Americans Are An Enquiring, Thinking, Reasoning 
People

By Christopher Dawson

	(This is a review of <Documents of American Church History>," edited by Msgr. John Tracy 
Ellis of Catholic University, published in 1957.)

	The development of Catholicism in the United States during the last century and a half is one of 
the most remarkable chapters in the Church's history.  Nowhere perhaps is the parable of the mustard 
seed more strikingly, illustrated than in the story of the expansion of the tiny Catholic community of 
1785, which possessed no bishop and hardly 25 priests, into the mighty organization which we see 
today filled with life and energy and spreading its branches from the Atlantic to the Pacific.

	Yet the average English Catholic knows nothing of this remarkable story, nor can he be blamed, 
since he has had little opportunity to learn.  As Msgr. Tracy Ellis himself has recently pointed out (in 
<American Catholicism and the Intellectual Life>), the American Church has not been a writing 
church, and there has been much in the circumstances of its development which have militated against 
the progress of scholarship and the growth of a reading public.

	Moreover the best historical writing has taken the form of ecclesiastical biography, and the 
English reader does not possess sufficient knowledge of the American ecclesiastical and political scene 
to make such works interesting, even if they were accessible to him.  For all these reasons Msgr. 
Tracy Ellis' new source book of American Church History is doubly valuable.  It gives us a bird's eye 
view of the whole history of the Church in the United States through contemporary documents, or in 
the words of contemporary observers.

	Yet it is not a mere text book compilation: the editor has woven the whole material together most 
skillfully by the introductory notes with which he prefaces each extract, so that the book has some of 
the qualities of a consecutive historical narrative.

	The first two sections are devoted to the Spanish & French contributions to the conversion of 
North America, beginning with the original papal bulls conferring the dominion of the newly 
discovered lands on the Kings of Spain and Portugal, and the bull of Paul III in defense of the rights of 
the Indians.

	Those introductory sections may be described as the Catholic prehistory of the United States, 
since they really belong to the history of the Mexican and the Canadian Church, although they are 
concerned with United States territory.  But the reports of the Franciscan Fray Junipero Serra on the 
Californian missions and the great story of the Jesuit mission to the Hurons are among the most 
remarkable documents in the whole volume, and it is well that we should remember that St. Isaac 
Jogues, the greatest of the Canadian martyrs, is also an American martyr, since he suffered in what is 
now the State of New York, and the diocese of Albany.

BISHOP CARROLL

	After these heroic exploits, the origins of Catholicism in the English colonies seem tame and 
unadventurous.  At the time of the Declaration of Independence, the Catholics in the States, as we see 
in the first report to Propaganda by John Carroll in 1785, were still a mere handful,most of them in 
Maryland and Pennsylvania, apart from the scattered French Canadians in the Mississippi valley who 
lived in an ecclesiastical no man's land without bishop or priests.

	But during the next fifty or sixty years an extraordinary transformation took place, the history of 
which is all too little known.  The documents of this period,the age of Carroll and Marechal and 
Flaget and England,are perhaps the most interesting in the whole volume, since they describe a world 
that is equally remote from Europe and from the modern American scene, a world without 
organization, without discipline, without material wealth, yet filled with a buoyant spirit of optimism 
and hope.

	Archbishop Marechal, who had the high and austere ideals of the Sulpician tradition, and who was 
not blind to the defects of American Catholicism, could nevertheless write in 1818, "There is no 
region in the world where the Catholic religion can be propagated more quickly or more widely than in 
the United States of America . . . The Protestants who constitute the greatest part of the citizens, have 
almost completely rejected the prejudices under which they formerly laboured, and they look on the 
Catholic religion with a certain amount of veneration.  There is also an immense number of Europeans 
who came hither early and among them there are many Catholics.  It seems that this immigration will 
not be lessened for a number of years."

	This optimism reaches its climax in Bishop England's account of his two hour discourse to 
Congress on the principles of the Catholic faith.  "I love your countrymen more as I know them better 
. . . They must be instructed not abused.  They must be expostulated with not quarrelled with.  They 
are not obstinate heretics,they are an enquiring, thinking, reasoning, I will add a pious people,and 
God will bless and bring them to truth."

	This climate of optimism endured until the '30s and seemed to be justified by the views of 
independent observers.  De Tocqueville greatly over-estimated the number of American Catholics, and 
notes that while America is the most democratic country in the world, it is at the same time the 
country in which the Roman Catholic religion makes most progress.

URSULINE BURNING

	In 1839 Captain Marryat declared that "all America West of the Alleghanies will eventually 
become a Catholic country."  But at this very moment the situation underwent a drastic reaction.  The 
progress of Catholicism in the West combined with the tension caused by the enormous influx of Irish 
immigrants in the cities of the Atlantic seaboard produced a wave of religious intolerance which 
continued to grow for twenty or thirty years.

	From the burning of the Ursuline Convent at Charlestown outside Boston in 1834, down to the 
collapse of the Nativist or "Know Nothing" party a few years before the civil war, hardly a year 
passed without anti-Catholic disturbances, church-burnings and outrages like the attack on the Papal 
Legate, Msgr. Bedini, in 1853.  This is one of the darkest chapters in American history, and it is not 
surprising that the present volume passes it over rather lightly.

	Nevertheless it is of considerable historical importance, since it made a profound impression on 
the course of American development.  It forced the Catholics back on themselves and turned their 
thoughts from the prospects of external expansion that had seemed so promising in the earlier part of 
the century to the need for self defense and internal organization.

