| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] neutralize 1 never 48 nevertheless 5 new 493 newark 6 newburgh 2 newcomers 4 | Frequency [« »] 515 bishop 514 scalabrini 508 would 493 new 481 our 475 but 463 at | Silvano Tomasi – Gianfausto Rosoli For the Love of Immigrants IntraText - Concordances new |
bold = Main text
Part, Chapter, Paragraph, N., Pag. grey = Comment text
1 Fore IX | At the threshold of a new millennium, the mobility
2 Fore IX | John Baptist Scalabrini (New York, 1977). The Center
3 Fore IX | for Migration Studies of New York has promoted in particular
4 Fore X | Italian Parishes in the New York Metropolitan Area,
5 Fore X | for Migration Studies of New York, critically supervised
6 Fore X | American cities where the “new immigrants” settled. But
7 Writ, 1 XIV | Archives of the Archidiocese of New York~
8 Intr, 1, 1 XV | Migrations: Old and New Questions~ ~Migrations provoke
9 Intr, 1, 1 XV | immigrants. This fact is not new, however. Migrations are
10 Intr, 1, 1 XVI | of what is different and new, of the “other” who threatens
11 Intr, 1, 1 XVI | out that almost a million new immigrants arrive every
12 Intr XVI(2) | Migration and Development, New York, 1998. Ibid., Concise
13 Intr, 1, 1 XVII | country left behind and the new societies within which they
14 Intr, 1, 1 XVII | more complex to be sure, a new presentation of the thinking
15 Intr, 2 XIX | contact with migrants in their new environment moved him, just
16 Intr, 4 XXIII | insurance, by introducing new technologies and agricultural
17 Intr, 4 XXIV | workforce.” Besides, “it opens new ways to commerce, facilitates
18 Intr, 4 XXV | of the migrants in their new environment and of supporting
19 Intr, 5 XXVI | persons assimilate to the new environment, or they lose
20 Intr, 5 XXVI | integration process into the new environment cannot avoid
21 Intr, 5 XXVI | about the formation of a new people through a lengthy
22 Intr XXVI(30) | to the Catholic Club of New York, Bishop Scalabrini
23 Intr XXVI(30) | principles will develop, new mysterious energies will
24 Intr, 5 XXVII | Italian identity toward a new American one without the
25 Intr XXVII(35)| to the Catholic Club of New York, op. cit.~
26 Intr, Con XXX | together with the search of a new way through which Italian
27 1, 1, I 2 | disappointments, how many new sufferings is an uncertain
28 1, 1, II 5 | manpower competition and new commercial outlets. But
29 1, 1, II 5 | boon because it creates new spheres of influence and
30 1, 1, II 6 | made even more acute by new needs and by isolation” (
31 1, 1, III 6 | mysterious force to seek new outlets for their activities.
32 1, 1, III 8 | steamship, has sailed for New York, with 80 tons of cargo
33 1, 1, V 10 | colonization, for lack of new lands to subdue, must limit
34 1, 1, V 10 | countries lorded over old and new continents and got hold
35 1, 1, VI 12 | and active priests in the new one, as well as bishops
36 1, 1, VI 13 | flag and thus prepare a new homeland for its emigrating
37 1, 1, VI 14 | necessary in view of the new dangers awaiting them in
38 1, 1, VIII 18 | Abruzzi region arrived in New York. The emigration agents
39 1, 1, VIII 19 | after their hometown the new settlement where Divine
40 1, 1, VIII 21 | atrocious sufferings of this new exodus..., and I felt I
41 1, 1, VIII 21 | October doth weave.”~From the New York newspaper, Progresso
42 1, 1, VIII 21 | of our emigrants in the New World:~ ~In one of our previous
43 1, 1, X 28 | plains of the Americas a new Italy, perhaps rich in material
44 1, 1, XI 29 | from the Archbishops of New York, New Orleans and the
45 1, 1, XI 29 | Archbishops of New York, New Orleans and the Fathers
46 1, 1, XI 30 | society, thus opening up new avenues for the work and
47 1, 1, XI 30 | fulfilled, requires of us a new spirit, a new orientation
48 1, 1, XI 30 | requires of us a new spirit, a new orientation of life and
