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An Irish-American Journalist and Catholicism: Patrick Ford of the Irish World

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

James P. Rodechko
Affiliation:
Mr. Rodechko is associate professor of history inBloomsburg State College, Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania

Extract

During the late nineteenth century, Irish immigrants were not always sympathetic toward the Catholic Church. Observers indicated that large numbers of Irish-Americans were dissatisfied with Catholic attitudes toward American conditions and might consequently sever their ties with the church. At times, priests, members of the hierarchy, and the American Catholic press showed particular concern that Patrick Ford, the influential and controversial editor of the New York Irish World, encouraged immigrants to question their traditional place in the church. In the late 1870s, Ford's opinions of American socio-economic and political affairs directly challenged those of Catholic spokesmen.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Church History 1970

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References

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57. Irish World, 04 25, 1891, 4.Google Scholar

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62. Irish World, 05 23, 1891, 4Google Scholar; May 30, 1891, 4; and February 11, 1893, 4.

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64. As early as 1880, Ford was aware that “men of ‘respectability’—the men of education—the men of good cloth”were in the Republican Party. See Irish World, 10 16. 1880. 4.Google Scholar

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67. Kinzer, Episode in Anti-Catholicism. chapter VII.

68. Irish World, 01 6, 1900, 5Google Scholar; February 3, 1900, 4; February 10, 1900, 11; May 31, 1902, 4; January 17, 1903, 4; and January 24, 1903, 1, 4.

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70. Irish World, 05 28, 1910, 4Google Scholar; April 30, 1910, 4; June 11, 1910, 4. Roosevelt's trouble in Rome also caused considerable embarrassment for Cardinal Gibbons, who considered Roosevelt a close friend. See Ellis, , The Life of James Cardinal Gibbons, II, 509514.Google Scholar

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74. Ibid., June 1, 1912, 11.

75. Ibid., March 21, 1908, 4.

76. Ibid., August 10, 1912, 11; and August 24, 1912, 4.

77. Ibid., April 28, 1888, 4; and May 5, 1888, 4.

78. Ibid., March 23, 1895, 1; and January 6, 1912, 4.

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