In 1740, the ecclesiastical parish and chapel relocated to the present-day site of the church on the eastbank of the Mississippi River. A log cabin structure was built and both the ecclesiastical parish and chapel were renamed St. Charles in honor of St. Charles Borromeo.
The log cabin chapel built in 1740, burned in 1806 and was replaced by a wood-framed church painted red during that same year. The church became known as the "Little Red Church". It was a famous riverboatlandmark where boat captains traditionally paid off their crews. In 1877, a fire destroyed the rectory and left the church without a pastor. Starting in 1890, the church entered a period of interdiction, losing the pastoral support of ArchbishopFrancis Janssens due to conflicts with the church charter and wardens. In 1917, a parochial charter was adopted and St. Charles Borromeo ecclesiastical parish was reinstated to the diocese by Archbishop James Blenk. In 1921, the "Little Red Church" burned and the current church was built on the property that same year.
St. Charles Borromeo Church
St. Charles Borromeo Church was dedicated on January 25, 1922. It was constructed with a white façade and a Spanish tile roof. A statue of Saint Charles Borromeo is enshrined in front of the church. The altar stone of the church rests on a walnut treetrunk imported from Arona, Italy. The tree is estimated to be four-hundred years old and dates back to the time Charles Borromeo was in Arona, Italy. In 1929, a convent was built and the rectory was rebuilt by elevating the ground buildings and closing in the ground level.
Cemetery
A cemetery was established at the site as early as 1723. It was commonly known as "Red Church Cemetery," or "Little Red Church Cemetery" after the Little Red Church was constructed. It is now the St. Charles Borromeo Cemetery. The Destréhan Family tombs are located in the cemetery. Louisiana state senatorJean Noël Destréhan, who died in 1823, is buried in the cemetery, but his grave was lost due to the shifting Mississippi River. He is the namesake for the town, one-time owner of Destrehan Plantation, and the first U.S. Senator elected from Louisiana, along with Allan B. Magruder. Nicolas Noël Destréhan, fourth son of Jean Noël Destréhan, and another son René Noël Destréhan, are buried in the cemetery; as is their sister, Marie Eléonore "Zelia" Destréhan Henderson. The oldest remaining burial plot is of Elizabeth Dubord, who died in 1777. This plot also contains the remains of François Trepagnier, who died in the 1811 German Coast uprising.