ARCHBISHOP HUGHES

	Thus it was one of the factors that contributed to the centralized urban pattern of organization 
which became so characteristic of modern American Catholicism.

	Throughout this dark period, the leading figure among American Catholics was Archbishop John 
Hughes of New York, a pugnacious Irishman who had no faith in soft answers and never turned the 
other cheek until his opponent had been knocked on the ropes.

	Throughout his career this formidable prelate used all his influence to discourage the schemes for 
settling the Irish immigrants on the land, which were sponsored by some of their most far-sighted 
leaders, like Thomas D'Arcy McGee and in later times by Bishop John Spalding.

	The unpublished document (No. 99) printed in the present volume, gives a very vivid impression 
alike of Hughes' uncompromising character and of the motives that inspired his opposition to the 
schemes of western settlement.  There is no doubt that there was real statesmanship of a kind behind 
his desire to keep the Irish concentrated in the great cities where their numbers made them a force that 
the politician had to reckon with.

	But from a wider point of view the wisdom of this policy is more questionable since it tended to 
create a kind of ghetto mentality which separated the Catholics from the rest of American society, a 
state of things which was especially regrettable in the 19th century when the roots of American culture 
were still predominantly rural.

	The remaining part of the volume, which deals with the century from the Civil War to the present 
day, covers more familiar ground.  It was the age of Cardinal Gibbons and Archbishop Ireland,a 
period of almost unbroken prosperity and progress, and one that is relatively familiar to modern 
Catholics.

	During this period Catholicism finally became recognized as an established element in American 
society, and though occasional manifestations of intolerance still occurred, as in the revived Ku Klux 
Klan movement after the first World War, they were more of a nuisance than a serious danger.

GHETTO MENTALITY

	On the other hand, American Catholicism was slow to shake off a sense of social and intellectual 
inferiority resulting from the ghetto-like conditions which characterized the life of the masses of 
unassimilated immigrants.  In this respect there is no doubt that the closing down of European 
immigration after the first World War was beneficial to American Catholicism, since it removed the 
barrier between the Irish and the native American, and raised the economic and educational standards 
of the Catholic population.

	Since the Second World War, above all, the consequences of this process are becoming 
increasingly evident.  American Catholicism is becoming more aware of the importance of cultural 
values.  The Catholic colleges which a hundred years ago were little more than high schools, are now 
sharing in the general expansion of American higher education, and are becoming Catholic universities 
in the traditional sense of the word.

THOUSAND MONKS

	Even more remarkable is the development of the contemplative life which was so lacking during 
the earlier period.  Since the second World War eight Cistercian Monasteries and one Carthusian one 
have been founded, and there are now more than a thousand Cistercian monks in the U.S.A.!  At the 
same time the development of the liturgical movement is carrying out an apostolate to the laity, based 
on the same spiritual principles.

	All these developments are too recent to be dealt with at length in this volume, but no one is more 
conscious of their importance than Msgr. Tracy Ellis, who is particularly concerned with the need for 
Catholics to take a larger share in the intellectual life of the nation.  It is true that the elite of Catholic 
scholars and writers, and still less of scientists and technologists, is not proportionate to their numbers.

	But when one considers the fact that the great mass of Catholic immigrants to the U.S.A. in the 
last century were practically illiterate, and desperately poor, the creation of the nationwide system of 
Catholic education with its schools, its teaching orders and its universities is little less than a miracle.

	In the course of a century and a half, in the face of every possible social and economic 
disadvantage, the Catholics have changed the religious landscape of America and have become the 
largest, the strongest and the most united religious body on the continent.  In face of this achievement 
it is impossible not to be optimistic about the future.

	Nevertheless the very strength of American Catholicism creates new problems.  In the past 
America was a country of minorities, and the Catholic minority, especially the Irish part of it, throve 
in the atmosphere of conflict.  But today the climate of American opinion and culture is changing.  
American Protestantism which once exploded in violent and often eccentric diversity has settled down 
to a mood of sober conformity, so that the Churches have become the loyal exponents of the American 
way of life.

	Against this congealed mass of American Protestantism and secularism, the thirty million 
American Catholics stand out as the one great remaining minority which can never be completely 
assimilated because it forms part of an international and universal society.

	This minority is far too large to be ignored, and it arouses opposition from two opposite 
directions.  On the one hand there is the old tradition of liberal individualism, which sees the 
organization and discipline of the Catholic body as a danger to American freedom, and on the other 
hand there is the new tendency to social conformity which regards the spiritual authority and 
independence of the Catholic Church as a challenge to national solidarity and to the unity of American 
culture.

BLANSHARD APPEAL

	Yet these opposite points of view do not cancel each other out: for critics of Catholicism like Mr. 
Paul Blanshard somehow contrive to appeal to both of them simultaneously.  The coming age will 
show how these problems will be met.

	But the records contained in this volume are enough to show how little room there is for doubt or 
despondency.  They show how the spiritual vitality of a religious minority can triumph over the most 
overwhelming odds.  The seed that was sown among the briars of the American wilderness has borne 
fruit literally a thousand-fold: for the thirty thousand American Catholics of Bishop Carroll's time are 
today thirty millions.

	And this miracle has been achieved not by the achievements of men of genius or by the favour of 
the temporal power: it is the fruit of faith and courage and hard work, and so long as these qualities 
persist, American Catholicism will continue to grow.

This article was taken from "The Dawson Newsletter," Summer 1995, P.O. Box 332, 
Fayetteville, AR 72702, $8.00 per year.

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