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St. Boniface Roman Universalism in North Orange County

St. Boniface Roman Universalism in North Orange County. St. Boniface Church, St. Catherine’s Academy and Associated Roman Catholic Institutions in Anaheim, California. Researched and Written by Alex Lamb, Anaheim High School, Anaheim, CA. St. Boniface Roman Catholic Church.

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St. Boniface Roman Universalism in North Orange County

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  1. St. BonifaceRoman Universalism in North Orange County St. Boniface Church, St. Catherine’s Academy and Associated Roman Catholic Institutions in Anaheim, California Researched and Written by Alex Lamb, Anaheim High School, Anaheim, CA

  2. St. Boniface Roman Catholic Church • German immigrant Roman Catholics followed German immigrant Protestants to Anaheim, in Southern California, and established St. Boniface Catholic Church in 1860. Many of these German immigrants had originally come to California to become wealthy during the gold rush of 1848-1849. • The “new” St. Boniface Church was begun on September 1, 1902, at the corner of Lincoln Avenue and Harbor Boulevard. It sustained serious damage during the Long Beach earthquake of 1933 and eventually was torn down by the late 1950’s. The present day church is located one block West of Harbor Boulevard on Lincoln Avenue.

  3. German Roman Catholic Immigration • The first large wave of German Roman Catholics began in the mid 1840’s. Most German immigrants during this time were more secure economically than the Irish Catholic immigrants who were also coming into the United States at this time. Most German Catholic immigrants were able to purchase farms or small businesses, and settled in the Mid West and in cities like Chicago, Cincinnati, St. Louis, and Milwaukee. A few made their way to California, to seek their fortunes in the gold fields, or to settle in small farming communities like Anaheim. • American nativist political parties arose like the Know-Nothings, which were anti-Catholic, anti-immigrant, and believed that immigrants would take away the good paying jobs of native-born Americans. These nativist and anti-Catholic feelings would arise later in Anaheim during the 1920’s when the Ku Klux Klan in Anaheim took control of the city council and for a while wielded considerable political authority.

  4. St. Boniface School • St. Boniface School was established in the 1930’s to provide Catholic education from Kindergarten to Grade 8. • Several graduates of St. Boniface then went on to attend Marywood Girls High School in Anaheim (at the corner of Harbor Boulevard and Broadway), Mater Dei High School in Santa Ana, or Servite High School in Anaheim. • However, a great many of St. Boniface alumni chose to attend Anaheim High School, a public school, one block West, at 811 W. Lincoln Avenue.

  5. Nativism and the Ku Klux Klan in Anaheim During the 1920’s Recently arrived newcomers to the city of Anaheim from the South and the Mid-West brought their ideas of nativism with them in the form of the Ku Klux Klan, which was fundamentalist Protestant, anti- Catholic, anti-foreigner, anti-new scientific ideas, and anti alcohol. Anaheim up to this time had been predominately Roman Catholic, and had a long tradition of manufacturing alcoholic beverages such as wine and beer. Traditionally, Anaheim was the only “wet” town in Orange County.

  6. The Ku Klux Klan in Anaheim In the mid 1920’s, there were Klan rallies on the softball field at Pearson Park, and a fiery cross was placed on the cement walkway before the main entrance of St. Boniface Church. For a time, the Klan gained control of the Anaheim City Council. One year, a Klan convention was held in Anaheim, and one could see the initials “KIGY” (Klansman, I greet you) written throughout the city.

  7. How Was the Klan Finally Defeated? • The Klan was active in Anaheim from 1922-1927. • The population of Anaheim during that time was less than 10,000 inhabitants. Klan membership didn’t exceed 300. • To defeat the Klan, the Knights of Columbus, a Catholic organization, created a strategy based on obtaining the membership rolls of the Anaheim Klan and bringing it out into the open. • The U.S.A. Club was created to fight the Klan. It included Knights of Columbus members, Protestant clergymen, and prominent business and professional men, such as Ernest Ganahl, owner of Ganahl Lumber Company. • A special election was held on February 3, 1925 which ousted four members of the Ku Klux Klan from the Anaheim City Council.

