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IN THE spring of 1870, seven Sisters of St. Joseph of
Carondelet stepped upon the soil of San Diego. They were the first Sisters ever
to venture to what was then a distant part of the Pacific coast. But they were
not to stay. They were busy arranging for a covered wagon and a driver for their
final trek to Tucson where they were to open a school at St. Augustine's
Cathedral. Their courage, however, must have impressed the zealous "padre" of
Old Town, Father Antonio Ubach, for time and again he requested that Sisters of
St. Joseph be sent to the little community in the far corner of California. He
even made the long trip himself to Carondelet, Missouri, to plead with Reverent
Mother Agatha Guthrie, who felt that San Diego was too far away. An unpublished,
typewritten manuscript in the archives of the Academy tells the story:
In his disappointment, he told of his thirty days of Masses
and of his confidence in St. Joseph, who had never before failed him. The
Superior General was much affected by the priest's faith in the power of St.
Joseph and answered, "This request must have come directly from our Holy
Patron, and the Sisters of St. Joseph will open your school in far away San
Diego."
By this time, Alonzo Horton had bought up acreage farther
south along San Diego's bay, a short distance from Old Town, and "new" San Diego
was flourishing. Father Ubach, too, had left the tiny Immaculate Conception
Church in Old Town, and in 1875, had built St. Joseph's Church on Third Avenue
and Beech Street in New Town. The manuscript continues:
On April 18, 1882, (he first community, consisting of
Sisters Ambrosia O'Neill, Eutichiana Piccini, Amelia Leon, and Coletta Dumbach
arrived at San Diego. On May 10, they began their day school in a small frame
house on a terrace overlooking the bay, registering on that day twenty-eight
girls and two boys. On June 13, the first Mass was said in the tiny chapel of
the convent, which was dedicated to Our Lady of Peace.
Numerous incidents in the lives of those four Sisters who
formed the first community of Sisters of St. Joseph in San Diego reveal the
courage it must have taken to blaze new trails in the early days. Sister
Ambrosia O'Neill had been appointed superior. She was destined, four years
afterward, to become superior at the Indian Mission in Yuma, Arizona, where she
was known throughout the scattered Yuma tribes as "El Capitan." It was against
her that hostile Indians planned an attack. Warned by a faithful neophyte, she
escaped from the convent. When the attacking Indians rushed into the building
they found instead of their victim a well-armed band of Yumas. The marauders
were defeated and their leader sentenced to a prison term by the United States Government.
Sister Amelia Leon had been one of the first postulants to
enter Mt. St. Joseph's Novitiate in Tucson, where descendants of her family
still rank among the city's leading citizens.
Sister Coletta Dumbach had come from St. Louis, as had Sister
Eutichiana Piccini, although the latter had come west six years before the
opening of the school in San Diego. In 1876, together with two companions, she
formed the first group to join the original seven pioneers in Tucson. The labor
in such distant outposts was strenuous enough, but in those days, the
difficulties of travel made getting to the mission fields an arduous struggle in
itself. These three had traveled by train from St. Louis to
San Francisco. From there, they had sailed by steamer around the Cape of San
Lucas, up the Gulf of Baja California, to the mouth of the Colorado River, where
they boarded a small river boat which took them as far as Yuma. The journey to
Tucson was completed by covered wagon.
These four Sisters, according to carefully preserved records,
with $50.00 received from Father Ubach, opened the little school on Second
Avenue and G Street. The records also disclose that they paid, at first, $15.00
a month rent for the house and $6.00 a month for a piano. Later the house rental
was raised to $20.00. In August of that year, they collected $65.00 from the
people for furnishings, and in December, someone gave them a gift of $5.00!
By 1884, the two houses which the Sisters had been renting
proved inadequate and both their records and the typewritten manuscript give a
picture of the next step. The records for 1884 show that they received from
Reverend Mother $650.00 (two years later the Mother House sent $200.00 for the
grading of A Street), $700.00 from a Father Fisher, and $488.25 collected from
miners! They also list $2598.42 paid out in cash for the moving of two buildings
which were to serve as school and convent on the newly purchased land at Third
Avenue and A Street. The manuscript reads:
Accordingly, a block of ground was purchased in a part of
the city known as Horton's Addition, which was then a beautiful park in which
grew the choicest plants and flowers. The house on this property was used
temporarily for the school. Two years later, four lots were sold [the strip
along B Street] to obtain means to build the Academy that for so many years
housed the school at Third and A.
Present day San Diegans will recognize this as the site of
the tall downtown Medical-Dental Building. Mother Valeria Bradshaw had replaced
Mother Ambrosia O'Neill when the latter was transferred to Yuma in 1885, and she
remained the superior in San Diego until 1895. During this time, the Academy
Hall, facing Third Avenue near B Street was built. Also on the grounds St.
