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The Diocese of St. Petersburg comprises 3,177 square miles (8,230 km 2), encompassing Pinellas, Hillsborough, Pasco, Hernando, and Citrus counties. The principal cities are Tampa, St. Petersburg, and Clearwater. As of 2023, the diocese had a total Catholic population of approximately 500,000, with 280,000 of them registered with the diocese. [2]
The Cathedral of Saint Jude the Apostle is a Roman Catholic cathedral located in St. Petersburg, Florida, United States. It is the seat of the Diocese of St. Petersburg. St. Jude Parish was founded in 1950. [3] The first church building, now Our Lady's Chapel, was completed the following year.
Diocese of Kearney: St. James Church •1912.03.08: Established as the Diocese of Kearney with territory from the Diocese of Omaha •1917.04.11: See transferred and title changed to Diocese of Grand Island •1995: Title of Bishop of Kearney Restored as Titular Episcopal See [15] Diocese of Lead: St. Patrick Church
Lynch continued the reorganization and management of the Diocese of St. Petersburg begun under Bishop Favalora. He commissioned the building of the Bishop W. Thomas Larkin Pastoral Center in St. Petersburg, which was dedicated on March 31, 2000 He also took an active role in planning for the future construction of new Catholic high schools, and ...
The church is home to Sacred Heart Parish, part of the West Hillsborough Deanery of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Saint Petersburg. [ 4 ] The first Catholic parish on Florida's West Coast was established in 1860 and named St. Louis Parish in honor of Fr. Luis de Cancer , a Dominican missionary who was martyred on the shores of Tampa Bay in 1549.
Tampa Catholic High School alumni (17 P) Pages in category "Roman Catholic Diocese of Saint Petersburg" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total.
It is located in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Saint Petersburg. The campus was originally opened in February 1957 as Bishop Barry High School for boys. In 1973, Bishop Barry High School and the nearby Notre Dame Academy for girls merged to become St. Petersburg Catholic High School. [2] (A decade earlier, St. Paul's High School for girls was ...
In 2004, the Catholic Press Association selected the paper to receive the Bishop John England Award for First Amendment rights, freedom of the press and/or freedom of religion. [5] In 2008, the paper was published for the final time in the St. Petersburg Diocese. It began production of a new publication for that diocese, Gathered, Nourished ...