49 1, 1, XI 31 | Church is bringing about a new, marvelous and consoling
50 1, 2 32 | Proposals~ ~ ~In 1888, the new Italian Prime Minister Francesco
51 1, 2 33 | at the ports of Genoa and New York, and by pursuing a
52 1, 2 35 | penalties threatened by the new bill on the emigration agents
53 1, 2 35 | material assurances, which the new bill requires of the emigration
54 1, 2 37 | Government, given that the new plan has the sanction of
55 1, 2 38 | could not be done with the new law. But what generous man
56 1, 2 42 | maximum of eight days to the new arrivals, bring them to
57 1, 2 42 | ordered by the Assembly of New York on the immigration
58 1, 2 43 | of the arrivals remain in New York. It was also proven
59 1, 2 43 | turn suffer the same fate.~New York, July 28, 1888. The
60 1, 2 43 | they don’t always get it. New York alone has two thousand
61 1, 2 43 | state of complete poverty.~New York, August 1, 1888. The
62 1, 2 43 | the trip from Naples to New York is 115 francs, while
63 1, 2 43 | 250 francs for the ticket.~New York, August 27, 1888. The
64 1, 2 47 | there is always a need for new victims unaware of the danger.
65 1, 2 48 | even less to logic, this new sin: they already have too
66 1, 2 50 | and putting into action new expedients, not only to
67 1, 2 50 | feels most lonely among new people, he knows that his
68 1, 2 50 | and active priests in the new one, as well as bishops
69 1, 2 52 | flag and thus prepare a new homeland for its emigrating
70 1, 2 52 | necessary in view of the new dangers awaiting them in
71 1, 2 54 | very gladly approved the new Institute and deigned to
72 1, 2 54 | Even lately it gave it a new impulse by sending me the
73 1, 2 54 | of Genoa and Le Havre to New York and to the interior
74 1, 2 55 | most worthy Archbishop of New York, whom I single out
75 1, 2 55 | that he has given to the new institution.~There the new
76 1, 2 55 | new institution.~There the new missionaries are also officials
77 1, 2 59 | wrote before, great, noble, new, glorious. They can find
78 1, 2 59 | ancient glories and add a new imperishable one, guiding
79 1, 3 61 | immigrants’ faith adapting to a new ethnic identity without
80 1, 3, I 61 | progress and satisfies the new needs of times and places. ./.
81 1, 3, I 62 | be impossible to form a new nationality, unless the
82 1, 3, I 62 | wouldn’t be amenable to new combinations, new fusions,
83 1, 3, I 62 | amenable to new combinations, new fusions, as when the barbarians
84 1, 3, I 63 | point and the seed of the new nationalities that only
85 1, 3, I 63 | unforeseeable, i.e., unless new migrations of the strength
86 1, 3, I 66 | times, little inclined to new heresies.~To avoid so much
87 1, 3, II 67 | condition, lead it into the new way, and tie it to their
88 1, 3, II 68 | be Catholic in Rome, in New York, among the Laplanders,
89 1, 3, II 69 | and assimilates into the new environment, or he loses
90 1, 3, II 69 | he is ignorant, with the new national habits, he takes
91 1, 4 71 | Giacomo Gambera he had sent to New Orleans in 1889 where the
92 1, 4 71 | Autobiography of Giacomo Gambera. New York: Center for Migration
93 1, 4 72 | in the ports of Genoa and New York. The St. Raphael’s
94 1, 4 72 | the vast regions of the New World, suggest to me the
95 1, 4 73 | Italian discoverer of the new continent, Christopher Columbus.~
96 1, 4 73 | first of all encouraged the new enterprise, not only by
97 1, 4 73 | authoritative support to the new institution, viewed as satisfying
98 1, 4 74 | missions have been founded in New York and one each in the
99 1, 4 74 | other states of the Union: New Haven, Providence, Boston,
100 1, 4 74 | Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, New Orleans and Kansas City.~
101 1, 4 74 | Entre Rios) in Argentina.~In New York the missionaries have
102 1, 4 74 | Heart have been sent to the New World.~Later on we will
103 1, 4 74 | been taken also to found new missions in Cleveland, St.
