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South Main Street, Waterbury, Connecticut; Feb. 10, 2010.

 

Parish History

 

St. Anne Church

French

Established 1886

400 households

 

The French community of Waterbury first met at a Grand Street hall and former Universalist chapel known as Trinity Chapel. Appeals were made to Bishop Lawrence S. McMahon, who on April 15, 1886, named Father Joseph W. Fones of Watertown to organize a parish. On May 2, 1886, Father Fones first celebrated Mass at the Grand Street hall for the French congregation, which had chosen St. Anne as its patron. Property was purchased at Clay and South Main Street. On September 2, 1888, Bishop McMahon blessed the cornerstone of the parish church on Dover Street, a structure dedicated on January 27, 1889. By 1895, Father Joseph E. Bourret had extended parish facilities by building a red brick school on Dover Street. It was staffed by the Sisters of the Congregation of Notre Dame and replaced the original school opened in September 1890 in the church basement. A new basement chapel was dedicated in 1908. The new parish church was dedicated by Bishop John J. Nilan on December 17, 1922. After 102 years of service, the parish school closed its doors in 1992.

Time (distance into the string) is on the horizontal. We start with the characters in ASCII order. Roughly speaking, lowercase is red and caps are blue. Every time a new character is encountered in the input string – the Canterbury Corpus’s copy of Alice – it moves to the bottom.

 

We can see, for example, word boundaries as the constant tiny green threads at the bottom. The line breaks every 60–70 characters or so appear as periodic orange threads. Occasionally something rare, like maybe an “X”, will appear and quickly float back up as it falls out of use.

 

The average curve here tells us the frequency distribution of the characters. Like most natural-language text, Alice roughly follows Zipf’s Law. This predictability is used by text compressors.

 

This diagram is related to but not the same as the lovely diagrams here, which did a lot to interest me in text compression in the first place.

 

If I weren’t lazy, I’d block-color vowels, consonants, punctuation, etc.

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