Spanish Monastery
A XII Century Romanesque Monastery in Florida (!)
-
Hours of operation:
-
Monday-Saturday 10:00am - 4:30pm.
-
Sundays 11:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
-
WITH PAID ADMISSION ON SATURDAYS AND SUNDAYS ENJOY A FREE GUIDED TOUR AT 1:00 PM
-
View Trip Map
-
Admission: $10, Seniors $5
-
Before going, please click HERE to see if they are closed for filming or special events.
-
Go to Website

In 1925, William Randolph Hearst purchased the Cloisters and the Monastery's outbuildings. The structures were dismantled stone by stone, bound with protective hay, packed in more than 11,000 wooden crates, numbered for identification and shipped to the United States. Soon after the shipment arrived, Hearst's financial problems forced most of his collection to be sold at auction. The massive crates remained in a warehouse in Brooklyn, New York, for 26 years. One year after Hearst’s' death in 1952, they were purchased by two entrepreneurs for use as a tourist attraction. It took 19 months and the equivalent of nearly $20 million dollars (in today’s currency) to put the Monastery back together. In 1953 Time magazine called it “the biggest jigsaw puzzle in history.”

In 1964, Colonel Robert Pentland, Jr, who was a multimillionaire banker, philanthropist and benefactor of many Episcopal churches, purchased the Cloisters and presented them to the Bishop of Florida. Today the parish Church of St. Bernard de Clairvaux is an active and growing congregation in the Episcopal Diocese of Southeast Florida. Services are held on Sundays and weekdays in both English and Spanish.