1) The founder is a Venerable of the Church.

Father Michael McGivney was born in Waterbury, Conn., on August 12, 1852. His parents, Patrick and Mary (Lynch) McGivney, had arrived in the great 19th century wave of Irish immigration. Patrick McGivney became a molder in the heat and noxious fumes of a Waterbury brass mill. Mary McGivney gave birth to 13 children, six of whom died in infancy or childhood. Therefore, the first child, Michael, with four living sisters and two brothers, learned early about sorrow and the harsh grip of poverty. Thanks to his parents’ example, he also learned about the powers of love and faith, and family fortitude.

Michael went to the small district schools of Waterbury’s working-class neighborhoods. A good student, he was admired by his school principal for “Excellent deportment and proficiency in his studies.” Then, after the Civil War, when Connecticut’s metals industry was booming, he left school at age 13 to go to work. His job in the spoon-making department of a brass factory provided a few more necessary dollars for family survival.

When Michael reached the age of 16 in 1868, he left the factory. With the priesthood clearly in mind, he traveled with his Waterbury pastor to Quebec, Canada. There he registered at the French-run College of St. Hyacinthe. He worked hard on subjects which would prepare him to apply for seminary admission.

After two academic years at Our Lady of Angels Seminary, which was attached to Niagara University in Niagara Falls, N.Y., young McGivney moved to Montreal, where he attended seminary classes at the Jesuit-run St. Mary’s College.

He was there when his father died in June of 1873. For more see the book “Parish Priest” & trailer for the movie here

2) A Charitable Organization

Originally serving as a mutual benefit society to working-class and immigrant Catholics in the United States, it developed into a fraternal benefit society dedicated to providing charitable services, including war and disaster relief, actively defending Catholicism in various nations, and promoting Catholic education

3) For Men and Young Men

There are about 2,000,000 members in the world & membership is limited to practicing Catholic men aged 18 or older but there is an official junior organization, the Columbian Squires, which is comprised of at least 10 Catholic young men between the ages of 10 and 18. For more on the Squires please visit here.

4) Insurance Program

This is the heart of Fr. McGivney’s mission. The Knights of Columbus insurance story begins in the winter of 1882 in the basement of St. Mary’s Church in New Haven, Conn. It was there that Fr. Michael J. McGivney, gathered the men of his parish together to create a solution to a recurring problem. Many Catholics — most of whom were immigrants — were working and living in unfavorable conditions. And many, tragically, were dying young, leaving behind widows and orphans with insufficient financial resources. It was a cold reality that had confronted Father McGivney all too often — not only in the lives of his parishioners — but in his own. As a seminarian, he was forced to leave school and return home to aid his family when his father died unexpectedly. Though this story of financial ruin for Catholic families was common, Father McGivney was convinced that there was a way to change the ending. He knew that if the Catholic men in his parish came together in mutual aid, widows and orphans could receive the support they needed. He also knew that if Catholic men banded together, united by charity and unity, they could strengthen their faith, their families, and their communities.

So, he established the Knights of Columbus, and with it, a “pass-the-hat” insurance system to protect the Catholic families in his parish. Over time, that system has evolved, and today we stay true to our founding mission through our multi-billion dollar, top-rated insurance program. Members in the United States and Canada have exclusive access to our insurance program and products, including life insurance, retirement annuities, long-term care insurance, and disability income insurance.

Our charitable giving and fraternal service have continued to grow too. Nearly 2 million men in over a dozen countries across the globe are proud to call themselves Knights. Last year alone, these men and their families donated more than $185 million to charity and performed more than 75 million hours of service. (Source: “Our Story” on the KofC website)

5) Baby Insurance

It is the ONLY insurance company that gives benefits for stillbirth & some even make oak caskets for stillborn and miscarried babies here.

