Saint Augustine Catholic Church History
Sixty years ago, Catholics on Signal Mountain were few and far between. The few that did live on the mountain's winding roads and in the hidden hollows traveled to downtown Chattanooga 's Saints Peter and Paul Church to hear the gifted Msgr. Francis Sullivan celebrate Mass. Signal Mountain itself was quite a different place then, too. Blissfully scenic, the mountain attracted vacationers and weekend visitors, but was still not greatly populated.
That Signal Mountain community stood in stark contrast to today's planned community developers and commercial retail centers. In 1936, the late Brother Gerard Kuhn, then superior of the Alexian Brothers' U.S. province, wrote the Nashville Bishop William L. Adrian from his Chicago headquarters asking permission to purchase the lovely, but desperately broke, Signal Mountain Hotel for use as a convalescent home for men and as the province's novitiate. Just as the bishop had given his permission and the sale had been completed, a number of non-Catholic Signal Mountain residents voiced their opposition to the plan and unleashed a furious, public, anti-Catholic attack on the brothers and the church in general.
Despite pleas from some influential residents, Bishop Adrian refused to revoke his permission and staunch supporter Msgr. Sullivan - a man of strong principle and even stronger determination - along with some of the Chattanooga 's Protestant clergymen, shamed to opposition into silence.



Since 1970, St. Augustine Church has been blessed with a series of dedicated pastors including Rev. James M. Bowling, Rev. Vincent J. Hines, Rev. Herbert W. Prescott, Rev. Vincent Kaufman, Rev. Paul A. Hostetter, Rev. T. Allen Humbrecht, Rev. Robert J. Hofstetter, Rev. Paul Valleroy, Rev. Peter Iorio, and currently serving are Rev. Patrick Brownell and Rev. Anietie Gerald I. Akata
By 1986, St Augustine had dedicated classrooms, a grand assembly room, new kitchen facilities and offices. The expanded space allowed the parish for the first time to host numerous deanery-wide events. Also expanding during Fr. Al Humbrecht and Fr. Bob Hofstetter's pastorships in the 1980's was the size of our parish family which has now grown to 350. In 1988, the parish built a shrine to the Blessed Virgin on the church grounds, which remains a peaceful and beautiful place for prayer and reflection. Additionally, a much needed columbarium has been added for the parishioners of Saint Augustine .
It was the first church in Tennessee designed with the then-new liturgical norms established by the Second Vatican Council. The fan-shaped church with its altar detached from the wall and facing the congregation, its separate Blessed Sacrament chapel for daily Mass, and its striking, if eclectic, appointments was held up as a model for the rest of the diocese. Indeed many churches built after that time resemble St. Augustine 's basic design.