Joseph's Boys' School, affectionately dubbed "The College," was erected facing
Second Avenue close to B Street.
While Our Lady of Peace Academy was growing in these early
years, another project, dearest of all to the heart of Father Ubach, was begun
by the Sisters of St. Joseph. An Indian school near the Immaculate Conception
Church in Old Town was opened by Sister Hyacinth Blanc and Sister Teresa Ortiz.
The Indian School was named St. Anthony's in honor of Father Ubach's own patron saint.
Some records have been lost through the years, and only a few
scattered memories can be drawn together to restore the picture of the busy
school in Old Town. One former pupil, a Mrs. Julia Stewart, recalled that the
children sang a great deal. She told how they would hike to Ocean Beach for
picnics, and how the baker, each morning, would leave the bread
stacked on the doorstep of the school. Pupils and teachers at
the Academy in New Town at that time recalled a priest, whose name they could
not remember, who would stick his head into Academy classrooms once a week and
call out, "A bag of beans for Old Town!" No one remembered the implication of
the request, whether he was begging food for the Indians, or whether he was
simply picking up a purchase to be delivered to the Sisters. But everyone
claimed that the expression came to be an inseparable part of their memories of
St. Anthony's.
Later, when quarters became cramped in Old Town, Father Ubach
decided to move St. Anthony's out to the old Mission San Diego de Alcalá in
Mission Valley, which had been abandoned for years. He built two
large frame buildings, one for boys and one for girls, while the
Sisters occupied what part of the shambled adobe buildings they
could. Mass was celebrated there November 1, 1891, for the first
time since the withdrawal of the Franciscan padres
earlier in the century. Here again, memories of the Sisters who taught at the
Academy help give an insight into life at the Mission. The Sisters recalled
going there for picnics, outings which required long preparation because of the
great "distance" of the Mission from San Diego. Also, at certain
times of the year, the river was so high that the Mission could be
reached only by boat! So on picnic days the Indians would meet the
Sisters and girls from the Academy on the San Diego shore to row
them across. It was considered a memorable treat when an Indian boy
could be persuaded to row them up and down the river a bit before
landing them on the banks by the Mission. At times, the trip could
even be dangerous. Once Sister David, returning to San Diego from a
trip to Los Angeles, stopped at the Academy for a brief visit and
then expressed her desire to go immediately to the valley. The river
was at an in-between stage, not high enough for boating, but
considerably deep in places. Mother St. Claire asked for volunteers
to accompany Sister David. The livery stable rather reluctantly sent
a surrey and driver. When they came to the river, he instructed the
Sisters to sit on the top seat with their feet under them, and not,
on any condition, to cry out if they were afraid, because if they did, the horses would stop and
refuse to go on. The Sisters huddled themselves up as commanded and pressed
their lips to keep from screaming as the water filled the surrey right up to the
level where they were perched.
In 1907, Father Ubach died. From the time he had come to San
Diego in 1886, he had worked for his beloved Indians, traveling from village to
village caring for his "favorite children." Many times the Sisters at the
Academy had been without Mass during the week because Father Ubach would be out
in the mission field, and his one or two assistants would be caring for some
other of the scattered fold. It is told that when Father Quinlan opened Our Lady
of Angels parish, the second in San Diego, he asked Father Ubach what his parish
boundaries were to be. The padre answered unhesitatingly, "Sixteenth Street and
the Colorado River."
Father Ubach's funeral was said to have been the largest ever
held in San Diego. It was more than the romantic linking of his name to the
Father Gasparra of Helen Hunt Jackson's famous novel, Ramona; more than
the handful of sugar candies with which he rewarded the good deeds of little
ones. It was the caring faith that was within him—in spite of his gruff
exterior—that Protestant as well as Catholic, Spaniard, American, Mexican,
Indian, all recognized. The San Diego Union carried stories and pictures
at the time of his death. But one amusing incident appears to have escaped the
reporter's eye. Bishop Canaty had said the funeral Mass at St. Joseph's Church.
Either he had lingered at his thanksgiving, or had taken particularly long to
unvest, but when he came at last to the steps of the church, not one conveyance
was left. All had gone to the cemetery—all but two Sisters. One had been
instructed to toll the bell at the nearby academy until the last carriage was
gone from sight. The other Sister had been posted at the window so she could
signal to the bell ringer when to stop. Fortunately, the vigil-keeper saw the
frustrated Bishop and called to her companion to open the door immediately while
she put some coffee on the stove. The two Sisters, Sister Generosa, who was
later to return as superior and Sister Lilia spent the remainder of the morning
placating the stranded Bishop Conaty.
