Add an Article Add an Event Edit

St. James The Fisherman Episcopal Church

Mile Marker 87.5, Overseas Highway
305-852-8468

About Us :

Saint James the Fisherman Episcopal Church (Anglican) is a parish church of the Episcopal Diocese of Southeast Florida. Our parish began in 1959 when Episcopalians in the Upper Florida Keys wanted a place to worship without having to drive miles to get there. They convinced the bishop of the then Diocese of South Florida to open a mission in Tavernier, Florida. First named St. Andrews-on-the Keys, the name changed to St. Simeon's-on-the-Keys, then St. Adrian's Episcopal Mission, before the congregation finally settled on the name St. James the Fisherman, probably because fishing is so popular in the Florida Keys. St. James moved to its present location, on Plantation Key in the Village of Islamorada, Florida in 1970. It is appropriate that, with our name, we should be located in Islamorada, for Islamorada is the "Sports Fishing Capital of the World" and is President George Bush, Sr.'s favorite place for bone fishing.

We met, for services, in a secondhand, prefabricated structure until completion of the new church buildings in 2001. St. James is the only Episcopal Church between Marathon, Florida in the Middle Keys and Homestead, Florida on the mainland. St. James operates a Children's Center, for pre-school children, as a ministry to the community.

Saint James the Fisherman Episcopal Church offers a full range of parish worship, Christian education and programs for spiritual development. We enjoy a very active parish social life, and have numerous parish dinners, pig roasts, dances and other social events throughout the year. We attract a wide variety of worshipers, many from other denominations, who attend St. James, during the winter "Snowbird" season simply because they enjoy the beauty of our liturgy, the evangelical proclamation of the love of Jesus in our sermons, the emphasis on God's Grace in our teaching and the warmth and hospitality they experience in our parish church. Our congregation more than doubles in size each winter, as visitors from the north come to the Florida Keys.