Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
In the 1860s Walt Whitman described New York as a “city of spires and masts” with “the flags of all nations … duly lowered at sunset.” To this celebrator or urban life New York was a “city of the world! For all races are here; all the lands of the earth make contributions here.” The cosmopolitan character of New York was especially reflected in the city's Roman Catholic community. In the words of John Hughes, the Roman Catholic Archbishop of New York at mid-century, his “people were composed of representatives from almost all nations.” There were Italian and French Catholics, German and Irish Catholics as well as white and black American-born Catholics. And if one looked long enough, he would come across Catholic merchants from Spain and Catholic chefs from Switzerland. But within this polyglot community the two most significant ethnic groups in ante-bellum New York were the Irish and German immigrants.
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11. Census of the State of New York 1865, p. 130.
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26. Ibid.
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87. Browne, “The Archdiocese of New York a Century Ago,” p. 157; the number of Masses on Sunday in each parish varied from as many as five to as few as two and the average number was three. See Metropolitan Catholic Almanac and Laity's Directory 1860 (Baltimore: John Murphy and Co., 1860), pp. 136–38.Google Scholar
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