Immaculate Conception Cathedral, Apia


The Immaculate Conception Cathedral is a cathedral affiliated with the Catholic Church in Apia, the capital of Samoa, a insular country in Oceania. It suffered damage in the earthquake of 2009, and has undergone restoration and extension.
The congregation follows the Roman or Latin rite and is the mother church of the Archdiocese of Samoa–Apia, which was created in 1966 by Pope Paul VI through the bull "Prophetarum voes".
After three years of repairs, the new cathedral of Apia was opened to the public on 2 June 2014 in the presence of Archbishop Martin Krebs, the apostolic nuncio in New Zealand. The church was rebuilt on the site of the original cathedral, which dated from 1857.

History

In 1852, William Pritchard sold a plot of land in Mulivai, about three-quarters of an acre, to Bishop Bataillon, onto which Bataillon's brother, Jacques, began building a church and a parish house. The first stone was blessed by the bishop on 8 December 1852, but work was interrupted by epidemics and a tropical cyclone in 1854, which destroyed eight ships and caused great damage to the plantations, resulting in problems with the food supply. As a result, the church was completed in 1857.
The church stood in the same place as the current one, while the residence was near Mulivai.