1867 to 1880 With the purchase of Alaska from the
Russian Empire in 1867, it became possible for Catholic missionaries to enter the area. The first Catholic missionaries were two members of the
Oblates of Mary Immaculate, Bishop
Isidore Clut and Reverend August Lecorre. They traveled in 1871 from Canada down the
Yukon River to evangelize
Inuit and
Alaskan Athabaskan communities. At the end of their expedition, LeCorre remained at the trading post of
St. Michael in at the mouth of the river. In 1872, a mission was established in
Seward. St. Vincent de Paul Church was constructed in 1878.In 1877, Bishop
Charles J. Seghers and Reverend Joseph Mandart traveled to St. Michael, then went up the Yukon River to evangelize more natives. On visits to Sitka, Althoff would celebrate mass in an old Russian carriage barn. In 1882, Althoff was transferred to Juneau to serve the miners. He celebrated the first mass and baptism in Juneau in an interdenominational "Log Cabin Church" in 1882. The Alaska missions continued to expand as more missionaries arrived in the region. In 1894,
Pope Leo XIII erected the
Prefecture Apostolic of Alaska in Juneau, taking all of what was now the
District of Alaska from the Canadian
Dioceses of Vancouver Island and
New Westminster. In 1885, Althoff established the first Catholic church in Juneau. That same year, Reverend William Heynen opened the Church of Saint Gregory Nazianzen in Sitka. The first Catholic church in the new town of Anchorage was the
Church of the Holy Family, built in 1915. In 1916,
Pope Benedict XV elevated the prefecture apostolic to a
vicariate apostolic. The Anchorage area would remain part of the Diocese of Juneau and the remainder of the vicariate for the next 15 years. Northern Alaska was placed in the new Diocese of Fairbanks.The new archdiocese took the territory "lying west of
Mount Saint Elias and Icy Bay" from the Diocese of Juneau, along with the rest of the vicariate apostolic. The pope designated the
Church of the Holy Family in Anchorage as its cathedral church. The
Dioceses of Fairbanks and Juneau were now the suffragan sees of the new Archdiocese of Anchorage. After Ryan was named
coadjutor archbishop for the
Military Vicariate in 1975, Pope Paul VI appointed Bishop
Francis Hurley of Juneau as the second archbishop of Anchorage. In 1981, during a brief airport layover in Anchorage,
Pope John Paul II celebrated
mass on the Anchorage Park Strip before 50,000 people. Hurley resigned in 2001. To replace Hurley, John Paul II in 1991 appointed Bishop
Roger Schwietz of the
Diocese of Duluth as the next archbishop of Anchorage. As the archdiocese continued to grow, the Cathedral of the Holy Family became too small to host major diocesan services. Schwietz retired in 2015.
Pope Francis in 2016 appointed Bishop
Paul D. Etienne of the
Diocese of Cheyenne as the next archbishop of Anchorage. He was named
coadjutor archbishop for the
Archdiocese of Seattle in 2019. On May 19, 2020,
Pope Francis erected the Archdiocese of Anchorage–Juneau and suppressed the Archdiocese of Anchorage and the Diocese of Juneau. He appointed Bishop
Andrew E. Bellisario, then bishop of Juneau and apostolic administrator of Anchorage, as the first archbishop of Anchorage-Juneau. The Diocese of Fairbanks became the only
suffragan diocese of the new archdiocese. The
COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 delayed Bellisario's installation until September 17, 2020, with the laity restricted to virtual attendance. The pope designated the Cathedral of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Anchorage as the cathedral for the new archdiocese and the Co-Cathedral of the Nativity of the Virgin Mary in Juneau as the co-cathedral. The Cathedral of the Holy Family in Anchorage became a parish church. == Coat of arms of Archdiocese of Anchorage-Juneau ==