DISCERNING THE PATH
Answering the Call to Serve
others. Whether through vocation, support, or formation, the Josephite community welcomes those who feel drawn to participate in and strengthen our mission.
Request Information – Josephite Vocation
Answer the calling
Founded after the Civil War to minister to newly freed slaves, the St. Joseph’s Society of the Sacred Heart is the only congregation in the American Catholic Church whose exclusive mission is to the African American community.
Josephite Spirituality is centered on St. Joseph and the Sacred Heart of Jesus. Under the patronage of St. Joseph, the first missionary, the Josephites are committed to the ministry of hope and the formation of faith among African Americans.
Since 1871, the Josephites have been proclaiming the good news through apostolic, parish and educational works as the needs and times require.
- The Society serves in parishes, schools and special ministries in the dioceses and archdioceses in the United States and the District of Columbia.
- The Josephites were instrumental in incorporating the African American cultural experience into the liturgy of the Catholic Church in the United States.
- Four Josephites and three laymen founded the Knights and Ladies of Peter Claver in 1909, which today is the largest fraternal organization of African American Catholics.
Contact the Josephite Vocation Ministry Office:
Phone: (202) 832-9100
E-mail: Vocations@Josephite.com
Mail: P.O. Box 65010
Baltimore, MD 21209
Are You Being Called?
It is only through the continued support of donors like you, that the Josephites are able to carry out their unique mission of service to the African-American community.
Please consider donating to one or more of our causes today.
Thank you for your support, encouragement and prayers. We Josephites give thanks for all who provide the financial resources needed for Josephites to serve the African American community. With God’s grace and your help, we will continue serving in the African American community for many more years to come. Donate here.
For more information, please contact The Josephite Mission Office at 844-249-5730 or missionoffice@josephite.com.
Are You Being Called?
Learn more about discerning your vocation, becoming a brother or becoming a priest.
Father Anthony Bozeman, SSJ
Vocations Director
Please contact Fr. Bozeman
E-mail: vocations@josephite.com
Phone: (202) 832-9100
Mailing Address:
P.O. Box 65010
Baltimore, MD 21209
Mary Immaculate Novitiate
Very Rev. Rodrick Coates, SSJ
Novitiate Director
1200 Varnum Street N.E.
Washington, DC 20017
ST. JOSEPH SEMINARY
1200 Varnum Street, NE
Washington, D.C. 20017-2740
Main: 202-526-4231
Fax: 202-526-7811
St. Joseph Seminary is located in the northeast section of our Nation’s Capital within blocks of the campus of the Catholic University of America (CUA) and the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception.
The main purpose of the seminary is for the formation of men for service to the Church, as Josephite Priests or Brothers. It includes Pre-Novitiate Formation, Josephite Brotherhood Formation, and Seminarian Formation for those in the Philosophy or Theology program for priesthood.
This building also serves as headquarters for the Josephite Pastoral Center, Josephite Archives and the Josephite Vocations Office.
Also, visiting small groups can utilize this facility for day-long meetings. Contact the Seminary Guest Master for fee structure and date availability.
Our Staff
Reverend Leo Udeagu, SSJ – Rector and Director of Spiritual Formation
Reverend Richard Wagner, SSJ – Spiritual Director
Reverend Cornelius K. Ejiogu, SSJ – Academic Dean
HISTORY OF ST. JOSEPH SEMINARY
MILL HILL (London 1871)
The English Society of St. Joseph for Foreign mission was founded by Father Herbert Vaughan. This was the first English-speaking foreign mission group in the world. Father Vaughan’s first priests were ordained in 1870 and were sent to Baltimore in 1871 at the request of Pope Pius IX to work among African Americans. That was the year a permanent seminary building was erected on property already owned in the Mill Hill section of London. The seminary was called “St. Joseph College.” The 147-year old College was sold in 2016 and its seminarians are now trained in several of the Society’s location.
ST. JOSEPH SEMINARY (Baltimore 1888)
Seventeen years later, it was felt that an additional seminary was needed in America. At a cost of $34,000, the empty, small Western Maryland Hotel, adjacent to St. Mary’s Seminary in Baltimore, would serve as a temporary site. It was named St. Joseph Seminary and dedicated by Cardinal James Gibbons on Sept. 9, 1888.
ST. JOSEPH SEMINARY (Baltimore 1893)
With an increase in members and missions in America, it was a time for considering an independent American community. The parent Society in London was widening its mission field and there was a fear of neglecting the commitment of serving African Americans and the problem of communication was evident.
A permanent split was sanctioned with five members agreeing to form the new American Society of St. Joseph of the Sacred Heart. Others returned to London or joined American dioceses. Father John Slattery was the first Josephite Superior and served as the seminary’s rector. The statue of St. Joseph in the 4th floor exterior niche now stands in the main corridor of the present seminary in Washington, D.C.
The new Society’s Headquarters were in the newly-built St. Joseph Seminary, also adjacent to the St. Mary’s Seminary where the students attended class. The new seminary was dedicated in October 1893.
The 129-year old building still stands as a city-owned senior center names for Josephite Father Charles Uncles, the first African-American priest trained and ordained in the U.S. (1891).
ST. JOSEPH SEMINARY (Washington 1930)
In the late 1920s, St. Mary’s Seminary planned to move from its downtown Baltimore location next to St. Joseph’s Seminary. Then, the Josephites decided to build in a new location amid a number of religious communities clustering around The Catholic University in Washington, D.C., and its school of theology. An imposing building in Georgian style, designed by the Boston architects, McGinnis and Walsh (architects of the nearby National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception), was completed in 1930 and dedicated on Nov. 12, 1930 by Cardinal William O’Connell of Boston.
The students initially attended Catholic University, but in 1934, the seminary formed its own Josephite faculty until 1968 when the seminary combined the Oblates of Mary Immaculate. Since then, Josephite seminarians have studied under a combined union of several religious communities, with the Dominicans, the Institute of the Divine Word, Catholic University and Howard University.
In 1959, the seminary saw the completion of the west wing, adding the beautiful chapel and a new library and auditorium. It was dedicated by Washington’s Cardinal Patrick O’Boyle in May 1959. Father Edward Casserly was the rector.
Since 1930, St. Joseph Seminary in Washington has hosted the ordination of hundreds of priests, including three bishops.


