Diocese of Venice

Diocese of Venice


Diocese of Venice

St. William is a part of the Diocese of Venice under the leadership of our
Chief shepherd, the Most Rev. Frank J. Dewane.

History of the Diocese

The Diocese of Venice now includes the counties of Charlotte, Collier, DeSoto, Glades, Hardee, Hendry, Highlands, Lee, Manatee, Sarasota, so it can be hard to image what the Diocese of Venice in Florida might have been like when the first Spanish explorers came ashore in the 16th Century. Their arrival brought the first Catholic missionaries who were intent on setting up permanent missions in the name of Spain and the Catholic Church.


Conquistador Juan Ponce de Leon is credited with discovering Florida in 1513 and exploring the west coast of the state between 1513 and 1521. Ponce de Leon encountered the native Calusa Indians who first welcomed the Spanish but later objected because the explorers had desecrated their Indian Mounds, and the Indians fought back.


The Indians were fearful of the missions being constructed and frequently attacked the structures in hopes of driving the explorers off. When Ponce de Leon was injured in an attack the expedition and mission on the West Coast was abandoned. It was another seven years before Spanish explorer Hernando De Soto brought priests to Florida in an attempt to evangelize the native tribes during an exploration of the coast from 1539-1542.


DeSoto led an expedition of 10 ships and 620 men, which included 12 priests. They landed near present-day Bradenton on May 25, 1539. Mass was celebrated almost every day by the expedition priests. Later, when DeSoto landed at Shaw’s Point near the mouth of Tampa Bay, the men were so taken with the peace and beauty of the water that they named it “La Bahia de Espiritu Santo,” in honor of the Holy Spirit.


The sheer number of DeSoto’s forces caused the Calusas to abandon their settlements along the harbor entrance. A memorial to the Eucharist and a Memorial Cross were built and dedicated in the area near DeSoto’s landings by Bishop Emeritus John J. Nevins in 1994 at what is the DeSoto National Memorial Park in Bradenton.


Other efforts to bring missionaries to Florida were unsuccessful until Pedro Menéndez de Avilés, founder of Saint Augustine and Governor of Spanish Florida, sought peace with the Calusa and founded a military outpost there in February of 1566. Pedro Menendez sought assistance from the Jesuits, who agreed to send a small contingent to Florida. Before leaving the San Carlos Bay area, Menéndez established a Jesuit mission at Mound Key near the mouth of the Estero River in present-day Lee County and left a garrison of soldiers to guard it.


Father Juan Rogel and Brother Francisco de Villareal spent the winter studying the language and proceeded to work among the Calusa tribe in southern Florida. The establishment there of a fort and settlement at Mound Key was the first such effort to colonize the area. A Jesuit mission, San Antonio de Carlos was also the first such mission in the Spanish New World and was founded by Father Juan Rogel when a chapel was built in 1567. This mission was the first place where a Catholic presence was established that lies within the territory of the present Diocese of Venice in Florida. It was not until after the Civil War those missionaries from Savannah, St. Augustine, and Tampa began visiting the areas south of Tampa Bay that would later become the Diocese of Venice.


In 1889, the care of the area within the Diocese fell under the jurisdiction of the Jesuit Fathers from Tampa, who made regular visits to Bradenton, Fort Myers, Arcadia, and adjacent missions. The first missions and Catholic communities within the current Diocese of Venice in Florida were located at Sacred Heart in Bradenton (1868), Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary (later St. Francis Xavier) in Fort Myers (1878), St. Paul in Arcadia (1882), Sacred Heart in Punta Gorda (1888), St. Martha in Sarasota (1889), St. Michael in Wauchula (1915), St. Joseph in Bradenton (1915), and St. Catherine in Sebring (1918). The Diocese of Venice was established by St. John Paul II in 1984 from parts of the Archdiocese of Miami, Diocese of Orlando and the Diocese of St. Petersburg. Bishop Emeritus John J. Nevins was the founding Bishop and served until his retirement in January 2007.


Bishop Frank J. Dewane took over all duties as the second Bishop of the Diocese of Venice in Florida in January 2007.

Our Bishop

Most Reverend Bishop Frank J. Dewane serves as the spiritual leader of approximately 250,000 Catholics in the 10-county Diocese of Venice in Florida. He was appointed by Pope Benedict XVI in 2006 as the second Bishop of the Diocese.


Bishop Frank J. Dewane was named Coadjutor Bishop of the Diocese of Venice in Florida by Pope Benedict XVI on April 25, 2006, and on January 19, 2007, he was installed in his current role as Bishop of the Diocese.

Our Diocesan Crest

The coat of arms of the Diocese of Venice has a background color of blue. This is to honor Mary, Our Lady of Mercy, co-patroness of the Diocese. The “charges” or symbols which are placed on this background are simple, but allusive.


The cathedral is dedicated to the Epiphany of our Lord. In heraldry this mystery is traditionally represented by three crowns, which appear in the Diocesan coat of arms. These symbols represent the three astrologers or wise men who sought “the newborn king” and came “to pay homage” (Mt. 2:1-12). In the Gospel story, the three searchers moved

toward a star and eventually “found the child with Mary, his mother.” Here, the star of faith is replaced by a Maltese cross, an artistic proclamation that Jesus, who died on the cross for us, is Lord and Savior.


The silver crescent, so often used in ecclesiastical heraldry to represent Our Lady, emphasizes her spiritual role as Mother of the new Church of Venice. The wavy lines of blue and white or silver at the base of the shield represent the waters of the Gulf of Mexico, which border the Diocese.


The upper portion of the shield, or chief, displays in gold and on a red background the ancient, winged lion of Saint Mark the Evangelist, co-patron of the Diocese. This section is intended as a mark of gracious deference to the patriarchal Church of Venice, Italy. But there is one significant difference: whereas the ancient arms had the Latin words for “Peace to you Mark, my evangelist” written on the pages of the open book, here the pages are blank to

symbolize a new history, a new story of the relationship between God and His People, that will be written in the hearts of the faithful in the Diocese of Venice in Florida.


The colors used in this new coat of arms are taken from the shields of the Archdiocese of Miami and the Diocese of St. Petersburg and Orlando, from whose territory the Diocese of Venice was formed.


Interpreted for modern times, the crowns of this Epiphany tableau might represent all the People of God in the new Diocese of Venice –“a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation,” (1 Pet. 2-9) – moving on their spiritual pilgrimage toward God and relying on the intercession of their patrons, Our Lady of Mercy and Saint Mark.


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