Over
200 years ago, the first Catholic priests traveled from
New Mexico through Utah looking for an overland route to
the Pacific Ocean. Today, Catholics in Utah number well
over a hundred thousand, including 63 parishes and missions,
and 17 Catholic schools. An area of nearly 85,000 square
miles comprises the Diocese of Salt Lake City.
It
was in 1776 that Franciscan friars Francisco Dominguez and
Silvestre de Escalante crossed this territory with the help
of local Native American guides. Six months later, diminishing
supplies and threatening weather forced their expedition
to return to New Mexico. It would be nearly 100 years before
Catholic priests would formally establish their first foundation
in Utah Territory.
In
1871 Fr. Patrick Walsh built the first Catholic Church in
Utah, dedicating it to St. Mary Magdalene. Father (later
Bishop) Lawrence Scanlan arrived in 1873 to become pastor.
Soon he would be given responsibility for the pastoral care
of the Catholic military men, immigrant miners and railroad
workers who numbered in the hundreds. Small churches, schools,
an orphanage and a hospital were built, staffed by clergy
and Holy Cross Sisters, to serve the growing Catholic population.
From
that time to the present, this diocese has been blessed
with assistance from Catholic Mission Societies such as
the Catholic Church Extension Society, U.S. Bishop’s
Committee on Home Missions, the Black and Indian collections
and the Catholic Communication Campaign.
As
the nineteenth century came to a close, it was clear that
the Catholic community in Salt Lake City was rapidly outgrowing
the small church of St. Mary Magdalene. The time had come
for the Catholics to erect a landmark of faith in downtown
Salt Lake City.
In
1890 Fr. Scanlan purchased a lot where the present Cathedral
stands for $35,000. The Vicariate of Utah became the Diocese
of Salt Lake a year later, and a rectory was built on the
site by Bishop Lawrence Scanlan, the first Catholic bishop
of Utah.
Ground
was broken for the new church in 1899. Construction for
the building would last nearly a decade, costing a small
fortune for the estimated 3,000 Catholics in Utah at the
turn of the century. In 1917, the interior was artistically
enhanced and the church was renamed the Cathedral of the
Madeleine.
Seventy
years later, in the 1990’s, the inside of the Cathedral
was renovated and restored over a three-year period, costing
9.7 million dollars. It stands today as a beautiful monument
to the early Catholic Church in Utah, and is listed on the
Utah State Register of Historic Sites as well as the National
Register of Historic Places.
As
the Catholic population in the nineteenth century grew,
the number of religious women and men increased dramatically.
The Holy Cross Sisters opened schools as well as Holy Cross
Hospital where they ministered for over 100 years. Benedictine
Sisters arrived in Ogden from Minnesota to establish a hospital
and priory. The present day Christus-St. Joseph Villa was
opened for the care of the elderly by the Sisters of Charity
of the Incarnate Word from Texas.
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Trappist
monks arrived in 1947 to build their monastery in Huntsville.
Discalced Carmelite nuns from California founded Carmel
in 1952, now located in Holladay. There were Franciscans,
Jesuits, Oblates of St. Francis de Sales, Vincentians, Dominicans
and the Blessed Sacrament Community. In addition to the
Holy Cross Sisters, there were Daughters of Charity, the
Mercy Sisters, the Mexican Sisters of Perpetual Adoration
and communities that catechized in the Missions: Sisters
of the Holy Family, Our Lady of Victory Missionary Sisters
and Franciscan Sisters of the Atonement. So too hundreds
of lay women and men dedicated their lives in service to
the missionary Diocese in Utah.
Today
in the Diocese of Salt Lake City there are 19 religious
orders. There are over 200 priests, deacons, brothers and
women religious serving across the state, as well as thousands
of lay ministers. Varied ministries reach out to people
of different ethnic backgrounds, especially Hispanic people,
who make up a large percentage of the growing Catholic population.
Catholic Community Services (founded in 1945) helps refugees,
the homeless, the poor and other marginalized members of
society. The Intermountain Catholic weekly newspaper (founded
in 1898) provides a network of communication to a vibrant
community of faith.
Following
in the footsteps of two brave Franciscan explorers, the
Diocese of Salt Lake City has grown from its humble roots
as a missionary diocese of miners, immigrants and railroad
workers, to an important presence on the Utah landscape.
The Catholic Community of Utah continues to grow and flourish
into the new millennium.