104 1, 4 75 | by the Italian colony of New York last June to the lamented
105 1, 4 75 | who sailed last March for New York, has received the special
106 1, 4 75 | distinguished Archbishop of New York, Msgr. Corrigan, accepted
107 1, 4 77 | useful, necessary by the new dangers to which they are
108 1, 4 78 | Italy is completed in the new continent and follows the
109 1, 5 81 | practical proposals for a new emigration law and for new
110 1, 5 81 | new emigration law and for new regulations concerning the
111 1, 5, I 83 | especially in the North. New York City alone has 85,000.
112 1, 5, I 85 | were to stop and that the new African territories were
113 1, 5, I 85 | and evolves into something new, and the organism’s unfolding,
114 1, 5, I 85 | excess population, opening new avenues for commerce and
115 1, 5, I 86 | as I said. This is why in New York the so-called “patron”
116 1, 5, III 92 | beginning with the Archbishop of New York, the press~of every
117 1, 5, III 93 | houses and missions: three in New York, where a school and
118 1, 5, III 93 | parishes in North America: at New Haven, Providence, Boston,
119 1, 5, III 93 | Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Buffalo, New Orleans, Bridgeport, Cleveland,
120 1, 5, IV 95 | the hymn ever old, ever new, of our immortal Poet:All
121 1, 6 97 | After four centuries a new group of Gospel’s workers
122 1, 6 97 | s workers arrives in the New World with the peaceful
123 1, 6 97 | the local Church, create a new society capable of regenerating
124 1, 6 102 | separate them from their new fellow citizens or detach
125 1, 6 103 | which will rise next to the new and large locality which
126 1, 7 106 | least for their children, a new homeland.~There are more
127 1, 7, I 108 | value because it opens up new avenues for trade, helps
128 1, 7, I 110 | possessions and acquiring new ones, are the most eloquent
129 1, 7, II 114 | than I had foreseen. The new law made the conditions
130 1, 7, II 115 | country felt strongly that new proposals and provisions
131 1, 7, II 115 | our influence so that the new emigration bill introduced
132 1, 7, III 122 | exclusively for Italians: two in New York, one each in Cincinnati,
133 1, 7, III 122 | one each in Cincinnati, New Haven, Providence, Boston,
134 1, 8 125 | Parliament debated some new emigration bills that would
135 1, 8 126 | in these solemn meetings. New light would be shed on this
136 1, 8 126 | to our brethren overseas; new blessings would pour over
137 1, 8 127 | human good, since it opens new avenues to commerce; it
138 1, 8 127 | host country and forming a new fatherland, if not for themselves,
139 1, 8 128 | abolition of slavery. Thus, in New York the so-called patron
140 1, 8 128 | as to make room for the new arrivals, new victims of
141 1, 8 128 | room for the new arrivals, new victims of sordid gains.
