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Santo por un Minuto

SJ

Servants of God

The Virginia Martyrs

Juan Bautista de Segura and Companions

d. February 1571

“We go to plant the cross where it has never been raised.”

Support Their CauseThe Ajacán Mission
Path to Sainthood

Group cause opened by Diocese of Richmond, 2002

Servant of God

2002

2

Venerable

3

Blessed

4

Saint

First Martyrs of the Future United States

In September 1570, Father Juan Bautista de Segura, vice-provincial of the Society of Jesus in La Florida, led a small band of missionaries to the shores of the Chesapeake Bay. They carried no weapons and brought no soldiers. Their guide was a young native man the Spanish called Don Luis (Paquiquineo), who had been taken to Spain years earlier, baptized, educated, and returned to serve as interpreter and bridge between two worlds. The eight Jesuits established the Ajacán Mission on the Virginia Peninsula, becoming the first Catholic missionaries in that region.

The winter was brutal. Supplies ran short, and Don Luis, struggling between two identities, abandoned the mission to rejoin his people. On February 4, 1571, he returned with a group of warriors and killed all eight missionaries. Only the boy Alonso de Olmos, too young to be considered a threat, was spared. A Spanish rescue expedition the following year recovered Alonso and learned the fate of the martyrs.

The Eight Martyrs
  • Father Juan Bautista de Segura, S.J. (leader, vice-provincial of La Florida)
  • Father Luis de Quirós, S.J. (priest)
  • Brother Gabriel de Solís, S.J.
  • Brother Sancho Zeballos, S.J.
  • Brother Juan Bautista Méndez, S.J.
  • Brother Pedro Mingot Linares, S.J.
  • Brother Cristóbal Redondo, S.J.
  • Brother Gabriel Gómez, S.J.

These eight men are considered the first Catholic missionaries to die for the faith in what would become the United States, predating the Jamestown settlement by thirty-six years and the arrival of the Pilgrims by nearly half a century. Their cause for beatification and canonization was opened by the Diocese of Richmond in 2002.

Words of the Mission

We go to plant the cross where it has never been raised.

Attributed to Fr. Segura before departing for Ajacán

They chose to go without soldiers, trusting only in God and the good will of the natives.

On the Jesuit decision to travel unarmed

Timeline
1526Spanish explorers first encounter the Algonquian peoples of the Chesapeake Bay region
1561A young native man (later called Don Luis) is taken from Virginia to Spain by Spanish explorers
1562Don Luis is baptized and educated in Spain, then Mexico and Havana
1570Father Juan Bautista de Segura leads eight Jesuits and Don Luis to establish the Ajacán Mission on the Virginia Peninsula
1571Don Luis abandons the mission and returns to his people; the missionaries face starvation through winter
1571On February 4, Don Luis leads a group of tribesmen who kill all eight Jesuits; only the boy Alonso de Olmos survives
1572A Spanish rescue expedition recovers Alonso and learns what happened to the missionaries
2002Cause formally opened by the Diocese of Richmond; declared Servants of God
Support the Virginia Martyrs’ Cause

The eight Jesuit missionaries of the Ajacán Mission gave their lives for the faith in 1571, decades before any permanent English settlement in America. Their cause was opened in 2002 by the Diocese of Richmond. Pray for their recognition.

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Martyred

February 4, 1571

Ajacán, Virginia

Number

8 Jesuits

Priests, brothers, catechists

Cause Opened

2002

Diocese of Richmond

Stage

Servant of God

Group cause

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