Saints Peter and Paul Church, San Francisco
Saints Peter and Paul Church | |
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Religion | |
Affiliation | Catholic |
District | Archdiocese of San Francisco |
Province | Archdiocese of San Francisco |
Ecclesiastical or organizational status | Parish |
Leadership | Archbishop of San Francisco |
Location | |
Location | |
Geographic coordinates | 37°48′5.77″N 122°24′36.71″W / 37.8016028°N 122.4101972°W |
Architecture | |
Completed | 1924 |
Direction of façade | South |
Saints Peter and Paul Church, San Francisco | |||||||
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Traditional Chinese | 官話聖伯多祿聖保祿教堂 | ||||||
Simplified Chinese | 官话圣伯多禄圣保禄教堂 | ||||||
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Saints Peter and Paul Church (Italian: Ss. Pietro e Paolo, Chinese: 官話聖伯多禄圣保禄教堂) is a Catholic church in San Francisco's North Beach neighborhood. Located at 666 Filbert Street, it is directly across from Washington Square and is administered by the Salesians of Don Bosco. It is known as "la cattedrale italiana dell'Ovest", or the Italian Cathedral of the West (the use of the word "Cathedral" is merely colloquial, not an official designation), and has served as the home church and cultural center for San Francisco's Italian-American community since its consecration. It offers English, Italian, and Cantonese-language services.
History
[edit]The first Saints Peter and Paul Church, built in 1884 on the corner of Filbert Street and Grant Avenue, was destroyed by the Great Quake of 1906. Construction on the current building was completed in 1924.[1]
During 1926–27, the church was the target of radical anti-Catholic anarchists, who, in the name of propaganda of the deed, instituted five separate bombing attacks against the building in the space of one year.[2] On March 6, 1927, officers of the San Francisco Police Department shot and killed one man and seriously wounded another, Celsten Eklund, a radical anarchist and local soapbox orator, as the two men attempted to light the fuse of a large dynamite bomb in front of the church.[2] The dead man, known only as 'Ricca', was never fully identified; Eklund died of his wounds some time later without giving any information about his co-conspirators.[2]
In recent years, Saints Peter and Paul has also become the home church for the city's Chinese-American Catholic population, offering weekly masses in Italian, Cantonese, and English. The Tridentine Mass in Ecclesiastical Latin is offered monthly as well.[3]
Saints Peter and Paul serves the Archdiocese of San Francisco.
In popular culture
[edit]The church is prominently featured in the Clint Eastwood movies Dirty Harry (the Church, and nearby Dante Building, are the scene of sniper attacks by the "Scorpio Killer"),[4] and The Dead Pool. Scenes from Cecil B. DeMille's 1923 version of The Ten Commandments were filmed at the church while it was under construction. Also featured in What's Up, Doc? in which Judy Maxwell, portrayed by Barbra Streisand and Dr. Howard Bannister, portrayed by Ryan O'Neal borrowed a Volkswagen Beetle during a car chase. Parts of Sister Act 2 were also filmed here.[5] Both the exterior and the interior of the church were prominently featured in the 1994 movie Getting Even with Dad, starring Macaulay Culkin.
After their civil ceremony in 1954, Marilyn Monroe and Joe DiMaggio returned for photographs on the steps of this church.[4] DiMaggio was married to Dorothy Arnold in the church on November 19, 1939, but later divorced. Still married as far as the Church was concerned (having not obtained an annullment),[6] he could not be married in the Catholic Church. In a side entrance, Sts. Peter and Paul Church still showcases a photo in a book displaying proudly DiMaggio's marriage day photo—but with Arnold, not Monroe. DiMaggio's funeral was held here on March 11, 1999, officiated by lifelong family friend and confidant, Armand Oliveri, S.D.B., who politely refuses all interviews or requests to discuss any intimate details of Monroe's or DiMaggio's life.[7]
American pop singer Michelle Lambert considers this church her spiritual home, and even portrayed Mary in “Las Posadas de San Francisco,” parade in 2010.[8]
In the 2015 disaster film San Andreas, the church and Washington Square was seen being hit by a tsunami as it reaches North Beach.
The protagonist of Wendell Berry's novella Remembering, Andy Catlett, walks by the church and reads the Italian inscription over its portal: the opening lines of Dante's Paradisio.
References
[edit]- ^ "History". Saints Peter & Paul Church. Retrieved September 4, 2019.
- ^ a b c Issel, William, For Both Cross and Flag: Catholic Action, Anti-Catholicism, and National Security Politics in World War II San Francisco, Philadelphia PA: Temple University Press, ISBN 978-1-4399-0028-4 (2010) pp. 24-27
- ^ "Saints Peter and Paul Church, San Francisco -- Holy Week". salesiansspp.org. Archived from the original on 2016-03-22.
- ^ a b Mueller, Christina (March 23, 2024). "Explore North Beach, a San Francisco neighborhood rich in Italian heritage". SFGate.
- ^ "Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit (1993) - Filming locations". IMDB.
- ^ Prior to the Second Vatican Council, an annulment, or "Catholic divorce," was not as readily available as it is today. See http://www.mostholyfamilymonastery.com/28_Annulments.pdf and it is unlikely that DiMaggio could have obtained one even if he had asked for one.
- ^ "Joe dimaggios grave - Marilyn Monroe Photos on ThisIsMarilyn.com". Archived from the original on 2016-08-05. Retrieved 2016-06-16.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ "North Beach festival highlights parallels between homeless, Holy Family". 15 December 2010. Archived from the original on 24 April 2016.
External links
[edit]- Anarchism in the United States
- Anti-Catholicism in the United States
- Atheism and violence
- Church bombings in the United States
- Incidents of anti-Catholic violence
- Roman Catholic churches in San Francisco
- Landmarks in San Francisco
- North Beach, San Francisco
- 1926 crimes in the United States
- 1927 crimes in the United States
- Attacks on buildings and structures in the 1920s
- Building bombings in California