142 1, 8 132 | its victim and waits for new ones.~What should be done
143 1, 8 132 | planning and implementing new strategies. They want to
144 1, 8 132 | they feel more lonely among new people, they know their
145 1, 8 133 | emerged and divided this new field of activity among
146 2, 1, Rep1 140 | Archbishops of Norfolk, New Orleans, and by the Fathers
147 2 140(3) | Italian Parishes in the New York Metropolitan Area (
148 2 140(3) | Metropolitan Area (1880–1930). New York: Center for Migration
149 2, 1, II 144 | by the seductions of the New World, where if they no
150 2, 1, II 146 | zeal of the Archbishop of New York and the efforts of
151 2, 1, II 146 | filth and beggary that in New York the Irish granted them
152 2, 1, II 147 | Germans, etc. have done. In New York, where they reach the
153 2, 1, II 147 | immigrants at Castle Garden in New York and exercises his ministry
154 2, 1, II 148 | They are scattered from New York to San Francisco, from
155 2, 1, II 149 | example, the Archbishop of New York reminds us how in a
156 2, 1, II 149 | they reach Castle Garden, New Orleans, San Francisco,
157 2, 1, II 149 | were possible to have in New York, Boston, Baltimore,
158 2, 1, III 150 | eventually establishing new ones, to be placed under
159 2, 1, III 150 | places apt to determine new or direct streams of traffic,
160 2, 1, III 151 | is now in preparation in New York a reception center
161 2, 1, III 156 | ports of entry, especially New York, to receive those poor
162 2, 1, III 156 | St. Paul remarks that in New York there are one Irish
163 2, 1, III 156 | the priest to be placed in New York should be zealous,
164 2, 1, III 156 | of the host country.~ In New York, a local committee
165 2, 1, III 156 | houses would suffice: one in New York, where the Pallottines
166 2, 1, IV 158 | boundaries, constituting new parishes to be entrusted
167 2, 1, IV 159 | of Piacenza, praising the new Institute about to be opened.
168 2, 1, Summ, I, 160 | immigrants, has given me a new occasion to always more
169 2, 1, Summ, I, 161 | is now going to settle in New York, I will ask him to
170 2, 1, Summ, IV, 163 | IV New York, August 4, 1884~Excerpt
171 2, 1, Summ, IV, 163 | Corrigan, Archbishop of New York ~ ~M.R. Sir,~I have
172 2, 1, Summ, V, 164 | Transfiguration on Mott Street in New York, by the Reverend Thomas
173 2, 1, Summ, VII, 167 | went to Spring Valley, a new town in Illinois made up
174 2, 1, Summ, VII, 167 | Italian committees here in New York, Philadelphia, New
175 2, 1, Summ, VII, 167 | New York, Philadelphia, New Orleans and San Francisco,
176 2, 1, Summ, VII, 168 | touch with the bishops of New York, Philadelphia, New
177 2, 1, Summ, VII, 168 | New York, Philadelphia, New Orleans and San Francisco
178 2, 1, Summ, VIII, 170 | Corrigan, Archbishop of New York, to His Excellency
179 2, 1, Summ, IX, 171 | IX New London, Conn., Nov. 18,
180 2, 1, Summ, IX, 171 | Corrigan, Archbishop of New York, to His Excellency
181 2, 1, Summ, XII, 176 | Most Reverend Archbishop of New York, Msgr. Corrigan, has
182 2, 1, Summ, XII, 176 | archbishops of Naples, Genoa, New York, Baltimore and Boston.
183 2, 1, Summ, XII, 176 | London, has been sent to New York to organize there this
184 2, 1, Summ, XII, 176 | Coadjutor) Archbishop of New York (Corrigan) showed great
185 2, 1, Summ, XII, 177 | a similar support in the New World.~ May God will that
186 2, 1, Summ, XII, 177 | information. In the port of New York alone there disembarked
187 2, 2 178 | social assistance, and new pastoral models of ecclesiastical
188 2 178(1) | commissioned to prepare a new report on the Church in
189 2, 2 179 | they take advantage of this new help Divine Providence has
190 2 181(5) | authoritative presentation of the new Congregation to the American
191 2 181(5) | universal Church for the new phenomenon of mass emigration.
