mwlogo.gif (8531 bytes)

by Fabian Parmisano, OP

CHAPTER 6 :

FIN DE SIECLE: NEW HORIZONS

[ Mission West 1805-1966 ]

Upon his death one of Vilarrasa's earliest novices succeeded him as major superior, Fr. Vincent Vinyes. It will be recalled that Fr. Vinyes was one of six novices coming to Monterey from Vich, Spain, in 1852. Because of his intelligence and learning -- before entering the Order he could speak several languages, was well versed in music, mathematics and science as well as logic, Latin, and Greek, and already had some grounding in philosophy and theology -- he was immediately put to work teaching, along with Vilarrasa, the young ladies of Santa Catalina, and when the friars and sisters moved to Benicia, he continued as convent professor and was warmly appreciated for his learning and pedagogy. Once ordained he remained at the Benicia priory as lector of the novices and students and in various administrative capacities, but we also find him now and again in one or other of the parishes entrusted to the Dominicans and giving retreats or parish missions. While still a young priest Vinyes was already known and respected not just by his Dominican brothers but by the California secular clergy at large, so much so that he was several times nominated for bishop. In 1873 Bishop Amat of Monterey proposed several candidates as his successor: Vinyes was second on his list. In the same year Bishop O'Connell of Grass Valley proposed Vinyes as his successor, and in the following year when the California bishops met for their first Provincial Council, Vinyes was their first nominee for Grass Valley. Rome, however, chose  Fr. John Prendergast, Vicar General of San Francisco. When Prendergast refused, Vinyes was again proposed. In response to this second strong recommendation, Propaganda Fide consulted Fr. Joseph Sanvito, the Vicar General of the Order, who replied that "Father Vincent Vinyes is deserving of commendation under every respect... I also judge him fit for the distinguished office for which Bishop O'Connell of Grass Valley is singling him out. However, on the occasion of a similar request for Father Vinyes, I pointed out the fact that his departure from his young Province would cause considerable hardship. Father Villarosa [sic] wrote to me on February 4, 1874, 'I thank you especially for your help in preventing that Father Vinyes should be named Bishop. In the present circumstances his loss would appear to constitute a great calamity for the Order in California.'..." In spite of Vilarrasa's objection and the Vicar General's implied agreement with it, the Sacred Congregation in January, 1877, designated Fr. Vinyes as bishop-elect of Grass Valley, which appointment he declined. He presented his reasons to the Sacred Congregation, and then summarized them for Fr. Sanvito:

I have always shied away from every type of responsibility where others are concerned, so that it was mainly to avoid the responsibility involved in the care of souls that I decided to join a religious order... When I stop to consider how many and great are the qualifications necessary for a Bishop, I cannot honestly find a single one in me. Unfit as I am to rule even a tiny community, how on earth could I undertake the administration of a Diocese? I am led to say this by truth rather than by humility.

One may, then, imagine Vinyes' consternation when in March, 1888, he was appointed by the Master General to succeed Vilarrasa as vicar general of the California congregation -- not as bad as the episcopacy, perhaps, but still an office heavy with responsibility for others. And how even begin to measure up to his predecessor? But Vinyes need not have worried over his inability to be and do as Vilarrasa, for now that the founding father was no longer there to guide and decide, the time was ripe for the leadership of the California congregation to become more diffuse.  With some lapses, more and more it would be the local entities, whether of institution or person, that carried the congregation forward into the new century.

As detailed above, toward the turn of the century, some of the small outlying missions began to grow into quasi-independent entities. Initially, in the late '50s and in the '60s those who had the care of the small churches of Martinez, Vallejo, Antioch, Concord, Pittsburg, etc., lived at St. Dominic's in Benicia and, on weekends, would travel to their respective assignments. Then small rectories, whether houses donated or built, would house a resident Dominican or two, who, however, would have as immediate superior the prior of St. Dominic's. Finally, the church would become a parish in its own right and the rectory a formal house with its own superior. Thus in catalogi prior to 1914, Vallejo, Martinez, Antioch, etc. are simply listed as under the care of Benicia. Whereas in those of 1914 forward each of these locations has a listing of its own with the names of the friars assigned and their designated superior (praeses, vicarius, superior) -- though they had been long since independent in practice of the motherhouse.

