This church is essentially reconstructed since it was severely damaged by earthquakes. Originally the complex covered the equivalent of four city blocks with a school, hospital, music rooms, printing press, and a monastery. After the earthquake in 1773, it was left as a ruin although the chapel where Santo Hermano Pedro de San José de Bethancourt remained intact and a popular destination for pilgrims. (Santo Hermano Pedro, a Franciscan from the Canary Islands who was credited with a number of miracles, was made the first Central American saint in 2002 by Pope John Paul II.) According to Elizabeth Bell, the church "was rebuilt in the 1960s due to the efforts of José García Bauer, engineer Oscar Martínex Dighero, and many others who joined to recreate a church in honor of Santo Hermano Pedro. While engineers rebuilt the church, they failed to give it its original proportions and flavor: none of the art there today is originally from San Francisco" (61). The ruined monastery, which can be visited, does, however, give a sense of its former grandeur.
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