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Co-Cathedral of Saint Thomas More (Tallahassee)

Co-Cathedral of
Saint Thomas More
Co-Cathedral of Saint Thomas More, Tallahassee (cropped).JPG
Co-Cathedral of Saint Thomas More (Tallahassee, Florida) is located in Florida
Co-Cathedral of Saint Thomas More (Tallahassee, Florida)
30°26′47.22″N 84°17′51.88″W / 30.4464500°N 84.2977444°W / 30.4464500; -84.2977444Coordinates: 30°26′47.22″N 84°17′51.88″W / 30.4464500°N 84.2977444°W / 30.4464500; -84.2977444
Location 900 W Tennessee St.
Tallahassee, Florida
Country United States
Denomination Roman Catholic
Website www.cocathedral.com
History
Dedication Thomas More
Architecture
Status Co-Cathedral
Groundbreaking December 4, 1965
Completed 1967
Specifications
Materials Block & Stucco
Administration
Diocese Pensacola-Tallahassee
Clergy
Bishop(s) sede vacante
Rector Father John B. Cayer

The Co-Cathedral of St. Thomas More is a Catholic cathedral located in Tallahassee, Florida, United States. Along with the Cathedral of the Sacred Heart in Pensacola it is the seat of the Diocese of Pensacola-Tallahassee. St. Thomas More also provides the Catholic Campus Ministry at Florida State University.

The Altar Relics of the Co-Cathedral are of Saint Felix and Saint Felicity.

The present day parish traces its origin to the 1930s with the Newman Club of the Florida State College for Women that met in the home of Dr. Paul Coughlin. This Catholic student organization would continue after the Florida State College for Women was converted into the current Florida State University (FSU) in 1947; becoming a chapter to the newly formed university. Three years after the formation of FSU, the club acquired the home of Dr. Conradi, located on the corner of Park Avenue and Macomb Street, just to the east of FSU grounds. This home became the first permanent student center for the Newman Club, complete with a live-in house-mother to make the center accessible.

Archbishop Joseph Hurley of St. Augustine (which had jurisdiction over Tallahassee at the time), sought to build a more prominent and official student center-chapel on a hill overlooking the university. Picking the present location, the diocese began purchasing the land plot by plot with the assistance of the Highland Reality Company of Miami and Jesse Warren Esquire. In 1963 preliminary plans for the new Student Center were sent to pastor Patrick Madden of the local parish of the Blessed Sacrament. Ground breaking of the construction took place two years later on December 4, 1965. The chapel was officially dedicated by Bishop Hurley on October 8, 1967.


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