  8. St. Boniface Catholic Church Completed in 1903

  9. The New St. Boniface Church in 1961

  10. Prominent Members of St. Boniface Catholic Church, Anaheim • The Carl Karcher Family: Mr. and Mrs. Carl Karcher, started the Carl’s Jr. hamburger restaurant chain, and have been generous philanthropists. • The Joseph M. Anton Family: The father of Joseph Anton, Abdullah, immigrated to Anaheim from Lebanon, and was part of the Maronite (Syrian) Rite of the Catholic Church. Joseph Anton began Anton’s Food Market on the corner of Lemon and Los Angeles Streets (now Anaheim Boulevard). • The George Garebedian Family: George was originally from Armenia, and came to Anaheim in 1915. He began as a hospital custodian, and accumulated orange groves in and around Anaheim. His son, Richard, attended St. Boniface School, Anaheim High School, and became an optometrist.

  11. Prominent Members of St. Boniface Parish • The Roman Wisser Family: Roman Wisser immigrated to Anaheim from the Alsace-Lorraine region of France because of the booming wine industry. His sons and daughters started Wisser Sporting Goods Store on Lincoln Avenue in Anaheim. • The Ernest Ganahl Family: The Ganahls were immigrants from Germany, and established Ganahl Lumber Company in Anaheim, today consisting of several branches. Ernest was instrumental in defeating the Klan in the 1920’s. • Dr. John A. Larson, M.D.: Dr. Larson was a well known and highly regarded general practitioner who was the last doctor in Anaheim to make house calls. His son, John Jr., also a doctor, continues to practice medicine in the Anaheim area.

  12. Prominent Members of St. Boniface Parish • Rudolph Oscar Monnig: Mr. Monnig’s ancestors can be traced to Germany in the 17th Century. Oscar Monnig, a German immigrant to New York City, took a boat to St. Louis, Missouri, and took another boat up the Missouri River to a German settlement called Rhineland, all before 1861. His descendants eventually settled in Anaheim, and they created the Monnig Floor Covering Company. Frank Monnig graduated from Anaheim High School in 1967. • The Joseph Huarte Family: Of Basque Spanish heritage. Affiliated with the Bastanchury family (spring water company). His grandson John was a quarterback at the University of Notre Dame, where he won the Heismann Trophy in 1962. Members of this family were also teachers at Mater Dei High School in Santa Ana, and at Marywood Girls High School in Anaheim.

  13. Father John Quatannens of St. Boniface Church - US Army Chaplain (R) • Father John Quatannens of St. Boniface, was called to duty by the U.S. Army in 1943 as a chaplain. He was born in Flanders, Belgium. He was one of the first to land at Omaha Beach in Normandy, France, on June 6, 1944. He was attached to General George S. Patton’s 3rd Army, and administered to the wounded during the Battle of the Bulge from December 16, 1944 to February, 1945.

  14. St. Catherine’s Academy (formerly St. Catherine’s Military Academy) • First built by the German community of Dominican Sisters, and opened in 1889, originally as a school. • It is located directly North of St. Boniface Catholic Church. • It became a Roman Catholic orphanage in 1894, taking in orphan boys as young as three months. • The school experienced financial difficulties during its first year of operation. An Eastern firm offered to buy the property in order to build a shoe factory. • Reverend Mother M. Pia (1854-1925) travelled to Anaheim to sign the papers for the final sale. As she was approaching St. Catherine’s from the railroad station, a swarm of bees followed her carriage. The bees stopped at St. Catherine’s. In those days, bees were thought to bring good luck. Mother Superior Pia then decided not to sell the property. St. Catherine’s began to prosper from then on. Other Roman Catholic institutions were then established in Anaheim: Marywood Girls High School in 1912, and Servite High School in 1958.

  15. Sister Johnellen Turner, O.P.,Current Director of Saint Catherine’s Academy

  16. Mother Pia, of the Dominican Sisters, Founder of Saint Catherine’s

  17. Original Main Building, St. Catherine’s

  18. Cadet, Saint Catherine’s Military School, 1920’s

  19. Colonel Bizzell (Commandant) andSister Johnellen on the Parade Grounds

  20. St. Catherine’s Military School: 1920’s

  21. St. Catherine’s Academy

  22. Educational Philosophy of St. Catherine’s Academy • Commandant Colonel Barry Bizzell, U.S.M.C., Ret., states St. Catherine’s Philosophy: “We will continue to teach leadership, self-discipline, honor, and respect through military tradition.” • Ms. Joanna Ronan, Marketing Director of St. Catherine’s Academy says: “A Catholic school is first about promoting peace.”