6) Traditional KofC Councils

The “Knights of Columbus Traditional Latin Mass Association” is an informal association of Councils that desire to promote the Mass known as the Usus Antiquior of the Roman Catholic Church, which was the Mass offered by Knights founder, Venerable Servant of God Fr. Michael McGivney. The vision of the Association is to witness the continued increase of the Traditional Liturgy and devotions envisioned in Pope Benedict XVI’s apostolic letter of July 7, 2007 Summorum Pontificum in order to help Knights grow in holiness and draw closer to our founder through the liturgy he offered daily – the Traditional Latin Mass. For more please visit their website here

7) Yankee Stadium

Opening day, April 19, 1923, Knights of Columbus member Al Smith, the governor of New York (first Catholic candidate for President in 1928), threw out the ceremonial first pitch in the ‘House that Ruth Built.’ To follow that up, Babe Ruth, a Knight himself, christened the new stadium with the first home run in the third inning that day. On top of the Knights being in charge of throwing out the first pitch opening day, they also were the Yankees’ landlord for 20 years. Beginning in 1953, the Knights bought the 9 acres that Yankee Stadium sat on at $2.5 million to create another outlet of fundraising for the Catholic apostolate. By leasing the land for $128,000 per year for 28 years, the Knights were trying to make an investment to aide the future safety of their organization and its charisms. Their charisms were first advocated by Knight’s founder, Fr. McGivney: country, family, and faith. However, after just twenty years of owning the land upon which many Yankee legends were made, the drastic 1974-75 renovation of the Stadium, eventually led to a for sale sign by the Knights.

8) Sports Legends

A few of the sports icons that were Knights:

Lou Albano, Professional wrestler and actor

James J. Braddock, “The Cinderella Man”, former heavyweight boxing champion

James Connolly, first Olympic Gold Medal champion in modern times

Mike Ditka, former Chicago Bears coach

Chris Godfrey, former right guard for the New York Giants and founder of Life Athletes

Ron Guidry, pitcher who helped lead the New York Yankees to a World Series championship

Gil Hodges, Major League baseball player and former manager who led the 1969 New York Mets to an improbable World Series win

Tom Kelly, first baseman and former manager of the Minnesota Twins

Vince Lombardi, former coach of the Green Bay Packers (The Vincent T. Lombardi Council, No. 6552, Knights of Columbus, in Middletown, New Jersey, is named for him.)

Connie Mack, baseball player, manager, and team owner

Bob O’Neil, former NFL Pittsburgh Steelers, New York Titans, CFL Calgary Stampeders, and Montreal Alouettes professional football player

Floyd Patterson, former heavyweight boxing champion

Babe Ruth, baseball player for the Boston Red Sox, New York Yankees, and Boston Braves

Jim Sorgi, former Indianapolis Colts quarterback.

Shane Victorino, Boston Red Sox baseball player

Lenny Wilkens, National Basketball Association’s second winningest coach

Not a professional athlete is the great Alan Keyes, political activist, author and former diplomat

9) The KofC Headquarters Building

Why does this matter? Well remember the Insurance the KofC offers? Ever see them sponsor the Super Bowl? Championship Games? Anything? You will see logos for others (Allstate on the Field Goal nets for example) but you will never see the KofC logo in a game? Why? The money is to help the people not to make everyone in HQ rich.

The Knights of Columbus Building, in Downtown New Haven, Connecticut, is the headquarters of the Roman Catholic fraternal service organization, the Knights of Columbus. Also known as the Knights of Columbus Tower or The Knights’ Tower, the building was designed by Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo and Associates and finished in 1969. This 23-story modern style reinforced concrete building, at 320 feet (98 meters) tall, is the third-tallest building in the city’s skyline. The Knights’ Tower serves as the international headquarters for the Knights of Columbus and is home to the Supreme Council. Led by the Supreme Knight, the Chief Executive Officer of the Knights, the building provides administrative support and leadership for more than 15,000 councils worldwide. The cylindrical towers at the corners give the structure a simple geometric form and represent the four core principles of the Order: Charity, Unity, Fraternity, and Patriotism. (Source – Wikipedia)

VS

New York Life Building – the massive building rises forty stories to its pyramidal gilded roof while occupying the full block between 26th Street, 27th Street, Madison Avenue and Park Avenue South, a rarity in Manhattan. The New York Life Building stands 615 feet (187 m) tall and contains 40 floors. Inspired by Salisbury Cathedral, it was the last significant Gilbert skyscraper in Manhattan.

Prudential Headquarters – the Prudential Plaza, opened in 1960 during the New Newark era when modernist buildings were built downtown. The International style building is one the tallest and most prominent on the Newark skyline. The Gibraltar Building, headquarters for the financial services company until 1986, is situated between two other office towers later built for the firm, all of which are connected by underground passage.

