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The Catholic Church, the Congress of Industrial Organizations, and Labor in the United States, 1930-1950

"1948 Labor Day Statement"; O'Hara-McIntyre-McNicholas-Spellman correspondence

Title: Labor Day parade

Description: Ford Local 600 members march in the 1942 Detroit Labor Day parade.

Source: Arthur S. Siegel, photographer, Farm Security Administration - Office of War Information Photograph Collection, Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress

Date: September 1942

There were always critics, both clerical and lay, of the Social Action Department's (SAD's) activities, but they received little notice and gained less support. In 1947, though, SAD's vehement criticism of the Taft-Hartley Bill led to substantial criticism from inside and outside the Church. The Administrative Board of the National Catholic Welfare Conference (NCWC), subsequently, established oversight procedures for SAD's episcopal chair, in this case Toledo's Karl Alter. (Alter [1885-1977], who had never completely agreed with SAD, had been doing what he could to rein in its independence and laborism). The following year, 1948, saw a significant attack on SAD and the Industrial Council Plan when the Department's Labor Day Statement came under siege. High Church intrigue might have been involved since Archbishop James McIntyre (1886-1979) of Los Angeles and Bishop John F. O'Hara C.S.C. (1888-1960) of Buffalo owed their positions to the patronage of Francis Cardinal Spellman (1888-1967) of New York. The bishops, led by Archbishop John T. McNicholas (1877-1950), affirmed their commitment to industry councils in November 1948, but dissatisfaction with it would only grow.

 

Questions

As you read these documents, reflect on the following questions:

1. Did McIntyre and O'Hara have similar criticisms of the Labor Day statement?

2. What was McNicholas' most important reply to their comments?

Title: 1948 Labor Day Statement

Creator: Social Action Department of the National Catholic Welfare Conference

Source: American Catholic History Research Center and University Archives, United States Conference of Catholic Bishops/Social Action Department Collection

Date: 1948
Title: Bishop John O'Hara to Archbishop John T. McNicholas

Source: Chancery Collection, The Joseph Cardinal Bernardin Archives & Records Center, Archdiocese of Chicago

Date: August 16, 1948
Title: Francis Cardinal Spellman to Archbishop John T. McNicholas

Source: American Catholic History Research Center, USCCB - Office of the General Secretary Collection, Box 88, Folder 1948

Date: August 21, 1948
Title: Archbishop J. Francis McIntyre to Archbishop John T. McNicholas

Source: Chancery Collection, The Joseph Cardinal Bernardin Archives & Records Center, Archdiocese of Chicago

Date: August 23, 1948
Title: Archbishop John T. McNicholas to Francis Cardinal Spellman

Source: Chancery Collection, The Joseph Cardinal Bernardin Archives & Records Center, Archdiocese of Chicago

Date: August 27, 1948