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Catholics and Labor Unionization

Gibbons' Memorial to Rome, 1887

A black and white photograph of Cardinal Gibbons
Title: Archbishop James Cardinal Gibbons, n.d.

Description: James Cardinal Gibbons (1834-1921) was born in Baltimore, the son of Irish immigrants. He was ordained to the priesthood in 1861. In 1868, he was consecrated Apostolic Vicar of North Carolina, and became one of the youngest bishops world. After attending the First Vatican Council (1869-1870), he was transferred to the bishopric of Richmond. In 1877, Gibbons returned to his native Baltimore, becoming the ninth Archbishop of the oldest diocese in the United States. When Gibbons travelled to Rome in 1886 to plead the case for the Knights of Labor, he was created a cardinal by Pope Leo XIII.

Creator: Bachrach Bros.

Source: CUA University Photographic Collection Box 4, Folder 4

Date: no date

Given that the American archbishops had not decided unanimously to either condemn or approve of the Knights, James Gibbons was given the responsibility of presenting the case to Rome for a final decision. The decision of Rome on the Knights would determine whether the American church would allow members to remain in the order and maintain their standing as members of the Catholic church.

 

 

With assistance from Bishops John Keane of Richmond, John Ireland of St. Paul, Minnesota, and Denis O'Connell, the Rector of the North American College in Rome, Gibbons made the case for the Knights at the Vatican. The formal argument for the Knights was a written memorial-the avenue through which church authorities pled cases for certain causes to Roman authorities. The original memorial of February 20, 1887 is written in French to Cardinal Giovanni Simeoni, to whom such matters were addressed at the time.

 

 

Reproduced here is the front page of the memorial, and an English translation. The memorial first outlines the action taken by the American archbishops toward resolving the matter of the Knights in the United States. It then details the case against condemning the order.

 

 

 

Title: Memorial on Behalf of the Knights of Labor, 1887

Creator: James Cardinal Gibbons

Publisher: Henry Joseph Browne, The Catholic Church and the Knights of Labor, (Studies in American Church History, v. 38), 1949, pp. 365-378.

Date: 1887

Questions:

As you read the document, reflect on the following questions:

1.  Under point 1, in what ways does Gibbons claim that the Knights’ constitution does not violate the church’s ban on secret societies? 

2.  Under point 2, how does Gibbons describe the state of American society?   The state of the working class in the United States?  On the right of workers to engage in “legitimate resistance”? 

3.  Under point 4 Gibbons describes several objections to the Knights of Labor that have surfaced.  Select a, b, c, or d, read it, and explain whether or not you find Gibbons’ counter to those objections convincing.

4.  Under point 6, describe one thing that Gibbons believe might happen to the American church if the Knights are condemned.

5.  Under point 9, select one of Gibbons’ summary arguments for withholding condemnation and argue for or against it