  23. Hollywood Comes to St. Catherine’s St. Catherine’s was well known within the Hollywood community, and highly regarded. Many in the film industry sent their sons to study here. It was chosen as the site to make The Private War of Major Benson, released in 1955 and starring Charlton Heston. The movie was filmed on location.

  24. Marywood Girls High School (1912), Anaheim, California

  25. Servite High School, Anaheim (1958)

  26. Who Was St. Boniface? Saint Boniface was born in England in the late 7th century CE. He became the official missionary to preach the Gospel to the heathen tribes in Holland and Germany. Boniface was part of the Emperor Charlemagne’s plan to convert the pagan Germanic tribes to Christianity by force or peaceful means.

  27. St. Boniface was Killed by Germanic Tribes He became a bishop in the year 723 CE. In the presence of a hostile, pagan crowd, he felled to the ground a sacred oak tree of the god Thor, and out of this wood he built a Christian church, the first in Germany. He planted a young fir tree to represent the tree of life. It is believed that from this action grew the German custom of the Christmas tree.

  28. St. Boniface and his Holy Ax Boniface was later attacked by a group of Germanic pagan warriors who objected to his forced conversions. He was declared a Saint. Today he is the patron saint of the Germans. When German Catholics moved to Anaheim in 1857, it was natural that their church should be dedicated to him.

  29. Who Was Saint Catherine? (282-305 CE) Saint Catherine, the daughter of the governor of Alexandria, Egypt, converted to Christianity in her late teens. When she attempted to convert the Roman Emperor to Christianity, he ordered her placed in a prison. She was condemned to death on the breaking wheel, an instrument of torture. According to legend, the wheel broke when she touched it, so she was beheaded. She became a symbol of proper Christian behavior and her power as an intercessor was renowned. Joan of Arc confessed that she communicated with her. Her pilgrimage sites included the monastery at Mount Sinai, Egypt; Rouen, France; and Canter- bury and Westminster in England.

  30. The Three Main Pillars of Western Civilization The Judeo-Christian Heritage, Greek Rationalism, and Roman Universalism

  31. I. The Judeo-Christian Heritage • 1. The Jewish sense of historical purpose. • 2. God’s divine plan was to be revealed to men through history (Old and New Testament revelations). • 3. A covenant-contractual relationship between God and man implying mutual trust and responsibility, and the ethical values coming from this covenant. • 4. The Messiah concept: a divine redeemer with a divine plan (Christian tradition).

  32. Examples of Judeo-Christian Heritage 1.God-centered relationship, with man as a special creature of God with great worth and dignity, lord of all earthly creation, but still subject to God. 2.Equality of all men before God, due to men’s souls as image of God. 3.Man’s spiritual, loving soul created by a personal, loving God.

  33. Christ, played by Jeffrey Hunter in King of Kings (1961)

  34. II. Greek Rationalism 1. There is an underlying order or harmony in nature. 2. Everything in the everyday world is governed by natural laws. 3. These natural laws can be understood by human reason. 4. The emphasis in ancient Greece was on the rational part of man. EXAMPLES: • The development of knowledge: mathematics, the natural sciences (astronomy, chemistry, physics). This is where order and harmony are believed to have always existed. • The Greeks tried to define the universe in terms of scientific and materialistic explanations. This orderly, rational explanation of the natural world could also be used to explain the behavior of human beings, and their place in the world.

  35. Greek Rationalism: Example Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727).English mathematician and natural philosopher, formulated the laws of gravity and motion and the elements of differential calculus.

  36. III. Roman Universalism uni=one; vers=part; al=having; ism=belief in. 1. The Roman view of the Mediterranean basin as “One World.” 2. A single, great, centralized political entity known as the Roman Empire. 3. A system of universal government run under an organized system of laws The Roman Law. Examples: • The concept of “one world”. The Holy Roman Empire, the United Nations, The European Common Market, the Roman Catholic Church (catholicus=universal, general). • The absolute monarchies and governments of Europe in the 17th century. • 20th century totalitarian governments • Imperialism in the 18th and 19th centuries.