St. Vincent Ferrer's in Vallejo is a fine example of such evolution and expansion. It was in 1855, the year following the transfer of their novitiate and studium to Benicia, that the Dominicans began to minister on a regular basis in Vallejo. Like other small northern California settlements in the forties, Vallejo, named after its founder, General Mariano Vallejo, grew in population and size with the gold rush and the establishment in 1852 of the naval base on Mare Island. By the time the Dominicans arrived in Benicia it had become a fair-sized town requiring the Church's attention. Accordingly, each weekend one or other of the friars would either walk or ride horse from St. Dominic's to Vallejo some eight miles distant. An old time resident of Benicia, James Bolton, recalled seeing Fr. Vilarrasa making the trek from Benicia to Vallejo and back again on foot "until the neighbors bought and presented to him a donkey. He rode the donkey all about on his ministerial work."  Bolton might also have seen along the same route, and on donkey, horse, or on foot, Frs. Langlois, Aerden, Vinyes. Each in his turn would be heading for the small white church built in 1855 on land donated by General Vallejo. This, the first St. Vincent church, was located on Marin Street, between Capitol and Virginia Streets. It was reportedly a handsome structure: a low, white frame hall with five tall windows on each of its long side walls and surmounted by an open belfry holding the bell from the old Sonoma mission, a gift from General John B. Frisbie, son-in-law of General Vallejo. The seating capacity was about 200. It was on August 19, 1855, that Archbishop Alemany came from San Francisco to formally dedicate the church and celebrate the event with the local citizenry. On this same day Alemany performed the first Catholic marriage ceremony in Vallejo, uniting Simon Marion of Austria and Anna McCormick of Maryland, U.S.A. Within a year of the dedication, General Vallejo and General Frisbie, with their wives, Francisca Benicia Vallejo and Epiphania Vallejo Frisbie, stood proudly near the baptismal font while Fr. Vilarrasa baptized their infant daughters -- Maria Aloysia Vallejo and Epiphania Anatalia Frisbie.

It was not until ten years later that St. Dominic's in Benicia was able to supply St. Vincent's with its first resident pastor, John Louis Daniel, O.P. Previously, he, together with other of the fathers who came to Vallejo on weekends, was given over-night hospitality by Patrick Haggerty, who lived just a few doors away from the church. But now a small house was added to the church and in 1865 Fr. Daniel took up his residence in it.

In the meantime Vallejo's population had grown considerably. A much larger church was needed, and also a school. On August 21, 1864, Fr. Louis called a general meeting of the parish to discuss expansion plans. Various properties were considered, especially two areas offered gratis by General John Frisbie, now, by appointment of Governor Leland Stanford, commander in chief of the state militia. On September 4, 1864, the matter was voted upon by the whole parish, and the "hill site" at Florida and Sacramento Streets was chosen. Since Archbishop Alemany was adamant against parishes incurring debts, it was agreed to postpone construction of the church until the money was in hand. Several benefactors, besides General Frisbie, immediately stepped forward: Patrick Dillon, who offered to provide stone from his quarry, Thomas Toomey, and a most generous Peter Fagan who told Fr. Louis to "begin your church, Father, and if you run short of money, come to me and I will give you what you need." In little over a year, Daniel had the necessary funds in hand, and, on August 18, 1867, the corner stone was laid. In 1868, shortly after the new church was begun, the first St. Vincent's Church was moved to the top of the hill where, in 1870, when the new church was completed, it was converted into a school for girls staffed by the Dominican Sisters from St. Catherine's in Benicia.

As the church was being constructed so also was the rectory -- both buildings of stone quarried locally, and brick made of the adobe soil plentiful in the area. The new rectory was built with a view to the future growth of the parish, but also of the Dominican presence. Fr. Louis Daniel, of like mind with Vilarrasa, was apparently looking to the time when St. Vincent's would be a priory, requiring at least six solemnly professed friars, as well as a parish. The rectory's ground floor contained two parlors, two rooms for housekeepers, a dining room, and a bedroom. On the second floor were five bedrooms, a recreation room, and a chapel. Both church and rectory were built well for they survived the two major earthquakes of 1898 and 1906 and the rectory continued to house the parish priests until 1934 when it was replaced by the one presently in use.

