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Saint for a Minute

C.M.

Servant of God

Father Felice De Andreis, C.M.

1778 to 1820

“I came to this country to spend myself for souls.”

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Path to Sainthood

Cause opened 1900

Servant of God

1900

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Venerable

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Blessed

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Saint

The Vincentian Who Planted the American Mission

Felice De Andreis was born on December 12, 1778, in Demonte, a small town in the Piedmont region of Italy. As a young man he entered the Congregation of the Mission, the religious community founded by Saint Vincent de Paul. Ordained in 1801, he quickly earned a reputation as a gifted teacher of theology and Sacred Scripture, lecturing in Rome to fellow seminarians and priests.

In 1815, Bishop Louis William DuBourg of Louisiana visited Rome seeking missionaries for his vast frontier diocese. Father De Andreis volunteered immediately. He gathered a small band of Vincentians and departed Italy in 1816. The journey to America took over a year, with stops in France and a difficult Atlantic crossing.

Arriving in Missouri in 1818, De Andreis founded St. Mary of the Barrens Seminary in Perry County, the first house of the Congregation of the Mission in the United States. It became a training ground for priests who would serve the rapidly expanding frontier. Bishop DuBourg appointed him Vicar General of Upper Louisiana, giving him authority over a territory stretching from the Mississippi to the Rockies.

Despite rapidly failing health, De Andreis traveled widely, preaching to settlers and Native Americans, organizing parishes, and training the next generation of missionaries. He died on October 15, 1820, in St. Louis, after only two years of frontier work. He was forty-one years old. The seminary he founded endured for over a century, and the Vincentian presence he established in America continues to this day. His beatification process was formally begun in 1900.

In His Own Words

I came to this country to spend myself for souls.

God has called me to the New World. I go with joy, for there is much to be done.

Letter before departing Italy

Let us work while there is still time.

Timeline
1778Born Felice De Andreis on December 12 in Demonte, Piedmont, Italy
1797Enters the Congregation of the Mission (Vincentians) founded by Saint Vincent de Paul
1801Ordained a priest; becomes a professor of theology and Sacred Scripture in Rome
1815Volunteers for the American missions after Bishop Louis William DuBourg visits Rome seeking missionaries
1816Departs Italy with a small band of Vincentians; the journey takes over a year
1818Arrives in Missouri and founds St. Mary of the Barrens Seminary in Perry County, the first Vincentian house in the United States
1818Appointed Vicar General of Upper Louisiana by Bishop DuBourg
1819Begins missions among settlers and Native Americans in the frontier territory; travels widely despite failing health
1820Dies on October 15 in St. Louis, Missouri, after only two years of frontier missionary work; he was forty-one years old
1900Beatification process formally begun; declared Servant of God
Support Father De Andreis’s Cause

Felice De Andreis planted the Vincentian mission in America and gave his life to frontier evangelization. His cause has been open since 1900. Pray for the advancement of his cause toward beatification.

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Born

December 12, 1778

Demonte, Piedmont, Italy

Died

October 15, 1820

St. Louis, MO

Cause Opened

1900

Vincentian Community

Stage

Servant of God

Cause begun 1900

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