The first Europeans to set foot in Utah were Catholics.

Catholic

priests Francisco Atanazio Dominguez and Silvestre V. de Escalante

entered Utah Valley on Sept. 23, 1776, while the original 13 colonies

were fighting for their freedom. The French trapper Etienne Provost —

for whom the city of Provo is named — is believed to be the first

non-Native American to see the Great Salt Lake in 1824.

After

the Mormon pioneers, members of the Catholic faith were the first to

make their homes in Utah. In 1863, Catholic settlers started arriving

in significant numbers, working as miners and later as rail workers

during the completion of the transcontinental railroad in 1869. Since

then, the community has continued to grow.

Throughout

the years, Deseret News photographers have captured many of the

important events, individuals and places relating to Utah's Catholic

population. Photo researcher Ron Fox has culled the newspaper archives

for many of these pictures.

Catholicism

captured a firm foothold in Utah in 1873, when Father Lawrence Scanlan

was entrusted with the 800 Catholics among Utah's 87,000 inhabitants.

For

the next 43 years, Father Scanlan would direct the affairs of the

church in Utah, supervising the building of churches, schools and

hospitals in railroad junctions and mining camps. He was appointed

bishop of the newly created Vicariate of Utah and Eastern Nevada in

1877, which became the Diocese of Salt Lake City in 1891.

Bishop

Scanlan's influence is still felt in the state. He founded missions and

parishes throughout Utah. Holy Cross Hospital, All Hallows College,

Kearns-St. Ann's Orphanage, and Judge Mercy Home and Hospital were all

built under his direction. And on Aug. 15, 1909, thousands attended the

dedication of the Cathedral of St. Mary Magdalene.

Bishop Scanlan forged good relations with Utah's dominant religion.

The

July 24, 1900, Deseret News reported on a banquet in the Alta Club "in

honor of Archbishop Riordan and priests assisting Bishop Scanlan at the

laying of the cornerstone of a new Cathedral of St. Mary Magdalene last

Sunday evening."

In his remarks, The

Rev. Riordan noted: "One thing that impresses me forcibly on coming to

Salt Lake is the spirit of tolerance that is manifest."

In August of 2009, the Cathedral of the Madeleine, as the building is now known, celebrated its 100th anniversary.

According

to a story in the Church News on Aug. 15, "In opening remarks the Most

Rev. John C. Wester, bishop of the Catholic Church's Salt Lake City

Diocese, welcomed President Monson and his counselors. ... In

acknowledging the presence of the LDS leaders, Bishop Wester spoke of

the great working relationship shared by Latter-day Saints and

Catholics in Utah."

The photographs feature many of Bishop Scanlan's successors and many Utah Catholic institutions.

One

example is St. Ann's Orphanage, which operated for that purpose for

more than 50 years. On the May 24, 1902, the News noted that the

orphanage had been moved from a small space on 100 South into more

spacious quarters thanks to a gift from Senator and Mrs. Thomas Kearns,

"and so the institution, like the little waifs that it harbors, was

lifted out of the gutter, given good clothes and a higher, prouder

aspect."

The orphanage was converted into the Kearns-St. Ann School in 1954.

In

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similar fashion, the property where the Judge Mercy Home once stood and

ministered to coal miners suffering from black lung is now home to

Judge Memorial High School.


E-mail: mhaddock@desnews.com

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