Toil and Transcendence: Catholicism in 20th Century America
By the end of the Civil War, barely four million Catholics lived on American soil. A century later, more than 43 million Americans were Catholic, making the Church a dominant force in American culture and politics.
The twentieth century was a springtime for the American Church, which witnessed the dramatic expansion of American dioceses, with towering new churches erected even blocks apart. Catholic schools were swiftly built to accommodate the influx of Catholic schoolchildren, and convents and monasteries blossomed as vocations soared.
The Catholic hierarchy and laity factored into many of the great stories of twentieth-century America, which are told here by one of our country’s foremost experts on Catholic American history, Fr. Charles Connor.
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About the Author
Fr. Charles Connor, a faculty member at My. St. Mary’s Seminary in Emmitsburg, Maryland is an expert in Church history. He is the host of several television series on EWTN including Historic Catholic Converts.