THESE
WORDS, as they stand
in the records, are Dr. Ewer’s farewell to
the Confraternity, In 1883 he died. He had been Superior-General
for fourteen years, and his death is the end of an
era in the Confraternity in America. His immediate
successor was the Rev, H. G. Batterson. Dr. Batterson
had been active in the Confraternity from the beginning,
and had borne valiant witness to its principles,
especially at St. Clement’s, Philadelphia.
He served as Superior-General, however, for only
one year. In 18X5 he was succeeded by Father Brown,
of St. Mary’s, New York, who had been Secretary-General
since the first election of officers in 1858. Father
Brown continued faithful in the Confraternity till
his death, but he was Superior General for only two
years. In 1887 he was succeeded by the Rev. E. A.
Larrabee, of the Church of the Ascension, Chicago.
This shift from East to West marks a change, not
only in the history of the Confraternity but in that
of the Catholic revival in the American Church. It
has been pointed out that, although the story begins
in the East, there is another chapter in the West,
not much later, beginning with the consecration of
Bishop Kemper in 1835 and the foundation of Nashotah
House in 1841. By 1867 the Catholic movement was
strong in the Mid-West. In the first decade of the
Confraternity’s history in this country there
is no more heroic figure than De Koven, from Wisconsin,
and no more eloquent spokesman for the Objects for
which it was founded. There is no evidence that De
Koven was ever affiliated with the Confraternity,
but the Society has always recognized its debt to
him, and in recent years has joined with the Community
of St. Mary in the gift of a tabernacle in his memory
in the chapel of the De Koven Foundation at Racine,
Wisconsin.
As Associates were admitted
and Wards formed in the West, opposition to the Confraternity
arose there, as in the East. An instance of this is
to be found in the diary of Sarah Maria Kirke, who
was known as Sister Sarah, and worked in Nebraska ender
Bishop Clarkson. She: writes: "The Bishop proposed
to admit me to the office of Deaconess, to begin the
formation of such an order (educational and hospital
work). I underwent an examination in his presence which
was satisfactory. A day was then appointed when I was
to present myself at the Pro-Cathedral—as it
really was—to be publicly admitted by him. Before
the date, however, he learned I was a member of the
Confraternity of the Blessed Sacrament, a society for
prayer recognizing the real presence in the Holy Sacrament.
He immediately informed me I must relinquish my membership
in it, for he could not accept any of its members for
work in his diocese, I declined to accede to his request.
He then desired me to join the staff of Brownell Hall,
the diocesan school for young ladies, temporarily,
in the absence of one of the staff through illness.
I assented. While there the Bishop called and had a
lengthy interview, renewing his wish for me to take
charge of the hospital that he might re-open it, though
requiring under compliance with his wish that I withdraw
from membership in the CBS (as it was known). The good
Bishop urged that, by withdrawing from the obnoxious
Confraternity, it would not involve the renunciation
of the principle underlying that society. I cou1d not,
however, see this from the Bishop’s standpoint," Sister
Sarah’s manuscript was published long after it
was written, under the title of The Life of One of
God’s Saints. However that may be, she was certainly
a stalwart champion of the obnoxious Confraternity
and more than a match for the good Bishop.
He and others did not
approve, but priests from Nebraska, Wisconsin, Missouri,
Illinois, Michigan, and Ohio became Associates of the
Confraternity, and also members of its Council. Papers
by Dr. Elnendorf, of Racine College, were read at some
of the Conferences. These continued to meet, however,
in the East, at St. Mary's, New York, until 1886. In
October of that year Father Brown, as Superior-General,
called a special meeting of the Council, not in New
York but in Chicago. Priests were present from both
East and West. Questions concerning Wards, Medals,
Manuals, and Intercession Papers were discussed, but
more important was the decision to hold the next Annual
Conference in Chicago. This was made subject to written
approval by the Council—evidence of possible
disapproval by others in the Confraternity. The meeting
was held in Chicago, the Council on the eve of Corpus
Christi at St. Clement’s, the Conference on the
feast at the Ascension. Father Larrabee was elected
Superior-General, and the Rev. J. Stewart-Smith, of
Elgin, Illinois, Secretary-General. Another indication
of the increasing strength of the Confraternity in
the West was the recognition of two new Wards in Illinois,
at Springfield and Warsaw.
For three years Father
Larrabee continued as Superior-general, and the Council
and Conference met at the Ascension in Chicago. In
1888 the Confraternity was reported to be "in
a condition of great prosperity," and the Intercession
Paper to be giving "general satisfaction," A
resolution was passed, however, against publications
except those connected with its immediate objects,
with a reminder that the Confraternity was designed
for devotional objects exclusively. Evidently the move
from East to West had not taken the Confraternity out
of the Church militant, or ended all difficulties among
its members. There was need to remind them again and
again of the Objects to which they were bound to bear
witness if they were to do its work. Authorizing the
Secretary to advertise in Church papers, this same
Conference stated that "the importance of urging
the claims of the CBS upon the more devout and Catholic
minded people is affectionately urged, on account of
the CBS itself, and as a help to a more devotional
life." Other helps were suggested in a paper on
the Sacrament of Unction. In the discussion following
the paper Father Taylor, of St. Paul’s, Springfield,
Illinois, told of the consecration of oil for the sick
by Bishop Seymour, and stated that it would be supplied
to any priest asking for it. Since then this has been
one of the ways in which the Confraternity has served
the Church. Soon when the Superior-General was a Bishop,
he consecrated the oil, and with it all the Holy Oils,
on Maundy Thursday each year.
In 1899 came a call,
clear and stern, from the Confraternity in England,
and its Superior and Founder, Canon Carter: "That,
without disturbing the 'status quo' of the CBS, the
following resolution should be forwarded to all Priest
Associates: That the Superior-General be requested
by the Council to issue a Circular letter to all the
Priests of the CBS drawing their attention to the fact
that the third Object of the Confraternity has not
been sufficiently emphasized, and reminding them that
Fasting Communion is a universal custom of the Catholic
Church." This resolution was approved for the
American Branch, which thus took its stand with the
English Confraternity for the discipline as well as
the doctrine and devotion of the Church.
Meanwhile worldly affairs
continued to demand attention, and in one case action,
for the good of the organization. It was found necessary
to incorporate the Confraternity. This was done, under
the laws of the state of Illinois, on December 7, 1888,
and at the next Conference, in Chicago in 18&9,
the American Branch of the Confraternity elected as
trustees of this corporation its three officers, the
Superior-General, the Secretary-General, and the Treasurer-General.
Later a fourth officer, the Vice-Superior, was added,
to meet a legal requirement that one trustee must live
in Illinois.
The next year the Council
and the Conference met again at the Ascension in Chicago.
In the election of officers Father Larrabee nominated
as Superior-General the Rt. Rev. Charles C. Grafton,
who on April 25, 1889, had been consecrated Bishop
of Fond du Lac. It was more than twenty years since
he had admitted the first Associates to the Confraternity
in this country, and they had been busy years for him.
His interest in the Religious Life had been manifest
not only in his membership in the Society of St. John
the Evangelist, but in his foundation of the Sisterhood
of the Holy Nativity. For sixteen years he was rector
of the Church of the Advent in Boston. In 1888 he resigned,
and with the Sisters went to Providence; then in 1889
to Fond du Lac. Wherever he might be, he continued
faithful to the Confraternity. He organized one of
its first wards in this country at the Advent, and
two more later, Wards of the Holy Nativity, in Boston
and Providence. The records of the Confraternity note
his presence during all this time at meetings in the
East and in the West.
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