1 2 3
4 5
6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
 CUA Libraries Home >> ACUA Home >> ACUA History Classroom >> KOL Home >> Documents>> Document 15 and 16

Document 15: Letter from Charles Mayer to D.J Foley, June 6, 1882

Document 16: Letter from V. Schmitt to Archbishop Gibbons, June 8, 1882

Go To Documents
Give Me Some Background Information On This Topic
Important Dates Related To These Documents
I Want To Know More About This Topic
Dates
Ideas


As noted, many members of the Knights of Labor were Catholic. In some locations, entire local assemblies were Catholic and attended church together. In many cases these were communities of immigrants from Catholic Europe that had come to the United States in search of work. Often, priests that spoke the language of a group of a immigrants (or came from the same country as the migrant group) was appointed to minister to their religious needs in a particular area. When this happened, priests often formed strong bonds with their parishioners, based on shared culture and language. Sometimes these priests became community leaders, at other times, they knew more about their parishioners than anyone else. As might be expected, priests became tightly associated with their particular communities by outsiders. Occasionally, local priests were accused of encouraging parish members to join the Knights, or of not discouraging them strongly enough from joining. Priests, in fact, had varying degrees of involvement in the Knights at the time.

Document 1
Document 2
Document 3
Document 4

Document 5
Document 6
Document 7
Document 8
Document 9
Document 10
Document 11
Document 12
Document 13
Document 14
Document 15
Document 16
Document 17
Document 18
Document 19
Document 20

These letters illustrate one of many ways a priest could find himself involved in local Knights affairs. They involve a coal mining company president named Charles Mayer, a priest named Valentine Schmitt, and a group of Schmitt's parishioners employed as coal miners in western Maryland (see intro to Document 4). Mayer, upset by the demands of his miners, blames Father Schmitt for generating labor unrest among them. An upset Mayer sent a letter with his version of the problem to D.J Foley, a Baltimore merchant and close friend of Archbishop James Gibbons. Mayer is hoping that Gibbons will step in and address the problem, since Schmitt is in Gibbons' jurisdiction. Gibbons responded by contacting Schmitt and asking for his side of the story. Both Mayer's letter and Schmitt's response are reproduced here.

(Top of Page)

Questions

Read the letters and consider the following questions:

On Mayer's letter to Foley:

  • Mayer describes who the "problem workers" are in the first paragraph of his letter to Foley. Who does he say they are?
  • How does the problem relate to the parishioners of Father Schmitt? (Note: Mayer incorrectly spells Schmitt "Schmidt").
  • How does Mayer ask Foley to remedy the problem?
  • Of what does Mayer accuse the Knights of Labor?
060682_sm.gif

Questions

Read the letters and consider the following questions:

Of Schmitt's letter to Gibbons:

  • What does Schmitt think of Mayer's accusations?
  • What does Schmitt think of the miners in his parish?
  • How does Schmitt characterize the ethnic background of his parishioners?
  • How does Schmitt characterize the treatment and attitudes of the Catholic miners?

(Top of Page)

060882_sm.gif

URL: http://libraries.cua.edu/achrcua/Knights/kol_doc15.html Send questions and comments MODIFIED: March-16-2007