You see my point. New Haven, Conn is not exactly a metropolitan city.

10) Take Care of Your Family

As in Fr McGivney’s day we still have to take care of our families. If the father of the household dies and he is the breadwinner for the family then that puts the mother and children in a bind. Join a council and find an agent to make sure you can help your family financially after you die. Click here to find an agent new you.

11) La Cristiada

The following are excerpts from Dr Jean Meyer’s book “La Cristiada” which you can obtain a copy here

The Knights of Columbus in Mexico were called by their Spanish name “Caballeros de Colon” and their first Mexican council was created with Guadalupe Council No. 1050 in 1905. By 1923, there were 43 councils in Mexico with some 6,000 “Caballeros.” When the Mexican Revolution, which began in 1910, took an anti-clerical turn in 1914, that further stimulated the growth of the Caballeros, whose relations with their U.S. brothers proved to be very important to brining information to the American public about the situation in Mexico from 1925 to 1938.

Twenty of the Ninety priests killed in the Cristiada were Knights of Columbus, and some were killed with the fellow Knights of their council. Some Cristeros were also Knights of Columbus, including General Luis Navarro Origel, who is famously called El Primero Crisero (“The First Cristero”).

Six K of C priests were one of the first to be canonized as saints:

Fr Rodrigo Aguilar Aleman – sacrificed his life to protect the identities of seminarians Fr Luis Batis Sainz – was put before a firing squad for refusing to submit to the anti-religious laws Fr Mateo Correa Magallanes – was executed when he refused to break the seal of confession of his fellow inmates. Fr Miguel de la Mora de la Mora – was shot while saying a rosary for speaking out against anti-religious laws. Fr Pedro de Jesus Maldonado Lucero – was caught administering the sacraments and was beaten then executed Fr Jose Maria Robles Hurtado – while preparing to say Mass he was captured and killed the next morning.

The Mexican Knights were a target of the Mexican Government & those who had traveled to the U.S. for the 1926 convention in Philadelphia were barred from returning to Mexico, forcing them to stay in L.A. where many other Mexican refuges would also find a new home. In Mexico, the K of C headquarters was attacked, ransacked, and its records destroyed. The KofC had to go underground. Being a KofC member was seen as a danger to the State’s agenda & being a Knight had its own dangers. They knew that to be a Knight one must be a practicing catholic so being a Knight was proof of one’s allegiance to the Catholic Church. Walking home one day in January 1927, Yocundo Duran of Chihuahua was spotted by Federal General Valles. Valles had one of his soldiers ask Duran if he was a member of the K of C. Duran confirmed asking if there was any evil in it. Duran was declared a ‘subversive Catholic’ and immediately shot.

After finally getting Washington DC to look at the problem the K of C created the Mexican Fund, a pledge of $1 million collected from members that was to be used for two broad causes: to provide direct aid to refuges, and to educate the U.S. populace about the true situation in Mexico, including the brutality, the despotic politics, and the anti-Catholic ideology that was rampant in Mexico’s government and labor unions. The Order published and distributed pamphlets, ranging from single-page fact sheets to longer booklets on the Mexican situation. Over 17 different titles were published, with 5 million copies distributed to the public. They even set up public speakers to give informational lectures to diverse, and often large, audiences. On November 25, 1926 the Mexican legislature deliberated at length about the K of C and the Mexican Fund. They ever perused and read from the pages of the “Columbia”, the K of C’s magazine (bc the K of C put information of the Mexican situation in the magazine), which was later barred from being mailed in Mexico.

Rumors by political figures and journalists of the money by U.S. councils to help fund arms for the Mexican K of C were unleashed saying they were desiring to ‘interfere’ with Mexican politics. The attacks upon the Knight’s Mexican Fund came especially from the Kl Klux Klan and its supporters. The KKK was quick to denounce the Knights’ plan and to offer $10 million to the Mexican government in its fight against Papism. The KKK also sent telegrams of congratulations to President Calles, asking him repeatedly for the full annihilation of the Church south of the Rio Grande. The U.S. Senate took notice of the hotly debated Knights’ fund for three hours in January 1927. Led by Senator James Heflin, who contributed to the KKK magazines and lectured around the union to audiences made up largely of KKK members.

(Photo was in protest of the KofC helping refuges enter the United States during the Cristeros War)

And for laughs

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