 A Diverse Church |
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Embroidery of St. Patrick, ca. 1870
The Catholic University of America
Museum Collection
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Irish Immigrants
Irish Catholic immigration to the United States stretches back to the very first colonial
settlements of the seventeenth century. It was only in the 1820s and 1830s that Catholics
became a majority of the immigrants fleeing Ireland, and only in the 1840s, uprooted by
the Great Famine, that Catholics fled Ireland for America in massive numbers. Between 1820
and 1900, almost four million Irish - the vast majority being Catholics - came to the
United States. Irish immigration would continue through out the nineteenth and twentieth
centuries but as a river or a steady swarm, never again a flood.
Irish Catholics were fiercely loyal to their faith, a loyalty born and tested in centuries
of religious warfare with Protestant England. Yet the Catholic church in Ireland was weak
and poorly organized and disciplined until the middle of the nineteenth century. Only a
small minority of Irish Catholics attended Sunday Mass regularly in the poorer western
parts of the island, if for no other reason than there were too few priests to say the
masses or chapels in which to hold them. Catholicism in such remote areas was still
largely a peasant, folk religion until the famine or even later. In the middle of the
nineteenth century, however, a "devotional revolution," a religious revival,
swept Ireland. New churches appeared, sodalities mushroomed, men and women flocked to the
religious life, mass attendance and practice of the sacraments rose dramatically, and
devotions multiplied. Some say this revival was a response to a crisis of cultural
identity as the Famine washed away much of the remains of the old Gaelic culture. Others
suggest that the new economy, requiring greater discipline, nurtured the religious
revival. Though new devotions encouraged by Rome became widely popular, Irish Catholicism
retained a fierce nationalist streak even after the religious
revival. The Irish, therefore, remained devoted to the island's longtime patrons, Saints
Bridget and Patrick.
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