Early Catholicism on the Peninsula The first known Catholics in the
Virginia Peninsula were two
Dominican friars, accompanied by 37 Spanish and Portuguese troops and guided by a converted
Algonquian, in August 1566. Forty years earlier, the short-lived 1526
San Miguel de Gualdape colony with its Catholic faithful had been established nearby, but its precise location is not known. Ten Spanish
Jesuits founded
St. Mary's Mission, known more commonly as the Ajacán Mission, in 1570. One posited location for where they disembarked is present-day
College Creek. The entire encampment of Spanish missionaries and Native American converts was massacred by members of the
Powhatan people in 1571 with the exception of a single convert boy, who was rescued by Spanish forces from
Florida the next year. Nearby
Jamestown colony, the first permanent successful
English colony in the Americas, was established in 1607. The
English Reformation and the
Treasons Act 1571 meant that Catholic practice was prohibited, as well as banning Catholics from holding military and civic positions. Despite this,
archeological evidence
uncovered in 2013 shows personal devotion to Catholicism persisted in the Peninsula's English settlements. Among the
devotional articles found at Jamestown was a
silver reliquary in the coffin of Captain
Gabriel Archer.
Saint Bede Parish In September 1923,
Mexican immigrant and professor
Carlos Eduardo Castañeda arrived at the College of William and Mary to teach
Spanish. As the faculty leader of the Gibbons Club, formed on 11 December 1923 and named for prior Bishop of Richmond
James Gibbons, he and thirty students agitated for a priest from
Newport News to come to Williamsburg in order to fulfill their
Sunday Mass obligations. In 1929, $25,000 was given by Margaret Burns to the Diocese of Richmond for "mission churches in Virginia," with the money going towards two lots purchased with the support of College President
J. A. C. Chandler. In 1932, the Catholic College Chapel was constructed to meet the growing needs of the Catholic students and staff at the college. The chapel was dedicated to
Benedictine monk St. Bede the Venerable in October 1932. The parish purchased a building originally constructed as a
fraternity house, 601 College Terrace, adjacent to the original location of Saint Bede for use as housing by the
USO, in which thousands of soldiers and families stayed during this period of use. On 16 September 1947, the
Sisters of Mercy opened
Walsingham Academy, a
private Catholic school, in this building. After the school's move, the building served as a
rectory and is now a privately owned home. In 2003, the parish opened a church off of Ironbound Road in Williamsburg, about 1.5 miles from the original chapel. While the title of Saint Bede Catholic Church passed to this new structure, the National Shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham remained a part of and is managed by the parish. The
ordination of
Episcopal Diocese of Southern Virginia Bishop Susan Haynes was originally scheduled to take place on 1 February 2020 in Saint Bede. Petitions seeking for Catholic Bishop
Barry Knestout to rescind the invitation towards the Episcopalians resulted in international coverage of the controversy. On 17 January 2020, the Episcopal Diocese announced they were moving the ordination to a different church in Williamsburg, citing that the event was "causing dismay and distress" in the Saint Bede community and invoking the warning of
St. Paul against "pursuing behavior that might cause problems for others within their community." ==Parish church==