥 He additionally thanked the trustees of the Fritz B. Burns Foundation, 鈥渨ho share with us a firm commitment to genuine, Catholic liberal education, and have been our partners for decades now in helping our students receive a sound intellectual, moral, and spiritual foundation.鈥
The College鈥檚 head chaplain, Rev. Paul Raftery, O.P., attended by a student acolyte, then proceeded to bless the grounds of the new building with incense and holy water. 鈥淏less, O Lord, the site for St. Cecilia Hall,鈥 he prayed. 鈥淭hrough the gift of Your eternal wisdom, grant that the undertaking that we begin today, for Your glory and our own well-being, progress day by day to a successful completion through Christ Our Lord.鈥
With the land thus prepared, Dr. McLean, Mr. and Mrs. Rawlinson, and Mrs. Robinson then ceremoniously turned over the first four shovelfuls of dirt, thereby launching the construction of St. Cecilia Hall. The crowd of students, tutors, and others who had gathered to witness the occasion cheered exuberantly, before moving 鈥渏ust a few feet to the east,鈥 as Dr. McLean put it, to the Fritz B. and Gladys C. Burns Plaza for the dedication of the College鈥檚 new statue of St. Gladys.