Founded in 1565, St. Augustine, Florida holds pride of place as the country’s oldest European-based city. Its first settlers included people of great piety and idealism, who brought La Leche Madonna from Spain as part of their patrimony. Over the next hundred years, missions blossomed and small communities attempted to survive under difficult conditions.
The issue of slavery proved to be pivotal. During the early 18th century, “British colonies supported the practice of slavery while the Spanish established Fort Mose, the first legally sanctioned African American community of free men approximately two miles north of St. Augustine.” The enraged British burnt St. Augustine to the ground, destroyed the missions, enslaved Indians, and scattered the Spanish settlers, most of whom fled to Cuba.
The Virgen del Cobre was fished out of the Cuban waters under demoralized circumstances that certainly seemed to be an act of providential solace. Meanwhile, the statue that came to be known as The Hurricane Lady accompanied a band of Catholic immigrants from southern Europe who had been seduced to work the land around St. Augustine under unspeakably cruel conditions that took years to remedy. She also seemed to carry Heaven’s message of mercy and watchful care.
The Pregnant Madonna dates back to 16th century Belgium but makes her appearance in late 19th century St. Augustine, traveling with the French Sisters of St. Joseph. These Sisters came to the United States to educate the newly freed southern slaves despite tremendous opposition and hardship and managed to establish seven St. Joseph Academies within a ten-year period.
There is, of course, a great deal more to these stories. Murray ends her lovely book by showing us where these cherished images reside today, still being honored and invoked. “All intercessory prayer is born of compassion and steeped in vulnerability,” she writes and then listens to what hearts pour out before Heaven: “’Please, Lord, make him well, restore my children’s faith, bless my marriage, save my unborn child, may I bear a child.’ Christ is the source, Mary the intercessor.”
BOOK INFORMATION:
The Madonnas of St. Augustine: A Remarkable History
By Nancy H. Murray
Category: Religious nonfiction, History
ISBN 978-0-9793637-6-4
Pages: 106
Available from: Amazon and Hart Street Publishers
Publisher’s Page
This article, A Book That Tells the Tales of Immigrants, Traditions, and the Help of the Blessed Mother is a post from The Bellarmine Forum.
https://bellarmineforum.org/a-book-that-tells-the-tales-of-immigrants-traditions-and-the-help-of-the-blessed-mother/
Do not repost the entire article without written permission. Reasonable excerpts may be reposted so long as it is linked to this page.