| 2nd Sunday | 11:45 AM |
| 4th and 5th Sundays | 8:00 AM |
In 1851, Eutaw was mentioned as a Mission attached to Saint John the Baptist Parish, Tuscaloosa and remained a mission through more than a century. Through this West Alabama county DeSoto and his priests passed in 1540-4 1. The French exiles who tried to settle in this section in 1818-20 were also Catholics, but few of their descendants kept the Faith. In the spring of 186 1, Bishop John Quinlan and his companion, Father Jeremiah F. Trecy, while on a tour of Central Alabama and administering the Sacrament of Confirmation along the route, visited Eutaw.
Saint Mary's Church, the first Catholic church to be erected in Greene County, Alabama, was planned and built in 1948 by Reverend Michael Finneran, then pastor of Saint Leo the Great. Father Finneran left to become a chaplain in the US. Armed Forces in 1949. Father William Jones was appointed pastor of Saint Leo the Great and its missions in 1950. He completed the church. The Catholic people of the Eutaw area were attended by pastors and their assistants from Saint Leo the Great parish, Demopolis, until 1972 when it became a Mission of Saint Francis of Assisi, Livingston.
Rev. Paschal Rys, O.F.M., was appointed pastor of the Livingston Parish and its missions in 1972; he was succeeded by Rev. Luke Dyjak, O.F.M. in 1973 and then by Rev. Camillus Blazak, O.F.M. in 1974. In 1979 Rev. Adrian van Ruijven, M.H.M. was given the care of the parish. He was succeeded by Rev. Paul Aronica S.D.B. and Brother Charles Todel, S.D.B. In 1989 Rev. Paul Stephen Holt served the community in Eutaw.
In 1991 the churches in Eutaw and Livingston were administered by Holy Spirit church in Tuscaloosa. In 1995 the West Alabama Missions were organized and included churches in Eutaw, Livingston and Reform. The administrator of the Missions was Rev. David Buchanan. In 1998, the parish in Eutaw was again placed under the care of Saint Leo the Great in Demopolis. Rev. Robert Sullivan was appointed as pastor.
The Consolata Sisters have worked among the poor, the aged, the ill, and especially with the African-American children of Eutaw and Greene county. The Sisters combine spiritual and temporal acts of charity and mercy to all who need it - from visiting families to procuring money to roof a house.