The Catholic World, Vol. 01, April to September, 1865 / A Monthly Eclectic Magazine
Fine Binding
THE CARSWELL COMPANY LIMITED
NEW YORK: LAWRENCE KEHOE, PUBLISHER, 7 BEEKMAN STREET. 1865.
The English Catholics, like the Puritans, early learned to look toward America as a refuge from persecution, and in 1634, under the direction of Lord Baltimore, they founded the colony of Maryland. Despite persecution from Protestants whom they had freely admitted into their community, they prospered, increased, and became the germ of the Church of the United States, now so large and flourishing.
In the colonial archives of the Ministry of the Navy we have found a curious manuscript memoir upon Acadia, by Lamothe Cadillac, in which it is stated that in 1686 there were Catholic inhabitants in New York, and especially in Maryland, where they had seven or eight priests. Another paper preserved in the same archives mentions a Catholic priest residing in New York; and William Penn, who had established absolute toleration in the colony adjoining that of Maryland, speaks of an old Catholic priest who exercised the ministry in Pennsylvania.
The Catholics at this time are said to have composed a thirtieth part of the whole population of Maryland. This estimate seems to us too low. At all events, the increase of our unfortunate brethren in the faith was retarded by persecution and difficulties of all kinds which surrounded them. In the Puritan colonies of the North, they were absolutely proscribed. In the Southern colonies, of Virginia, Georgia, and Carolina, their condition was but little better; in New York they enjoyed a precarious toleration in the teeth of penal laws. In Maryland and Pennsylvania alone they were granted freedom of worship, and a legal status; though even in those colonies they were exposed to a thousand wrongs and vexations. Maryland persecuted them from time to time and banished their priests; and William Penn, in his tolerant conduct toward them, was bitterly opposed by his own people.
A few years before the French Revolution, Mr. Emery, superior of Saint Sulpice, guided by what we must term an extraordinary inspiration, came to the assistance of the American Church, and with the help of his brother Sulpitians and at the cost of the society, founded a theological seminary at Baltimore. His plans were already well matured when Bishop Carroll, soon after his appointment, entering heartily into the project, promised him a house and all the assistance he could give. Four Sulpitians accordingly set out from Paris in 1790, taking with them five Seminarians. They were supplied with 30,000 francs to defray the cost of their establishment, and to this modest sum the crisis which soon overtook the parent establishment allowed them to add but little; but this mite, bestowed by the Church of France in the last days of her wealth, was destined to become, like the widow's mite, the price of innumerable blessings.
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THE CATHOLIC WORLD.
CONTENTS.
I.
II.
III.
II.
CHAPTER II.
II.
II.
III.
CARDINAL WISEMAN IN ROME.
ART.
BOOK NOTICES.
CHAPTER IV.
CHAPTER V.
I.
II.
III.
ART.
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
A LETTER TO THE REV. E. B. PUSEY, D.D. BY HENRY EDWARD MANNING, D.D.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
VII.
VIII.
IX.
CONCLUSION.
CHAPTER VII.
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
CHAPTER II.
CHAPTER III.
CHAPTER IV.
CHAPTER V.
CHAPTER VI.
§ 2.
§ 3.
§ 4.
I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
VII.
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
BOOKS RECEIVED.
CHAPTER X.
§ 5.
§ 6.
§ 7.
CHAPTER VIII.
CHAPTER IX.
II. THE KINGDOM OF GOD ON EARTH.
III. THE BODY OF CHRIST.
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
CHAPTER XII.
CHAPTER XI.
CHAPTER XII.
THE STRAND.
PUBLISHING IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY.
BEN JONSON AND LINCOLN'S INN.
MISCELLANY.
NEW PUBLICATIONS.