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Catholics and Politics

Mary Rose Hyland to John Ryan

Title: Mary Rose Hyland to John Ryan

Contributor: American Catholic History Research Center and University Archives

Date: October 12, 1936

The letters from Jessie HortonE. Doskey, and Mrs. Caskey, which are critical of Coughlin/or supportive of Ryan's "Safeguard" speech, were among the minority of mail responses Ryan received. This letter, on the other hand, represents the majority of the critical correspondence produced by Coughlin's followers. It is from a Mary Rose Hyland of Providence, Rhode Island, whose admiration for Coughlin and his National Union for Social Justice (NUSJ) were grounded in the belief that only Coughlin among the nation's leaders cared about the financial hardship she and her family had experienced. Her letter clearly expresses resentments that some working-class Catholics felt toward a clergy they perceived as insulated from the economic deprivations of the Depression.

 

Questions:

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

  • How does Hyland describe the role of Father Coughlin in her life? How do you think the Depression shaped her views of Coughlin?
  • Excluding her views of Coughlin, how does Hyland see the Catholic Church?