  37. SPQR: Senatus Populusque Romanus-The Senate and the People of Rome

  38. “One World”Concept: The Roman Empire (Roman Universalism)

  39. “One World”: Charlemagne’s Empire 800 AD (Frankish Empire)

  40. Roman Universalism: Roman Catholics in the World (in green) Today

  41. “One World” Holy Roman Empire 1100 CE

  42. “One World” Napoleon’s Empire, 1812

  43. “One World”: European Union (2008)

  44. The Roman Catholic Church • Early Christians in the Roman Empire adopted Roman political administration and organization almost immediately. • After the Roman (political) Empire fell, the Roman Catholic Church was the strongest institution in the Western Roman Empire. The church continued Roman culture throughout Western Europe. • According to Sir Kenneth Clark, it could be argued very convincingly that the Roman Catholic Church was solely instrumental in saving Western Civilization. • The monk-scholars of the Church copied and thus preserved the ancient manuscripts of Greece, ancient Judea, and the early Christians. One could argue therefore that the Catholic Church-a form of Roman Universalism-saved Western Civilization.

  45. The Roman Catholic Church is Roman Universalism Roman Empire Roman Catholic Church One capital: Rome One ruler: Emperor One language: Latin The state is supreme One law: Roman law One capital: Rome One ruler: The Pope One language: Latin The Church is supreme One law: Church law

  46. Who are the Catholics and What do they Believe? • The term “Catholic” means “universal” or “whole.” • It is the largest Christian church in the world with 1.147 billion people in 2007. Catholics are 17.40% of the world population. • The Pope is the head of the Church, and it defines its mission as spreading the gospel of Jesus Christ, administering the sacraments, and exercising charity. • It teaches that it is the church founded by Jesus Christ, its bishops are the successors of Christ’s apostles, and that the Pope is the successor to Saint Peter. • Catholic doctrine maintains that the church is infallible when it rigidly teaches a doctrine of faith or morals. • Catholic worship is centered on the Eucharist in which the Church teaches bread and wine are supernaturally transubstantiated into the body and blood of Christ.

  47. Who are the Catholics and What do they Believe? • The Church’s hierarchy is headed by the Bishop of Rome, the Pope (“Holy Father”), a position that makes him the leader of the worldwide (universal) Catholic Church. • The current Pope is Francis, who was elected on March 13, 2013. • The office of the Pope is known as the Papacy. His ecclesiastical jurisdiction if often called the “Holy See”. • The Roman Curia directly serves the Pope. It is the governing body that administers the day-to-day business of the Catholic Church. • The Pope is also the head of state of Vatican City State, a sovereign city-state within the city of Rome.

  48. Who are the Catholics, and What do they Believe? • Following the death or resignation of a Pope, members of the College of Cardinals who are under age 80 meet in the Sistine Chapel in Rome to elect a new Pope. The title of Cardinal is a rank of honor bestowed by Popes on certain high churchmen such as leaders within the Roman Curia, bishops serving in major cities and distinguished theologians. Since 1389, only fellow Cardinals have been elevated to the position of Pope, although theoretically any male Catholic can be elected. • Individual countries, regions, or major cities are served by local “particular” churches known as dioceses or eparchies, each supervised by a Catholic bishop. Dioceses are further divided into numerous individual communities called parishes , each staffed by one or more priests, deacons, and/or lay ecclesial ministers. Parishes are responsible for the day-to-day celebration of the sacraments and pastoral care of the Catholic laity.

  49. Who are the Catholics? • Ordained Catholics, as well as members of the laity, may enter into consecrated life as monks or nuns. • A candidate takes vows confirming their desire to follow the three evangelical counsels of chastity, poverty and obedience. • Examples of institutes of consecrated life are the Benedictines, the Carmelites, the Dominicans, the Franciscans, the Missionaries of Charity, and the Sisters of Mercy.

  50. Signal that a new Pope has been Elected Once a new Pope has been elected by the College of Cardinals, a special paper is burned which transmits white smoke.

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