Though eventually six, and even eight, fathers were assigned to the house, St. Vincent's never reached priorial status. When Fr. Louis took up residence, with him, as assistant, was Fr. J.P. Callaghan, O.P. These two increased to three in 1904, to four in 1912-13, and from then on the number fluctuates, from three again in 1914, 1922-24, 1932, 1935, to four in 1915-17, to five in 1918, 1926, 1937, 1939, 1941,  to six in 1936, 1938, 1940, 1943-46, and even to eight in 1947. In 1914, however, the house was raised from simply a parochial religious house to a domus formata or vicariate, even though at the time there were only three priests in residence. This meant that the friars had to be complete and exact in their religious observance. And in times of visitation they would be reminded of their communal as well as personal obligations. There might be extenuating circumstances diminishing the requirements of a given formal house, but the circumstances rather than the requirements were to be changed. Thus on the occasion of his visitation of St. Vincent's, January 29, 1916, the then provincial, Fr. Arthur L. McMahon, noting "the ill health of some of the Fathers" and "the many ministerial duties of all," granted that "the recitation of the divine office in common does not seem to be possible." Accordingly, "For the present this will not be required of them." The brethren were to continue their two periods of communal meditation each day, were to have specified communal grace before and after meals, and were to wear the habit when in the house, especially "at meals and when called to the parlor." But they were dispensed from communal Mass and Office. In the following year, however, in a letter dated June 15, 1917, the whole battery of religious observances is not only recommended but demanded of the community. After quoting from his 1916 visitation letter, requiring communal meditation and dispensing from choral office, Fr. McMahon continues:

The fidelity with which the Fathers have observed the      ordination regarding common meditation has undoubtedly brought upon the community and the parish many blessings.  Greater blessings may be expected through the community Mass and the recitation of the Divine Office in common. At last the time has come when it is possible for the Fathers to discharge these community obligations. It is needless to say that of the religious exercises of a community the most important are the Conventual Mass and the choral recitation of the Divine Office.

McMahon goes on to remind the fathers how important and serious this obligation is, noting in scrupulous detail what is expected of them by both Church and Order.

To what extent the fathers fulfilled their communal obligations, or in what spirit, it is impossible to judge. But that they knew the seriousness of them and their provincial's seriousness about them, is evident. The ministry of St. Vincent's that was meant to grow out of such communal living under its first pastors -- Frs. Louis Daniel, Mannes Doogan, T. Ceslaus Clancy, C.V. Lamb, J.D. O'Brien -- stretching from 1865 to 1921, we can only observe in general and surmise the rest. These years saw dramatic growth in Vallejo's general and in its specifically Catholic population. The fathers ministered to the people in and from St. Vincent's as also its mission church, St. Louis Bertrand, in southern Vallejo. They also had the care of the naval station of Mare Island. The parish school under the management and care of the Dominican sisters, now centered in San Rafael, experienced tremendous growth in these years. A "free school," meaning no or very little tuition, it began with five sisters from St. Catherine's in Benicia and fifty  young women. In 1883 it became necessary to add two classrooms and two more teachers. By 1893 the student population had outgrown the present building and so a new, much larger edifice -- two stories with basement -- was erected on the corner next to the sisters' convent. With the opening of the new school male students were welcomed along with the young ladies, resulting in an overall population of some 700 students. In 1903 a classroom was set aside for the smaller children in preparation for advancement into "St. Vincent's High." Thus began St. Vincent's grade school. The 1912 History of Solano and Napa Counties, after praising the school generally, adds that at St. Vincent's "The music department has been made very attractive and is presided over by very efficient vocal and instrumental teachers, all of which with the finely appointed library, tends to make this one of the most thoroughly equipped educational institutions of Solano and Napa counties. At present writing (1911) there are four hundred and thirty pupils in the school, under the direction of a corps of fourteen teachers. The teachers of the instruction have always been women of unusual qualifications and decided ability..."[4] The school served other purposes, too. In 1915, under the pastorship of Fr. J.D. O'Brien, the newly constructed high school was given over to the care of the many victims of influenza. The sisters and priests together with many of the laity of the parish cared for the sick and dying both military and civilian -- shades of the next World War, 1939-46, when the school and parish, under the leadership of Fr. Joachim Walsh, once again served the government by housing the headquarters of the 211 Coast Artillery Anti-Aircraft Division, with its guns set high atop the school roof, and by tending the sick and wounded at the Mare Island naval hospital.