192 2, 2, 3 182 | tradition disappears and new bad customs take its place.~
193 2, 2, 4 185 | greatly overjoyed at the new radiance that, because of
194 2, 2, 4 185 | realizing that, from the new path on which they are traveling,
195 2, 2, 7 187 | sending you two copies of a new booklet of mine on Italian
196 2 187(12) | is sending copies of the new booklet on “Italian emigration”:
197 2, 2, 8 188 | The two copies of your new booklet on Italian emigration
198 2, 2, 12 191 | blessing which will infuse new life, new courage into them
199 2, 2, 12 191 | which will infuse new life, new courage into them in the
200 2, 2, 16 194 | sale of the church built in New York for the Italian emigrants
201 2, 2, 17 194 | must understand that in New York, at the very beginning
202 2, 2, 17 196 | Protestants are working. In New York they have three Protestant,
203 2, 2, 18 197 | Eminence, please forgive this new bother. With cordial veneration,
204 2, 3, 4 203 | his triumphal visit to the New World and for the festive
205 2, 3, 5 203 | immigrants at the port of New York~5. Father Pietro Maldotti
206 2, 3, 14 210 | America, taking along six new missionaries. Before going
207 2, 3, 17 213 | for this purpose old and new studies and which in the
208 2, 3, 18 214 | special blessing for this new work of charity~ My health,
209 2, 3, 21 215 | Piacenza~Holy Father, grateful new evidence your goodness,
210 2, 3, 24 217 | wishes. I cannot send you the new plan very soon because I
211 2, 3, 26 224 | country that must be their new motherland and the language
212 2, 3, 26 226 | forth are self-evident. For new phenomena, new structures,
213 2, 3, 26 226 | self-evident. For new phenomena, new structures, adequate to
214 2, 3, 26 226 | felt the need to create new administrative offices to
215 2, 3, 26 230 | being transplanted in a new country. It is necessary
216 2, 4 232 | cities like Philadelphia and New York already toward the
217 2, 4 232 | Coadjutor Archbishop of New York Cardinal John McCloskey,
218 2 232(1) | Italian Parishes in the New York Metropolitan Area,
219 2 232(1) | Metropolitan Area, 1880–1930. New York: Center for Migration
220 2, 4 233 | information ./. gathered from the New York pastors, Archbishop
221 2, 4 233 | care of the Italians in New York.3 The Council of Baltimore
222 2, 4 233 | succeeded as Ordinary in New York in 1885 and would have
223 2, 4 233 | poor and notorious slums of New York, where most of the
224 2, 4 233 | immigrants from Italy in their new environment.4 The fruitful
225 2 233(3) | Italians in the Archdiocese of New York, 1885–1902. Doctoral
226 2, 4 233 | person in Piacenza and in New York.~ The personalities
227 2 233(4) | work of analysis of the new waves of Italian emigration,
228 2, 4 234 | need to give themselves new religious answers before
229 2 235(5) | Archive of the Archdiocese of New York (AANY) housed at St.
230 2 235(5) | Corrigan several times in New York. The correspondence
231 2, 4, 2 237 | Corrigan to Scalabrini11~ New York, October 28, 1887~ ~
232 2 237(12) | to assist the Italians of New York in 1884, first missionary
233 2 237(12) | Carmelo, 115ma Strada in New York City, New York: Eugene
234 2 237(12) | Strada in New York City, New York: Eugene Printing Service,
235 2, 4, 3 238 | Corrigan to Scalabrini13~ New York, December 16, 1887~ ~
236 2, 4, 3 239 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York~ ~
237 2 239(14) | In 1887 he was sent to New York to prepare the arrival
238 2, 4, 5 241 | Corrigan to Scalabrini20~ New York, February 10, 1888~ ~
239 2, 4, 6 242 | Missionaries to be sent to New York. Within a few months
240 2, 4, 6 242 | patronage. From the house in New York, the Missionaries,
241 2, 4, 6 242 | requesting them. Then in New York, in my opinion, some
242 2 243(24) | countries and an office in New York in 1883. Bishop Scalabrini
243 2, 4, 7 243 | Corrigan to Scalabrini25~ New York, April 13, 1888~ ~Most
244 2 243(26) | became Bishop of Brooklyn, New York, from 1892 to 1921.
245 2, 4, 9 245 | Corrigan to Scalabrini28~ New York, May 28, 1888~ ~The
246 2, 4, 9 245 | Augustine,~Archbishop of New York~ ~
247 2, 4, 11 247 | purchase a large building in New York to be used as a church
248 2, 4, 11 247 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York~ ~
249 2 247(32) | negli Stati Uniti d’America. New York: J.H. Carbone, 1888,
250 2 248(34) | Italian orphanage and died in New Brunswick, N.J., in 1923.
