This mix of  the pews resulted in the most integrated congregation in the entire country;  one large row of free people of color, one large row of whites with a  smattering of ethnics and two outer aisles of slaves.  Except for a brief six month period when its  sanctuary was enlarged and blessed in time for Christmas 1925,  St. Augustine Church has been in continuous use as a      place of worship until the present time.
              Saint Augustine  Church on November 21, 1842 and pledged to live in community to work for orphan  girls, the uneducated, the poor, the sick and the elderly among the free people  of color, thus founding the Congregation of the Sisters of the Holy Family,  after the Oblates of Providence founded in Baltimore in 1828, the second oldest  African-Americancongregation of religious women
               
            
            
              In the midst of all these things, Henriette Delille,        a free woman of color, and Juliette Gaudin, a Cuban, began aiding slaves,        orphan girls, the uneducated, the sick and the elderly among people of        color around 1823. Their particular concern for the education and care        of colored children aided greatly in the founding, financing, staffing        and administration of the city’s early      private schools for the colored. 
              At the urging of Jeanne Marie Aliquot and      the wise counseling of Pere Etienne Rousselin, the two women knelt publicly      at the altar of St. Augustine Church on November 21, 1842 and pledged to      live in community to work for orphan girls, the uneducated, the poor, the      sick and the elderly among the free people of color, thus founding the Congregation      of the Sisters of the Holy Family, after the Oblates of Providence founded      in Baltimore in 1828, the second-oldest African-American congregation of      religious women.
              Historical  figures such as Homer Plessy, of Plessy vs. Ferguson fame form the U.S. Supreme Court  decision on May 18, 1896 and Alexander P.   Tureaud, Sr., a giant among the civil rights attorneys of the stormy  sixties, were members of Saint    Augustine Church.There  is neither Jew nor Greek, there is nether slave nor free, there is neither male  nor female; for you are all one in Christ Jesus.
                                   Galatians 3:28