By: Cassidy Delamarter, University Communications and Marketing
New details have emerged about the history of one of St. Augustineâs most popular tourist attractions. ±«Óătv Spanish Professor David ArbesĂș tediously pieced together documents that were scattered around the world that helped connect the dots about the life of Francisco LĂłpez de Mendoza Grajales, believed to be the first priest in the United States. An of him is located on the grounds of near Matanzas Bay.
As , âThe First Man to Plant the Holy Gospel in Floridaâ chronicles Mendozaâs journey in helping establish the first permanent Christian mission in the United States and his role in what many scholars believe was the first Thanksgiving feast.
Mendoza, who we now know lived from 1527 to 1586, sailed across the Atlantic in 1565 alongside Pedro MenĂ©ndez de AvilĂ©s, who was tasked by the King of Spain to remove French settlers and establish a colony in Florida. After the three-month expedition, MenĂ©ndez founded Americaâs first city, St. Augustine, where Mendoza would play a crucial role.
âHe brought Catholicism to America and gave the first Christian mass in the United States,â ArbesĂș said. âAs important as Mendoza may have been for the early history of Florida, all we knew about his life were the first four years he spent in Florida â thatâs it.â
After finding Mendozaâs baptismal records that were recently made public by a church in Spain, ArbesĂș was able to pinpoint the year Mendoza was born and from there, piece together a timeline of what his life was like before and after he joined MenĂ©ndezâs expedition.
At 38 years old, Mendoza began the three-month expedition to Florida, where ArbesĂș believes he stayed for about seven years before moving back to his native community in Spain. After a couple of years, Mendoza moved to Nicaragua, according to ArbesĂș discovered in Oklahoma. There, Mendoza held several distinguished roles in the LeĂłn Cathedral â a World Heritage Site â before eventually becoming Commissary of the Holy Inquisition as he continued to spread Catholicism in the Americas.
âThese records trace the priestâs lineage back to the Middle Ages and reveal a previously unknown side of his personality,â ArbesĂș said. âThis new evidence allows researchers to revisit all the records on Mendozaâs life to clarify aspects, correct mistakes and ultimately understand the first parish priest in the continental United States.â
The biography reveals details of his life for the first time, including the name Francisco Grajales de Mendoza he used when he was younger, the fact he likely practiced cannibalism to survive the winter of 1565 to 1566 and the witness account of him fighting at knifepoint over a woman. But the most moving: Letters ArbesĂș found in the National Archives of Mexico that determined the exact date of Mendozaâs death.
âHe wrote to the inquisitors of Mexico City that he had become so ill that he was âin the last trance and end of my lifeâ,â ArbesĂș said. âIt was a touching letter to read after studying his life for so long. To see him get to a point where he could not even sign his name, it was emotional.â