Ancient Spanish Monastery

16711 W. Dixie Highway
At St. Bernard de Clairvaux Church
North Miami Beach, FL 33160
305-945-1461
 
Hours: 
Call in advance or check the schedule on the web as the monastery frequently closes for private events
 
 


Ancient Spanish Monastery in North Miami Beach was built 350 years before Columbus arrived in the Americas. How did this monastery get to Florida? In 1925, newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst was traveling across Europe looking for art and architectural curiosities to grace San Simeon, his California estate. Hearst came across the abandoned monastery, built circa 1141 and once home to Cistercian monks, and bought it for $1.5 million.

It was disassembled and packed in more than 10,000 boxes, each marked with a number so workers could rebuild the monastery in California. But customs officials in New York worried the straw surrounding the 35,872 stones might carry hoof-and-mouth disease and burned the straw and crates. As Hearst's fortunes waned during the Great Depression, so did his interest in bringing the monastery to California. It wasn't until 1951, after Hearst's death, that two men from Florida came across the monastery, or at least the promise of it, in the boxes they purchased for $19,000. It cost $80,000 to ship it to Florida and another $1.5 million to re-erect the monastery. It turned out that while the stones had been placed in numbered boxes after the originals were burned, there was a mistake made in the numbering. It was a gigantic jigsaw puzzle that took 19 months to put together.

Unfortunately, the tourist attraction went bankrupt, and it wasn't until the Episcopal Diocese of South Florida took over in 1964 that the monastery regained its place as a spiritual refuge. Now it is a wonderful place to wed, worship or reflect on history.

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