 A Diverse Church |
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Italian Liturgical Banner used at
Holy Rosary Catholic Church, Washington, DC, ca. 1900
Church was established in 1913.
Holy Rosary Catholic Church
Click on the image for a closer look. |
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Immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe
In the 1880s and early 1890s, as Irish and German immigration began to slow, Italians,
Poles, Slovaks and other immigrants from southern and eastern European countries began to
arrive in the United States in greater numbers. This immigration would not peak until the
first few decades of the twentieth century, but already by 1900, there were almost a half
million Italians and 400,000 Poles in America.
Religious traditions and customs varied widely among these immigrant groups. Many
immigrants from southern Italy had resented the Catholic clergy at home whom they
suspected of being in league with oppressive landowners and brought their suspicions of
the institutional church to America. Nevertheless, they developed a rich religious life of
local societies, community feast day celebrations and family and personal devotions in
tight knit urban neighborhoods like the North End of Boston, Italian Harlem in New York,
south Philadelphia and parts of New Orleans. In Poland, on the other hand, Catholicism and
nationalism had been merged in the fire of persecution from non-Catholic Russian or
Prussian conquerors. Polish immigrants supported huge parish complexes of churches,
schools, sodalities, associations and clubs, such as St. Stanislaus Kostka in Chicago and
Sacred Heart in New Britain, Connecticut. They too had a fierce devotion to saints like
Stanislaus, and to Our Lady of Czestochowa.
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