The first Catholic presence in the
Florida Keys was established on
Upper Matecumbe Key by Spanish
Jesuits in 1566. The Jesuit superiors in
Spain abandoned the Florida missions in 1572 and the missionaries were recalled to
Mexico. They attempted to establish a permanent mission on Key West as early as 1724. However, the Native peoples on the Keys were unpredictable and the English raiders from the Carolinas forced the missionaries to return to
Cuba in 1727. Two Italian Jesuits from
Havana opened a mission chapel on Key West in 1743 for the Native peoples. The Spanish governor ordered them to return to Cuba as well as he could not protect them. The Rev. John F. Kirby was sent by Bishop
Francis X. Gartland of the
Diocese of Savannah to Key West in 1851 and established St. Mary Star of the Sea parish in 1851. The first permanent Catholic Church on Key West was dedicated on February 26, 1852, on the corner of Duval and Eaton Streets. It was the fifth Catholic parish established in the state of Florida and the first parish in South Florida. The present structure was built in 1905. The Jesuits ended their service to the parish after seventy-two years in 1970 and the Rev. Charles Zinn of the Archdiocese of Miami became pastor. St. Mary Star of the Sea Church was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1971 as a contributing property in the Key West Historic District. Sunday masses are celebrated in English, Spanish and
Haitian Creole. ==Architecture==