Born of Faith, Built on Sacrifice
It all started on a large expanse of land donated by Mr Ferdinand Hooper, a Togolese-born Nigerian resident in Yaba. The Catholic Bishop of Lagos at the time was Kwao Aggey, whose evangelical prowess extended to and beyond the Ipaja land. He approved the construction of the Boystown Project, and when he died on March 13, 1972, the building next to Hooper House was named Aggey House in his memory.
Then came His Eminence Archbishop Anthony Olubunmi Okogie, who appointed Reverend Father John Olufemi Burke to care for the Boystown Project. Fr. Burke sank a borehole, built a pavilion, and created a space for destitute boys to be trained in arts and crafts — a place that doubled as a worship centre. When the congregation outgrew the space, Hooper House and the Rev. Father’s House were constructed between 1979 and 1982.
In the last week of May 1984, His Eminence Archbishop Okogie donated ₦43,000 for a steel structure with an aluminium roof — and thus began, formally, St. Ferdinand Catholic Church, canonically received on 28th May 1984, almost on the very feast day of its patron saint.