Diocese of Victoria in Canada
The Diocese of Victoria is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory or diocese of the Catholic Church in the Canadian province of British Columbia. Its episcopal see is in Victoria. The diocese encompasses all of Vancouver Island and several nearby British Columbia islands. A suffragan diocese in the ecclesiastical province of the metropolitan Archdiocese of Vancouver, the diocese's cathedral is St. Andrew's Cathedral and its present diocesan bishop is Gary Gordon.
This is the oldest Canadian diocese west of Toronto.
History
When the American expedition of 1810 entered the Willamette Valley of present-day Oregon, it included 13 French-Canadian Catholics. Several of them, including the fur trader Étienne Lucier, decided to settle there. In 1836, Lucier and 15 other Catholic settlers petitioned Auxiliary Bishop Norbert Provencher, head of the church in present-day Manitoba, to send a priest to their settlement. They constructed St. Paul's Church, the oldest church in Oregon, in St. Paul, Oregon that same year. In 1838, he sent the missionary priests François Norbert Blanchet and Modeste Demers, who had been instructed by Archbishop Joseph Signay of Quebec: "In order to make yourselves sooner useful to the natives... you will apply yourselves... to the study of the Indian languages... so as to be able to publish a grammar after some of your residence there."The Diocese of Vancouver Island was erected on 24 July 1846, being one of three dioceses in the Pacific Northwest created out of the Vicariate Apostolic of the Oregon Territory, although the population of Catholics there was "a mere handful." Modeste Demers became the new diocese's first bishop. The territory included Vancouver Island, the Gulf Islands, New Caledonia, and the Queen Charlotte Islands. When the United States purchased Alaska in 1867 from the Empire of Russia, it came under the jurisdiction of the Diocese.
The Diocese of Vancouver Island was elevated to an archdiocese on 19 June 1903 and then renamed Archdiocese of Victoria in 1904. During the period 1846–1903, it was under the influence of the Archdiocese of Portland in Oregon, which either directly appointed or had considerable influence over the appointment of the bishops of Vancouver Island.
The Archdiocese of Victoria was lowered to the status of a diocese in 1908, when the metropolitan see was moved to Vancouver.
Territorial losses
| Year | territory lost to form: |
| 1863 | Vicariate Apostolic of British Columbia |
| 1894 | Prefecture Apostolic of Alaska |
Bishops
The following are the lists of Bishops and their years of service:Ordinaries
Bishop of Vancouver Island
- Modeste Demers
- Charles-Jean Seghers, appointed Coadjutor Archbishop of Oregon City, Oregon, USA; returned here in 1884
- Jean-Baptiste Brondel
- Charles-Jean Seghers ; personal title of Archbishop
- Jean-Nicolas Lemmens
- Alexander Christie, appointed Archbishop of Oregon City, Oregon, USA
- Bertram Orth
Archbishop of Vancouver Island
- Bertram Orth, see above
Archbishop/Bishop of Victoria
- Bertram Orth, see above
- Alexander MacDonald
- Thomas O'Donnell, appointed Coadjutor Archbishop of Halifax, Nova Scotia
- Gerald C. Murray, C.SS.R., appointed Bishop of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
- John Hugh MacDonald, appointed Coadjutor Archbishop of Edmonton, Alberta
- John Christopher Cody, appointed Coadjutor Bishop of London, Ontario
- James Michael Hill
- Remi Joseph De Roo
- Raymond Roussin, S.M., appointed Archbishop of Vancouver, British Columbia
- Richard Gagnon, appointed Archbishop of Winnipeg
- Gary Gordon
Coadjutor bishops
- John James Jonckau ; did not take effect
- Raymond Olir Roussin, S. M.
Auxiliary bishop
Churches
Greater Victoria- St Andrew's Cathedral
- Holy Cross
- Our Lady of Fatima
- Our Lady of the Rosary
- Our Lady Queen Of Peace
- Saanich Peninsula Parish
- Sacred Heart
- St-Jean-Baptiste
- St. Joseph the Worker
- St. Leopold Mandic
- St. Patrick's
- St. Rose of Lima
- Christ The King
- St. Patrick's
- St. Peter and St. Paul
- Holy Cross
- St. Joseph's
- St. Ann's
- St. Edward the Confessor
- St. Louis De Montfort
- St. Mary's
- Our Lady of Victory Mission
- St. Francis of Assisi
- St. Teresa's Chapel
- Our Lady of Grace
- St Francis Xavier
- Our Lady Queen of the World
- St. Peter's
- Trinity Catholic
- Church of the Ascension
- Holy Family/Notre Dame
- St. Francis of Assisi
- Holy Family
- Our Lady of Assumption
- St. Bonaventure
- St. Mary's
- St. Theresa's
- St Bernadette's
- St. Joseph's
Monasteries
- House of Bread Monastery, a Benedictine monastery in Nanaimo
Education
Catholic high schools
| School | City | Est. | Website | Enrolment |
| St. Andrew's Regional High School | Victoria | http://www.standrewshigh.ca/ | ~475 |
- St. Ann's Academy (Victoria, British Columbia), was open 1858 and closed in 1974.
- Smith Memorial High School, of Port Alberni, was opened 1951 and closed in 1976.
Catholic elementary schools
- St. Ann's Academy for Boys, of Duncan, was erected in 1864 and closed in 1969.
- St. Mary's School, of Ladysmith, was established 1909 and closed in 1913.
Catholic universities, colleges, and seminaries
- St. Joseph's School for Nursing, of Victoria, was erected in 1900 and closed in 1981.
- St. John Fisher / Thomas More College 1953 and closed in 1993.
Religious institutes
Religious institutes of womenResidential schools
The Diocese managed two residential schools in British Columbia. Upon the discovery of the remains of 215 children at Kamloops Indian Residential School, the diocese released aCharities
Health Care- Lourdes Hospital, of Campbell River, was erected in 1926 and closed in 1957.
- St. Joseph's Hospital, of Victoria, was erected in 1876 and closed in 1972.