ST. LOUIS — Someone set fire to a seventh church in this city Thursday (Oct. 21), the latest in a rash of arson fires targeting predominantly black churches.
But the Shrine of St. Joseph on the outskirts of downtown, in what’s known as Columbus Square, is not a black church. It was a predominantly white and Roman Catholic church, dating back to 1843.
Capt. Garon Mosby of the St. Louis Fire Department said no one was injured in the blaze. No one was inside the church when it happened.
READ: St. Louis police investigate possible racial motive in string of fires at black churches
Fire crews showed up and saw flames coming from the front exterior rectory doors. They put the fire out with an extinguisher.
The first fire was Oct. 8. The others have come every few days since.
“This isn’t a north city problem, it’s not a North County problem,” Mosby said. “It’s a St. Louis problem.”
Firefighters from all 30 fire companies Thursday will be distributing fliers throughout the city to let people know about the reward.
It wasn’t immediately clear if the call reporting the fire came from an alarm sounding or if a police officer on patrol spotted the fire.
(Kim Bell writes for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.)