251 2, 4, 14 249 | Corrigan to Scalabrini38~ New York, August 10, 1888~ ~
252 2, 4, 14 249 | at the arrival of the two new Missionaries for the Italian
253 2, 4, 14 250 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York~ ~
254 2, 4, 15 250 | great consolation to me. New York is a very important
255 2, 4, 16 251 | for the founding of the new parish.~ With renewed sentiments
256 2, 4, 17 251 | Corrigan to Scalabrini41~ New York, October 4, 1888~ ~
257 2, 4, 17 252 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York~ ~
258 2, 4, 18 252 | letter together with your new contribution of two thousand
259 2, 4, 18 252 | repay you by sending some new workers for your beloved
260 2, 4, 19 252 | Corrigan to Scalabrini43~ New York, November 9, 1888~ ~
261 2 253(44) | of these Sisters went to New York, but after a few months
262 2 253(44) | correspondence regarding this New York House between Bishop
263 2 253(44) | who led the Sisters to New York. Cf. Figlie di Sant’
264 2, 4, 20 253 | introduce to you the two new Missionaries who are destined,
265 2, 4, 20 253 | The Sisters destined for New York are the Missionaries
266 2 253(46) | The two new Missionaries were Father
267 2 253(46) | in the United States in New York and Buffalo. Fr. Alussi,
268 2 253(46) | years he worked zealously in New Haven, Boston and other
269 2 253(47) | Immigrant of the Century. New York: Center for Migration
270 2 254(48) | Metropolitan Museum of Art of New York that he founded and
271 2 254(48) | relocated to West Park, New York.~
272 2, 4, 21 254 | Corrigan to Scalabrini49~ New York, February 5, 1889~ ~
273 2, 4, 21 254 | the Italian immigrants in New York.~ Father Felice50 is
274 2, 4, 22 255 | letters of Italians from New York containing bitter complaints
275 2 258(55) | Cabrini, who had arrived in New York on May 31, 1889 on
276 2 258(55) | Italian orphanage started in New York City by the Sisters
277 2 258(55) | after a year to West Park, New York. Cfr. Mario Francesconi,
278 2, 4, 24 259 | twenty miles away from New York, in my former diocese
279 2, 4, 24 259 | of the Resurrection. The new Missionaries had everything
280 2, 4, 25 260 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York.~ ~
281 2, 4, 27 261 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York ~
282 2 261(62) | Catholic Tradition series (New York: Arno Press, 1978),
283 2, 4, 29 263 | Corrigan to Scalabrini64~ New York, November 14, 1890~ ~
284 2, 4, 29 263 | Now they want to buy a new and better location for
285 2, 4, 30 264 | all your desires and the new workers will always be ready
286 2, 4, 31 265 | Corrigan to Scalabrini67~ New York, January 9, 1891~ ~
287 2 265(68) | who would have remained in New York, Fr. Paolo Riva, Fr.
288 2, 4, 32 265 | Corrigan to Scalabrini69~ New York, February 25, 1891~ ~
289 2, 4, 32 266 | true in its sad reality. In New York I have had evidence
290 2, 4, 32 269 | Fourth Provincial Council of New York in chapter III, art.