Father Ubach's will, still preserved at the Academy of Our
Lady of Peace, was a lengthy document drawn up by Judge Mannix. Among numerous
bequests is $500.00 to Mother St. Claire with the provision that for ten years
she would give $1.00 a month for Masses to be said for the repose of his
parents' souls.
At the time of Father Ubach's death in late March of 1907,
plans were being made to celebrate the silver jubilee of Our Lady of Peace.
However, out of reverence for their pastor's death, the celebration was
postponed until 1908. Father Ubach's passing affected far more, however, than
mere celebrations. Almost immediately, the Indians felt the loss of their
beloved teacher, and many of those who lived close to San Diego sadly gathered
their families about them and moved quietly into the back country. By 1908 there
were so few children left at the old Mission that they were taken to St.
Boniface Indian School, which had been established by the Sisters of St. Joseph
at Banning in 1890. Mission San Diego, once more, was left to the elements in
the lonely valley.
By this time the Sisters were also faced with the challenge
of teaching catechism to children in the little mission churches that began to
spring up in the outskirts surrounding San Diego. A number of these churches,
later erected into parishes, were built by Father Mesny, an historic and revered
figure in the annals of San Diego. The Sisters of St. Joseph generously accepted
the obligation to instruct the children of these outlying districts as well as
those within the boundaries of the city who did not attend the Academy. After a
full day of teaching school in San Diego proper,
transportation would have to be provided for the Sisters to
go to St. Joseph's; St. Vincent's; Our Lady of the Sacred Heart, East San Diego;
St. John's; and across the bay to Sacred Heart, Coronado. They had to take a
train to go to Mary, Star of the Sea, in La Jolla.
The Sisters had taught longest at the parish on Golden Hill,
Our Lady of Angels, and it was there, in 1912, that they opened their second
school in San Diego. Two Sisters started classes with eleven girls and twelve
boys. Sister Perpetua Malloy and Sister Serena McCarthy were the first faculty.
In 1921, St. John's School was opened by Sister Isabel Walsh,
who died in San Diego in 1953, and by Sister M. Florina. In 1925, St. Joseph's
Grammar School was begun under the direction of Sister M. Estelle Hanley. June
of that same year marked the last graduation from the Academy of Our Lady of
Peace on Third and A.
When Mother St. Catherine returned as superior in 1923, after
her term as provincial superior had been completed, she noticed how San Diego
had grown out over the hills and canyons and how the "downtown" section was up
to the doors of the Academy. It was time, she felt, for another move. After a
year or so of thoughtful investigation, Mother St. Catherine purchased two
blocks at the end of Sunset overlooking Old Town in St. Vincent's Parish.
Shortly after this purchase the city planned to put a street through the
property. Since only half a block farther was a canyon, the Sisters could not
see the good to either the city or to them of such a street, hence the
opposition was taken to court. No sooner had the case been won and the plans for
building actually begun, when a very quiet little priest rang the doorbell one
early afternoon. He asked to see Mother Catherine. "Tell her," he said, "it is
important. I won't keep her a minute if she is not interested." Mother sent word
that she was busy, but the priest repeated, "It is just so important that I see
her." Persuaded, Mother Catherine came downstairs and received Father Sullivan
in the fine old parlor. He had heard of a piece of property overlooking Mission
Valley that had fallen into the hands of a trust company. Mother consented to
accompany him to look at it simply because, as she said, "I can't refuse him."
The property was known as the Vandruff Estate, and an article
in The San Diego Union describes it:
. . . at Copley and Oregon Streets, comprising about 20 acres of land, adorned
by three large buildings . . . and featured by spacious gardens,
luxuriant shrubbery, a swimming pool, and a casino.The buildings were begun in 1916. Two were planned as
residences, the third was to be used as a scientific laboratory. With the
outbreak of the war, work was discontinued, and the interior of the structure
was unfinished.
Mother St. Catherine returned with a new determination
gleaming in her eyes. Reverend Mother Agnes Rossiter, Superior General, was
holding visitation in the West, and was, at the time, in Los
Angeles. The next morning, Mother St. Catherine boarded the train for Los Angeles and returned
that evening with Reverend Mother. Proceedings began the very next day. Word of
the desired purchase spread quickly and struck the flint of a fiery opposition
on the part of a gentleman in San Diego. Long distance calls up and down the
coast kept the wires buzzing. The struggle reached its climax the night of
January 25, 1924, and the Sisters spent that night in vigil. Their prayers were
answered, and the following morning The San Diego Union carried the
triumphant news, "Catholic Sisters Acquire Vandruff Property As Site For New
Academy."
