The original St. Joseph's
Church was called San Jose de Guadalupe built on the site of the current basilica in 1803, and was the first non-
mission parish built in California for the benefit of Spanish settlers instead of the Mission Indians (Ohlone). The Pueblo de San Jose de Guadalupe was connected with Mission Santa Clara by
The Alameda which was part of the historic
El Camino Real. The original
adobe structure was damaged by
earthquakes in 1818 and 1822. In 1835, prominent
Californio businessman
Antonio Suñol donated the land at the northeast corner of the Plaza del Pueblo (modern
Plaza de César Chávez) for the construction of a new, larger adobe church. Suñol, alongside his brother-in-law
Antonio María Pico (who served as
Alcalde of San José at the time), oversaw the construction of the church for the next eight years until its completion and consecration in 1846. In 1842, Suñol petitioned
Francisco García Diego y Moreno, the
Bishop of the Californias, for proper religious vestments and relics for the church. The second church was severely damaged by the
1868 Hayward earthquake. Work on the third church began in 1869. The third church was destroyed by fire in 1875, and a temporary fourth church was built a few blocks away while the fifth and current church was being constructed. The fifth church was dedicated by
Joseph Alemany,
Archbishop of San Francisco, in 1877 while construction continued. The current
portico was completed in 1884, and the large
dome was finished in 1885. In 1981, a major renovation project was begun at the church, which was to become the
cathedral for the new
Roman Catholic Bishop of San Jose. In 1985, the church was elevated to a cathedral, pending completion of the restoration in 1990. It replaced
Saint Patrick Proto-Cathedral Parish, located a few blocks away, as the cathedral of the diocese. The cathedral was made a minor basilica by
Pope John Paul II in 1997. The Cathedral Basilica of St. Joseph is listed as a
California Historical Landmark and is listed on the
National Register of Historic Places. ==Architecture==