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In former Camden firehouse, a beautiful renaissance

The ribbon-cutting ceremony for a new arts center just a block from his church Friday evening was an event the Rev. Michael Doyle didn't want to miss.

The Rev. Michael Doyle greeted by from (from left) William Butler, Kieshiya Davis, and Ronja Butler at the Camden Fireworks ribbon-cutting.
The Rev. Michael Doyle greeted by from (from left) William Butler, Kieshiya Davis, and Ronja Butler at the Camden Fireworks ribbon-cutting.Read moreAARON RICKETTS / Staff Photographer

The ribbon-cutting ceremony for a new arts center just a block from his church Friday evening was an event the Rev. Michael Doyle didn't want to miss.

So he had friends push him in a wheelchair from Sacred Heart Church to the former firehouse - another landmark that's been brought back to life during his tenure in Camden's Waterfront South neighborhood.

"I could walk, but when I get inside I'll have no place to sit," said Doyle, 81, who since March has had two surgeries and undergone radiation treatment for cancer of the jaw.

"It's hard to be tied down so much," he said. "But my mind is working. I have to trust God that I will come back to my strength."

Doyle's jaw is swollen, but his Irish brogue was as intact as his charm as he greeted well-wishers inside the restored Victorian structure.

It took about six years, 200 volunteers and $675,000 to remake the long-vacant city fire station on the 1800 block of South Broadway into gallery and studio space with soaring ceilings, exposed brick walls, and handsome woodwork.

"I sat on the bench outside with the firemen in the evening when I first came here," said Doyle, who became Sacred Heart's pastor in 1974.

The landmark brownstone church at Broadway and Ferry attracts the faithful from throughout the region.

The charismatic Doyle, whose monthly letters are legendary, has attracted support for Sacred Heart School and for programs such as Heart of Camden, a nonprofit that has renovated 350 Waterfront South houses.

Within a block of the church, Heart of Camden also renovated the former Star movie theater into the Michael J. Doyle Fieldhouse, a recreation center drawing thousands of visitors a month. It helped make possible the construction of the brand new Waterfront South Theatre, as well.

The new Camden FireWorks arts center adds another bright spot to the budding arts district in the neighborhood, where Sacred Heart also has been the catalyst for creation of a writers house now under construction.

The center will be named for Nick Virgilio, the late Camden haiku master who was a great friend of the poetry-loving pastor's.

"There's a wonderful quote from Dostoyevsky that there are three things that will save the world: truth, goodness and beauty," Doyle said. "And if the first two fail, beauty will do it. That's an article of faith around here."

kriordan@phillynews.com

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