After two years in Belize, Stanton left for priestly studies and was ordained in the
Philippines, during this time helping at the
Manila Observatory, which was a part of the Jesuit
Ateneo de Manila University. He returned to Belize in 1904 to establish the church at
Benque Viejo del Carmen on Belize's Western border with
Guatemala. Benque had been a mission station in the heart of
Mayan lands, but beginning with Stanton took on permanency. He described the parish in his letters home. "I have eight hundred people here at Benque Viejo. ... Some talk a little Spanish, but most of them Mayan. My district comprises over 30 parishes and I am the only priest." He wrote of battling his way for 40 miles through the bush, about 10 of it on foot with a 50-pound saddle bag after his horse slipped its halter. After Stanton contracted cancer, he returned in 1909 to the United States, where he died at the age of 40. ==References==