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Over a century ago, in mid-August of 1890, one of the largest funerals
in the history of Waterbury, Connecticut, took place. The throngs who
attended were grieving the death, at age 38, of
Father Michael J. McGivney, founder of the Knights of Columbus.
Delegations were present from almost every one of the 57 Knights
of Columbus councils that had been chartered in the Order's first eight
years. The Bishop of Hartford and more than 70 of Connecticut's Catholic
priests were joined by many civic leaders. It was reported that every
available carriage for miles around had been rented for the great
procession.
Father McGivney's funeral was an indication of the love and
respect the people felt for this hard-working, holy, parish priest. It
also reflected the deep personal appeal that immigrant Catholics
immediately found in the Knights of Columbus. Since that time, the
Order's growth has never stopped. Today it is the largest society of
Catholic men in the world, with 1.6 million members in the United
States, Canada, the Philippines, Mexico, and several Central American
and Caribbean countries.
To mark the Order's hundredth anniversary in 1982, the Knights of
Columbus brought the remains of Father McGivney from Waterbury back to
St. Mary's Church in New Haven, where he had founded the Order. There he
now rests in a setting in which daily Mass is offered for the deceased
members and their deceased spouses of the Order and prayers are said in
his honor. His cause for canonization is proceeding.
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