The ministerial power of St. Vincent's early friars and sisters was amply evidenced at the funeral of its first pastor in June of 1896. Fr. Daniel was an energetic and prudent pastor with financial know-how, but even more he was a loving and loveable priest for his people, a devoted and pious religious, who served as confessor and spiritual director for priests and religious as well as laity. One of those whom he long directed was Sister Mary Louis O'Donnell, O.P., who during his tenure as pastor was teacher and principal of St. Vincent's school. She had had Frs. Vilarrasa and Vinyes as her spiritual advisors, and now she turned to Fr. Daniel. He was of special help to her when in 1887 she was elected Mother Provincial with the task of relocating the center of her congregation from Benicia to San Rafael. In this and in other tasks, almost impossible because of the financial indebtedness of her congregation, she relied upon Fr. Daniel for advice and help. His letters to her reveal his practicality but also his deep faith and simple piety. The material demands upon Mother Louis were real and had to be faced prudently and realistically, Fr. Daniel acknowledged, but the spiritual dimension was most critical and must never be neglected. So he wrote in February of 1894, after the sisters had moved to the new convent and school in San Rafael:

You must not impose upon yourself all the responsibility of the debt of Saint Catherine's. Some religious, I should say many, have no idea where money is to come from to meet their many needs. They have no sympathy with those charged with the temporal affairs of the community... I would suggest, also, that you commence a novena to Saint Joseph in March, and he will come to your relief. Have seven candles burning steadily during the novena.   Purchase the candles and send me the bill.  To this I will add one hundred dollars as an earnest of my concern."

And in April of the same year, when things began to look better for the sisters, he wrote:

I am glad to find, by your letter just received, that you are in a more hopeful frame of mind... You have a great load to carry, but it will help to lighten it by seeking the assistance of our dear Lord, His Holy Mother, and Saint Joseph. Frequently you must remind them of your own weakness and inability, openly declare to them, that when you unhesitatingly obeyed their divine call to enter their holy service, in the religious state and in a mendicant Order, it was entirely unknown to you that after long years of faithful service, you should be held almost exclusively responsible for so enormous a debt. You must humbly but earnestly remind them that your present indebtedness is not personal, reminding them gently how little it would cost them to help you in your present difficulty, to pay off a portion of your obligations.

It was such childlike faith and trust coupled with a realistic sense of the worth and demands of the temporal that endeared Fr. Daniel to all who were blessed to know him while he was alive and to honor him in his death. The reporting of his funeral is lavish. The whole of the city -- Catholic, Protestant, Jew, atheist, civic leaders, rich, poor, and plain ordinary folk -- joined in paying tribute to the man who loved and served all of whatever race, color, or creed. The bell tolled at the City Hall, flags were at half mast, ministers of other churches attended the services, over 500 representatives of different societies were present, and over 200 carriages with other mourners on foot formed the funeral cortege all the way to the cemetery in Benicia. This was a personal tribute to Fr. Louis Daniel, of course, but also to the other Dominicans, male and female, who labored with him with the same mind and heart.

A similar evolution appears in other of the early churches missioned out of Benicia directly or indirectly through one or other of its original missions. Some began small and remained so: St. Catherine's in Martinez, Queen of All Saints in Concord, and the churches of Pacheco, Sommersville, Nortonville, Brentwood, Port Costa, Crockett, Bay Point (Port Chicago), Oakley -- and by the early 1920s were no longer in the care of the Dominicans. But Holy Rosary in Antioch and St. Peter Martyr in Pittsburg experienced growth, though slow and modest.

Holy Rosary, as we have seen, began when in 1864 Fr. Vinyes was called from Benicia to attend an injured miner at the Empire Mine just south of the small town of Antioch. Every other weekend initially, but soon every weekend, one or other of the fathers from Benicia would serve the incipient parish. It was Fr. Thomas O'Neill, Irish-born but with the California Dominicans from the novitiate forward, who supervised the building of the church. It was begun in early April of 1864 and completed in the following September, as witnessed by Alemany's Journal of Correspondence for September 18, 1864 : "Blessed the church at Antioch under the title of Our Lady of the Holy Rosary. Confirmed about six."

For the next ten years Holy Rosary continued to be served from Benicia as a kind of extension of St. Catherine's in Martinez. Its records for baptisms, marriages, funerals show a variety of names of officiating priests, all assigned to St. Dominic's in Benicia at the time: Frs. Vincent Vinyes, Patrick Callaghan, Louis Daniel, Henry Aerden, Jordan Caldwell, Hyacinth Derham, Mannes Doogan, and, most prominently in those earliest years, Thomas O'Neill. It seems one father would work the missions of Martinez, Holy Rosary, and Sommersville for three months steady and then be relieved by another, who in turn would have his three month term. But it is O'Neill who is most featured as pastor of the several missions. So we read in the Monitor of May 10, 1873: "Fr. O'Neill, pastor of Antioch, Nortonville and Somersville, seeing the increase of population and the need of a cemetery, worked for six months to procure one... Blessing of the new cemetery took place on May 1... At 11:00 o'clock one thousand people from the area assembled for the occasion, a procession headed by Fr. Vincent and McGovern of Vallejo, Fr. Horgan of San Francisco together with our own pastor, Fr. O'Neill... Fr. Vincent spoke..." 

