[545] Ibid.
[546] Hamilton, Gail, “Catholicism and Public Schools,” North American Review, Vol. CXLVII (1888), pp. 572-580.
[547] Ibid.
[548] “The Anti-Catholic Spirit of Certain Writers,” The Catholic World, Vol. XXXVI (February, 1883), pp. 658-667.
[549] Deshon, loc. cit.
[550] Hamilton, loc. cit.
[551] In 1815 there were “about 70,000 Catholics to be found in the United States,.... In 1918, ... its Catholic population had increased to 17,416,303,....” McCarthy, Charles H., The History of the United States for Catholic Schools (New York, 1919), p. 421.
[552] McCarthy, Charles H., The History of the United States for Catholic Schools (American Book Co., 1919); O’Hara, John P., A History of the United States (The Macmillan Company, 1919); A History of the United States for Catholic Schools prepared and arranged by the Franciscan Sisters of the Perpetual Adoration (Scott, Foresman and Company, 1914); Lawler, Thomas B., Essentials of American History (Ginn and Company, 1918); Betten, Francis S., The Ancient World (Allyn and Bacon, 1916); Betten, Francis S., and Kaufman, Alfred, The Modern World (Allyn and Bacon, 1919); Burke, E. J., Political Economy, designed for use in Catholic Colleges, High Schools and Academies (American Book Company, 1913).
[553] McCarthy, op. cit., preface, p. iii. Professor McCarthy is Knights of Columbus Professor of American History at the Catholic University of America.
[554] Ibid., preface, p. iv.