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You Can Visit The Actual Body Parts Of These Deceased Catholic Saints Right Now If You Want
Most of St. Frances Cabrini Is In Washington Heights, NY
Mother Frances Cabrini, who dedicated her life to serving the poor through her order founded in Codogno, Italy, wanted to go to China, but the pope sent her to the United States in the 1800s. Once there she founded schools, orphanages, and other organizations to serve the immigrant population until her death in 1917. You can visit most of her body at the St. Frances Cabrini Shrine in Washington Heights, NY - but the head you see is not hers. It is a wax replica. Her actual head is in Rome. Her heart is in Codogno, and a bone from one of her arms is in Chicago.
The Whole Skeletons Of St. Magnus And St. Bonosa Are In Louisville, KY
It was hard being a Christian in the third century. Many were martyred under the orders of Roman Emperor Diocletian, including Roman centurion St. Magnus and the virgin St. Bonosa. Their remains were interred in catacombs in Pontiani, Italy, until the 1700s when they were moved to Rome. In 1901, Pope Leo XIII had them packed up and shipped to St. Martin of Tours Catholic Church in Louisville, KY. That is where they are today. At the church's website you can watch their procession and reinternment Mass, which shows the saints' relics outside of their reliquaries.
The Skeleton Of St. Demetrius Is In Pittsburgh
As is the case with many martyrs of the early church, the details of St. Demetrius' life have been lost to history. But we do know where to find his skeleton: the martyr's remains reside in an ornate reliquary brought from Rome to St. Anthony's Chapel in Pittsburgh, PA, in 1880. (There is another, more famous St. Demetrius whose incorrupt remains are in Thessaloniki, Greece. Since the seventh century, a flow of myrrh has issued from beneath his crypt, which is why he is called St. Demetrius the Myrrh-gusher.)
You Can Visit The Body Of St. Victoria in Ohio
There are several saints named Victoria, but the one whose remains are enclosed in a wax figure resting in a glass reliquary at the Maria Stein Shrine in Ohio was a teenager killed for practicing her faith in the early days of Christianity. Her relics were brought to Ohio from Rome in 1843, and the three rings in the the palm of her hand were put there by the Sisters of the Precious Blood when the reliquary was opened and resealed in the 1870s - major relics like St. Victoria's are maintained periodically.
St. John Neumann's Body Is In Philadelphia
When John Neumann left Bohemia (now the Czech Republic) for the United States as a missionary in 1811, he may not have imagined just how long he would remain there. The future saint dedicated himself to serving the European (especially German) immigrants in the northeast part of the country until his sudden death of a heart attack at the age of 49 on a Philadelphia street. His relics remain in Philadelphia to this day at the National Shrine of St. John Neumann.
The Arm Of St. Valerie Of Milan Is In Thibodaux, LA
St. Valerie (Valeria, in her native language) of Milan's arm is encased in the wax figure of a young woman at St. Joseph Co-Cathedral in Thibodaux, LA. According to legend, St. Valerie is the wife of St. Vitalis, some of whose smaller relics now hang near her reliquary in Louisiana. They are the parents of the twin martyrs St. Gervasius and St. Protasius, whose relics are in Milan. Every year on her feast day, the firefighters of the town carry St. Valerie's relics in a procession in memory of the time their forebears rescued the relics from the 1916 fire that destroyed the original church. The procession and Mass begin a festival in honor of the firefighters, of whom she is the patroness. (She is also the patroness of Thibodaux.)