Catholic Young Men's National Union
Encyclopedia
The Catholic Young Men's National Union was a Roman Catholic voluntary organisation set up in the USA in 1875. Its object was the intellectual, moral, and physical advancement of Catholic youth.
, at the call of Very Rev. George H. Doane, who became its first president. It included about one hundred organizations, extending as far west as Mankato, Minnesota
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Its aims included the establishment and promotion of Catholic young men's associations, libraries, reading-rooms, and gymnasiums; and the maintenance and conduct of an athletic league. Initially, delegates met for an annual congress.
In 1878 the National Union inaugurated a successful movement for obtaining appointments of a greater number of Catholic chaplains to the army and navy.
The Catholic Summer School was an outgrowth of National Union plans. Warren E. Mosher, the secretary of the National Union at the time, was the founder of the Summer School.
At the convention of 1906, held in New York City, a committee was appointed to prepare a plan of re-organization, then adopted at the convention of 1907 held at Elizabeth, New Jersey. Under the original organization it had been required that the president and first vice-president should be clergymen; this was now changed, the various departments of the Union were organized on a business basis, the athletic work was systematized by establishing the Catholic Amateur Athletic League, a branch of the National Union with complete control over all athletic affairs.
History
This association was organized on 22 February 1875, at a meeting held in Newark, New JerseyNewark, New Jersey
Newark is the largest city in the American state of New Jersey, and the seat of Essex County. As of the 2010 United States Census, Newark had a population of 277,140, maintaining its status as the largest municipality in New Jersey. It is the 68th largest city in the U.S...
, at the call of Very Rev. George H. Doane, who became its first president. It included about one hundred organizations, extending as far west as Mankato, Minnesota
Mankato, Minnesota
Mankato is a city in Blue Earth, Nicollet, and Le Sueur counties in the U.S. state of Minnesota. The population was 39,309 at the 2010 census, making it the fourth largest city in Minnesota outside of the Minneapolis-St. Paul metropolitan area. The county seat of Blue Earth County, it is located...
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Its aims included the establishment and promotion of Catholic young men's associations, libraries, reading-rooms, and gymnasiums; and the maintenance and conduct of an athletic league. Initially, delegates met for an annual congress.
In 1878 the National Union inaugurated a successful movement for obtaining appointments of a greater number of Catholic chaplains to the army and navy.
The Catholic Summer School was an outgrowth of National Union plans. Warren E. Mosher, the secretary of the National Union at the time, was the founder of the Summer School.
At the convention of 1906, held in New York City, a committee was appointed to prepare a plan of re-organization, then adopted at the convention of 1907 held at Elizabeth, New Jersey. Under the original organization it had been required that the president and first vice-president should be clergymen; this was now changed, the various departments of the Union were organized on a business basis, the athletic work was systematized by establishing the Catholic Amateur Athletic League, a branch of the National Union with complete control over all athletic affairs.