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Building the “Catholic Ghetto”: Catholic Organisations 1870–1914*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 March 2016
Extract
It was a ghetto, undeniably,’ concluded the American political journalist, Garry Wills, when recalling from the safe distance of 1971 his ‘Catholic Boyhood’. ‘But not a bad ghetto to grow up in.’ Wills’s ghetto was defined by the great body of shared experiences, rituals, relationships, which gave Catholics a strongly felt common identity, and separated them from their Protestant and Jewish neighbours who knew none of these things. Wills talked about priests and nuns, incense and rosary beads, cards of saints and statues of the Virgin, but in this essay said very little about Catholic organisations (apart from a brief reference to the Legion of Decency). In many European countries, by contrast, any reference to the ‘ghetto’ from which many Catholics were seeking to escape in the 1960s and ’70s inevitably focused on the network of specifically Catholic organisations which was so characteristic of central and north-west European societies in the first half of the twentieth century. The Germans even have a pair of words to describe this phenomenon, Vereins- or Verbandskatholizismus, which can be defined as the multiplication of organisations intended to champion the interests of Catholics as a body, and to meet the special needs, spiritual, economic or recreational, of every identifiable group within the Catholic population. So when in 1972 the Swiss historian Urs Altermatt wrote a book on the origins of the highly self-conscious and disciplined Swiss Catholic sub-culture, the result was an organisational history, as stolid and as soberly objective as Wills’s book was whimsical and partisan. Its purpose was to determine how it came about that so many a Catholic ‘was born in a Catholic hospital, went to Catholic schools (from kindergarten to university), read Catholic periodicals and newspapers, later voted for candidates of the Catholic Party and took part as an active member in numerous Catholic societies’, being also ‘insured against accident and illness with a Catholic benefit organisation, and placing his money in a Catholic savings bank’.
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- Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 1986
Footnotes
I wish to thank the British Academy and Social Science Research Council for research grants, and Elizabeth Roberts for permission to quote from oral history interviews.
References
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42 Calendar of the Church of Saint Paul the Apostle, New York, Dec. 1895. (Copy in the Archives of the Paulist Fathers, Saint Paul’s rectory, New York.)
43 Sperber, Popular Catholicism pp. 225-7. See also the account of the ‘pope-cult’ in 1890s Bavarian Catholicism in Blessing, Staat und Kirche pp. 239-40.
44 See the collections of photographs of Roman Catholic processions in Southwark and Tower Hamlets local history libraries.
45 In parish file for Corpus Christi, Brixton, Archives of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Southwark.
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48 Parish histories often contain a lot of information about priest-people relations and the distinctive qualities of particular priests, most commonly in the form of testimonials from satisfied customers, though sometimes in terms of veiled criticism. As one example, L.E. Whatmore, The Story of Dockhead Parish (London 1960) pp. 72-9 includes an interesting attempt to define the influence of Fr Murnane, a formidable Irish-born priest, with a reputation as a saint, who dominated Bermondsey Catholicism from the 1890s to the 1920s. ‘His influence over the people was phenomenal (it is hardly an overstatement to say they “worshipped” him) but was never obtained, as has been known, by bullying. He ruled it has been said, by revealed love and concealed discipline.’
49 London School of Economics Library, Booth Collection, B274 pp. 63-5, B280 pp. 3-5. The interviews with London priests by Charles Booth and his assistants in the 1890s include many comments about their relations with their parishioners. Recent oral history projects have provided a lot of new evidence about Catholic views of their clergy in this period. See below, footnotes 67 and 84.
50 Walker, W.M., Juteopolis: Dundee’s Textile Workers 1885-1923 (Edinburgh 1979) pp. 130–3, 137, provides a useful account of the role of the priest in Catholic parish organisations, and brief comments on priest-people relations in general. The latter have been studied mainly in situations where open conflict is endemic, as for instance in Zeldin, T. ed Conflicts in French Society (London 1970), or where hostile stereotypes of the clergy are widespread, as among the first and second generations of Italian immigrants in the U.S.A., whose religion has been interpreted in a fascinating study by Orsi, R.A., ‘The Madonna of 115th Street: Faith and Community in Italian Harlem, 1880-1950,’ (Yale University Ph.D. thesis 1982) see esp. pp. 150–1 Google Scholar. For our period there has been little attempt to unravel the potentially more interesting situations where attitudes to the clergy were more varied and less clear cut.
51 Broch, Katholische Arbeitervereine p. 15 Google Scholar. For the 1860s and ’70s see Brose, E.D., Christian Labor and the Politics of Frustration in Imperial Germany (Washington D.C. 1985) pp. 46–60 Google Scholar.