The upgrading of Holy Rosary from mission church to an independent parish occurred sometime in 1875. Fr. Patrick Callaghan, like O'Neill a native of Ireland but an affiliate of the western Dominicans, was named its first resident pastor. When he took up actual residence in Antioch is unknown. At the time of his appointment he was finishing out his term as prior of St. Dominic's in Benicia. Where he first resided in Antioch is also not known. There was no rectory at Holy Rosary until 1880, and even this date is doubtful. The first known mention of a rectory at Holy Rosary is in the minutes of a council meeting of St. Dominic's, April 9, 1886, when approval was given "to build a house in the town of Antioch for the Father who has the care of the church of that town." Up until this time Fr. Callaghan may still have resided at Benicia; or he may have been a boarder in one of the parish's private homes. This last surmise may be born out by the fact that in St. Dominic's council book an entry dated December 22, 1876, agreed to pay to "Mr. Griffin of Antioch one hundred dollars and to Mr. Swartz of Martinez fifty dollars for offices rendered to the fathers who have the care of the churches of Antioch and Martinez." Such payment may well have been for the fathers' room and board, including that of Antioch's first resident pastor, before a rectory was erected.

In the October 15, 1870 issue of the Antioch Ledger the Catholic population of Antioch was numbered at about one hundred, seventy-five more, it is noted, than when Fr. O'Neill officiated at the first church in 1864. Parishioners were mainly Irish, who had formerly worked the neighboring coal mines but, with local production steadily diminishing, joined -- some of them -- the incoming Italian, Spanish, and Portuguese ranchers in farming the rich soil of the area. The Southern Pacific Railroad also helped the population to grow. On September 9, 1878 for the first time a train puffed through Antioch and soon a station was established to accommodate the farmers. The Catholics were still mainly of Irish stock, but in the late '80s and early '90s we begin to find more and more Italian, German and Portuguese names recorded in Holy Rosary's baptismal registry. Some of these new-comers, however, were probably in residence in the neighboring fishing and coal-mining towns of Pittsburg, Somersville, and Nortonville, now  missions of Antioch.

By the turn of the century the Catholic population of Antioch had grown sufficiently to warrant a larger church. For some years pastor and people dreamed and made plans, both for a church and school, but it was not until March of 1905 that ground for the church was finally broken on 8th St. between G and H Sts. Dedication of the new church was scheduled for April 22, 1906, but the earthquake forced a delay of about six weeks. It was on Pentecost Sunday, June 3, 1906, that the dedication took place with the new pastor, Fr. Peter A. Riley, and his assistant, Frederick B. Clyne, as resident priests. The parish school was to remain a dream until some sixty-five years later when in September of 1955 Holy Rosary School opened its doors to its initial first-to-third graders. Yet all along, from the beginning of the mission to the building of the school under Fr. William Lewis, both the young and old of Antioch had their religious instruction from the fathers, from the Holy Family Sisters, and from the Dominican Sisters both of Mission San Jose and San Rafael, the San Rafael Dominicans becoming resident faculty and staff once the school got under way.

The parish, however, never reached a size sufficient to warrant more than two or at most three resident priests. This, together with the frequency of the change in personnel, suggests that the common religious life could scarcely be lived by the fathers stationed at Antioch. From 1874 to 1903 only one priest was in residence. Then from 1904 forward there is rapid fluctuation between two and three priests, with only one priest again from 1925 to 1928 and once again in 1935. The longest terms as pastor were held by Fr. Patrick Callaghan: from 1874 to 1888, and again from 1893 to 1902. The shortest term, scarcely six months, was that of the missionary to the Indians, Fr. William Dempflin, from June 26, 1892, to Feb, 11, 1893. It would seem he took over the pastorate simply to mind the house until the proper guardian could be found and he would be allowed to return to the work he loved.

Notes to ch. 6. Fin de Siecle: New Horizons

[4]. Tom Gregory, etc., History of Solano and Napa Counties, Calif.... pp. 827-28.

[ Mission West 1805-1966 ]