Classes began at the new Academy of Our Lady of Peace, called
Villa Montemar, in September, 1925. The property at Third and A was sold and the
buildings themselves sold to Whiting Mead to be wrecked. An agreement had been
reached that anything attached to the building was to go to the wreckers. A bell
rested on the rafters high up in the already condemned
belfry. It was not attached to the building because in Mother
Generosa's time the cupola had become so unstable that the winds blowing in from
the sea had often tolled the bell. But the bell had been forgotten
in the excitement of moving, and by the time it was remembered, it had been claimed by
Whiting Mead. The great old bell, bearing the inscription "San Juan, 1790" is
believed to be one of seven bells brought to San Diego from Mexico in 1834 at
the time of the secularization of the missions. It has now disappeared with the years.
In the meantime, the city of San Diego continued to expand,
and soon a Commercial School was opened at St. Joseph's. In 1936, San Diego was,
for the second time, marked with the distinction of being made a diocese. Many
year before, Bishop Amat had found little to encourage him in the unkempt
village, and in two months had moved his episcopal throne to Santa Barbara. His
Excellency, Bishop Charles F. Buddy came to San Diego, courageous and willing to
meet the challenge of the distant diocese with its far-flung boundaries and
scattered cities. He was welcomed by the priests, Sisters and lay-people who
loyally placed themselves under his guidance.
In 1937, a ninth grade was added to St. Joseph's Grammar
School, and in 1939 Cathedral Girls' High School was established, the first
graduating class receiving their diplomas in 1943. For nine years, the Sisters
of St. Joseph of Orange taught with the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet, but
in 1948 the former withdrew and the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet moved
into the convent on Fourth and Cedar and completely staffed Cathedral Girls'
High School under the direction of Sister M. Adrienne. Eventually the
Commercial School became incorporated with the high school.
The Sisters opened St. Patrick's School in 1944, with Sister
Margaret Clare in charge; St. Brigid's, Pacific Beach, in 1948, under the
direction of Sister Mary Helen. Regina Coeli Academy, a high school
located in Our Lady of Angels parish, opened in 1947, with Sister M. Carmelita
as principal. St. James School, Del Mar, under the direction of Sister St. Anne
was established in 1952. A parochial school in Banning, Precious Blood, was
erected in 1953 with Sister Agnes Francis in charge. Our Lady of Perpetual Help
School opened in Lakeside in 1961; and, lastly, the Sisters staffed All Hallows
School in La Jolla from 1964 to 1977.
When in 1907, a lady of the parish visited the failing Father
Ubach to ask about plans for the silver jubilee of the Academy, he had answered,
"You have my full approval. Do all and everything to manifest the appreciation
of the work of the good Sisters. They have been in my parish for so many years,
and I have always found them the same humble, obedient, and unselfish women—such as we know them today." Half a century later, a Sister begged for
reminiscences of early San Diego from a valiant woman who had spent much of her
young professed life as well as many more of her
mature years as superior at Our Lady of Peace Academy.
Suddenly, Sister Generosa straightened up and in her firm way answered, "Yes, I
can sum up for you all the years in San Diego. It was a lot of work, but we
always did it together."
One hundred years! It is misleading to measure this span of
time in years, for it has worked changes that tend to dim our appreciation of
the past. Eighteen-eighty-two! San Diego was not the beautiful city we know
today. Dirt roads ambled about uneven hills, and deep canyons gorged between
streets. Travel was, at best, uncomfortable, and the Sisters of St. Joseph had
traveled far.
No neatly furnished convent or well-equipped school awaited
them. Theirs was actual poverty and hard physical labor. But San Diego grew, and
with it grew the Sisters of St. Joseph. A spacious day and boarding school
emerged from an old frame building. The select school for young ladies gave
culture and finish to its graduates in the early years of this twentieth century.
With World War II, San Diego's strategic harbor drew
thousands, and industry and commerce insured further growth. Broad streets
joined hill and canyon, and homes dotted the slopes far behind the bay. The
Sisters of St. Joseph kept pace with the expanding city and opened parochial
schools. The Academy, too, meeting the demands of today's youth, now crowns one
of the lovely hills overlooking Mission Valley where once the padres toiled and
where the Sisters, too, had spent so many years.
These one hundred years have witnessed a growth surpassing
that of centuries preceding them, and as San Diego looks to the future and to
the startling heights of progress, so the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet
look forward to still new challenges.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Archives of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet. St. Louis, Missouri and
Los Angeles, California.
San Diego Historical Society Library and Manuscripts Collection.