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61 Brand, H.J., ‘Kirchliche Vereinswesen und Freizeitgestaltungen in einer Arbeitergemeinde: Das Beispie] Schalke, 1872-1933’ Huck, G. ed Sozialgescbichte der Freizeit (Wuppertal 1980) pp. 208–11 Google Scholar provides membership figures for parish societies between 1909 and 1927 in a working class suburb of Gelsenkirchen, where nearly half the Catholic population attended mass regularly and about half belonged to Catholic organisations. These showed that the Frauen- und Mutterverein always had at least twice as many members as the male Arbeiterverein, and that the organisation for young women always had considerably more members than that for young men. In south London where both mass attendance and membership of organisations was lower, the Bishop of Southwark asked in the Visitation Returns for 1897 and 1912 for the membership of confraternities. In the five parishes for which I have seen figures organisations for women always had more members than those for men, though the difference was sometimes fairly narrow.
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64 The Year Book and Book of Customs of Our Lady of Lourdes, Washington Heights (New York 1916) p. 106; interviews with Miss Caroline Kolb, New York City, 21 Nov. and 5 Dec. 1983.
65 See replies to questionnaire on history of Sacred Heart parish, New York, at Sacred Heart rectory. One reply stated that in the inter-war years the church was ‘hand in glove with the McManus Democratic Club, which could furnish jobs at the drop of a hat’. A priest who was assistant from 1947-57 stated that the McManus club gave food baskets on the church’s recommendation.
66 New York, Archives of the Community Service Society, case-files of the AICP and COS, R-127, 130, 133, 136, 138.
67 Centre for North-West Regional Studies, University of Lancaster, Oral History Archive: Interview by Elizabeth Roberts with Mrs PIP, p. 30.
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69 Parish bulletins and other parish publications gave a lot of space to explaining the necessity for Catholic schools and answering criticisms. See the Calendar of Saint Paul’s parish, September 1908; Parish Monthly of Our Lady of Good Counsel, April 1908; Year Book and Book of Customs of Our Lady of Lourdes pp. 41-4. For examples of the more flexible views of some parents see M.J. Oates, ‘Organised Voluntaryism: The Catholic Sisters in Massachussets 1870-1940,’ J.W.James ed Women in American Religion (Philadelphia 1980) p. 161; J.J. Bukowczyk, ‘Steeples and Smokestacks: Class, Religion and Ideology in the Polish Immigrant Settlements of Brooklyn 1880-1929’ (Harvard University Ph.D. thesis 1980) pp. 108-11.
70 Reports of the Immigration Commission 41 vols (Washington D.C. 1911) 32 p. 619. For statistics of school attendance in New York from 1800 to 1970, see D. Ravitch, The Great School Wars (New York 1974) p. 405. Attendance at Catholic schools peaked at about 25 per cent of the total in 1960.
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80 Nolan, M., Social Democracy and Society: Working Class Radicalism in Düsseldorf 1890-1920 (Cambridge 1981) pp. 44–7, 72–5, 118, 132, 160–4, 221–3 Google Scholar; for statistics of decline in Centre voting, and of Catholic support for other parties, see Schauff, Das Wahlverhalten pp. 74, 112-5, 132.
81 See parish file in Archives of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Southwark.
82 Wahl, , ‘Confession et comportement’ 2 pp. 764–5.Google Scholar
83 Ibid, 2 pp. 761-85.
84 Transcripts of interviews in Thompson and Vigne’s project are kept at the Department of Sociology, University of Essex.
85 Wahl, , ‘Confession et comportement’, 2 p. 784.Google Scholar
86 Ibid. 2 pp. 718-84. The same contrast is apparent in the Lancashire interviews.
87 Essex Oral History Archive, tape no. 68, pp. 47-9, informant born Manchester 1883; Elizabeth Roberts, interview with Mr EIP, pp. 6, 31, informant born Preston 1895, and interview with Mrs DIP, p. 33, informant born Preston 1908.
88 See for instance, Essex Oral History Archive, tape no. 72, informant born Bolton 1891, (she left the Catholic Church after being told by a nun that her dead brother was in hell or purgatory); Roberts, interview with Mr FIP, informant born Cumberland 1906 (gave up going to mass because of various slights received at church; claimed priests were only interested in his money).
89 Roberts, interview with Mrs PIP, pp. 32-6, 64.
90 The most spectacular drop was in the Netherlands, where weekly mass attendance fell from 64 per cent to 26 per cent between 1966 and 1979: see Bakvis, Catholic Power p. 117. In many other countries there was a sharp fall within a short period in the late ‘60s and early ’70s. See, for instance, F. Lebrun ed, Histoire des catholiques en France (Toulouse 1980) p. 488; and for Belgium, R.E.M. Irving, The Christian Democratic Parties of Western Europe (London 1979) p. 167.
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