The original parish church was a Gothic building at the intersection of Ninth and Santa Clara streets, which was completed in 1888. This church was destroyed in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, but rebuilt less than a year later. The second church was replaced by the current church at the intersection of Eighth and Santa Clara streets in 1967.[1] From 1981 until 1990, St. Patrick’s served as the cathedral of the Diocese of San José. The cathedra was then transferred to the newly renovated St. Joseph’s, at which time the parish was redesignated St. Patrick Proto-Cathedral Parish.
In 2002, the parish changed from being a “regular” territorial parish to being a national parish for the Vietnamese population. In addition to the several services offered in Vietnamese, the parish also offers English and SpanishMasses.
The church building was destroyed by a fire on the morning of August 31, 2012,[2] and demolished in 2017.[3] On April 28, 2013, Bishop Patrick J. McGrath signed a decree renaming the proto-cathedral in honor of Our Lady of La Vang.[4] The attached school remained St. Patrick School. The new church officially opened May 13, 2023.[5]
^Ward, Roberta. "'Our Lady of La Vang' new name of St. Patrick Proto-Cathedral Parish". The Valley Catholic. Roman Catholic Diocese of San Jose in California. Archived from the original on July 8, 2013. Retrieved November 7, 2013. Bishop Patrick J. McGrath announced April 28, at a Mass at a temporary worship site for St. Patrick Proto-Cathedral Parish, that the parish would now be named after Our Lady of La Vang ... 'I have today signed a decree to rename the parish,' he announced.
^"Lịch Sử Giáo Xứ" (in Vietnamese). San Jose, California: Our Lady of La Vang Parish. 2023. Retrieved May 28, 2023.