Politico has this article about James Cardinal Gibbons of Baltimore (1834-1921), the United States' second cardinal. The Church leader was born on this day in 1834. The piece says Cardinal Gibbons played a key role in the Vatican's decision to allow Catholics to join labor unions, was one of the founders of the Catholic University of America, and frequently visited the White House.
President Theodore Roosevelt called Gibbons “the most respected and venerated and useful citizen of our country.” the Cardinal also led the American Church's Council of Baltimore. A letter to the editor in The Catholic Review describes Gibbons as someone who "walked the streets of Baltimore before lunch and dinner each day, greeting and being greeted by the people on the street, who might also 'have a word' or 'speak their mind' or just pass the time of day."
Archbishop Edwin O'Brien of Baltimore will celebrate a Mass in honor of Cardinal Gibbons today.
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