291 2, 4, 32 269 | Fourth Provincial Council of New York has very conveniently
292 2, 4, 32 269 | practice of virtue. Thus in New York City alone, besides
293 2, 4, 32 269 | the Provincial Council of New York was accepted by the
294 2 269(72) | of Baltimore (1791–1884). New York: MacMillan, 1932.~
295 2, 4, 32 270 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York~ ~ ~
296 2 270(74) | and in 1891 returned to New York where he established
297 2 270(75) | failure of the hospital. A new one was started by Mother
298 2, 4, 33 271 | see that the Archbishop of New York writes Italian so well,
299 2, 4, 34 271 | Corrigan to Scalabrini77~ New York, April 3, 1891~ ~Most
300 2, 4, 35 272 | Corrigan to Scalabrini78~ New York, n.d.~ ~Most Venerated
301 2 272(79) | in Fosinone. Invited to New York by Archbishop Corrigan,
302 2 272(79) | served the Archbishops of New York, Corrigan, John Farley
303 2 272(79) | into one of their homes in New Jersey for the last years
304 2, 4, 36 272 | Corrigan to Scalabrini81~ New York, May 10, 1891~ ~Your
305 2, 4, 36 272 | doctrine in the Archdiocese of New York.82 With such a gesture
306 2, 4, 36 275 | cornerstones, one for the New York Seminary and one for
307 2, 4, 36 275 | Seminary and one for the new church started by the Piacenza
308 2, 4, 36 275 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York ~ ~
309 2, 4, 37 275 | of Archbishop Corrigan84~ New York, July 10, 1891~ ~Reverend
310 2, 4, 37 276 | you our Pastoral Blessing.~New York, from our Archiepiscopal
311 2, 4, 37 276 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York~ ~
312 2, 4, 38 276 | archdiocese regarding the new St. Raphael Society.~ This
313 2, 4, 39 279 | Corrigan to Scalabrini92~ New York, August 31, 1891~ ~
314 2, 4, 39 281 | since all immigrants come to New York.~ In the expectation
315 2, 4, 39 281 | Canadians scattered throughout New England, the present (ecclesiastical)
316 2, 4, 39 281 | sent a pamphlet printed in New York to all Italian bishops
317 2, 4, 40 282 | Corrigan to Scalabrini96~ New York, November 11, 1891~ ~
318 2, 4, 40 282 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York~
319 2, 4, 41 283 | Corrigan to Scalabrini98~ New York, March 17, 1892~ ~Dearest
320 2, 4, 41 283 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York~ ~Best regards and
321 2, 4, 41 283 | is almost one city with New York, divided by only a
322 2, 4, 42 283 | Corrigan to Scalabrini100~ New York, August 29, 1893~ ~
323 2, 4, 44 285 | Corrigan to Scalabrini103~ New York, September 29, 1893~ ~
324 2, 4, 45 286 | Corrigan to Scalabrini105~ New York, October 5, 1893~ ~
325 2, 4, 45 287 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York~ ~
326 2, 4, 47 288 | Corrigan to Scalabrini107~ New York, November 22, 1893~ ~
327 2, 4, 48 289 | warned me not to trust the New York Curia, because sooner
328 2, 4, 48 290 | is usually done, those in New York have never been able
329 2 291(112)| with French-Canadians in New England. Cf. Robert J. Wister,
330 2, 4, 49 292 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York~ ~
331 2, 4, 51 292 | Corrigan to Scalabrini114~ New York, December 4, 1896~ ~
332 2, 4, 51 292 | of St. Joachim Church in New York, returns to Italy to
333 2, 4, 51 292 | Joachim Church. He has done new and great works in that
334 2, 4, 51 292 | my cordial Christmas and New Year wishes and with respectful
335 2, 4, 51 292 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York~
336 2, 4, 53 294 | Corrigan to Scalabrini117~ New York, October 1, 1897~ ~
337 2, 4, 53 294 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York~ ~
338 2, 4, 54 294 | Corrigan to Scalabrini118~ New York, May 25, 1898~ ~Most
339 2, 4, 54 295 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York~ ~
340 2, 4, 55 295 | Corrigan to Scalabrini119~ New York, May 13, 1901~ ~Most
341 2, 4, 55 295 | sure, you will not find in New York the spaciousness of
342 2 295(120)| great talent, he worked in New Orleans, Pittsburgh, Boston,
343 2 295(120)| Pittsburgh, Boston, Chicago and New York. He served as Provincial
344 2 295(120)| by Mary Elizabeth Brown. New York: Center for Migration
345 2, 4, 55 296 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York~ ~P.S. Please inform
346 2, 4, 57 297 | Corrigan to Scalabrini~ New York, June 15, 1901~ ~Most
347 2 297(123)| to the Italian priests of New York and to his missionaries
348 2 297(123)| Scalabrini to Francesco Sidoli, New York, August 30, 1901.~
349 2, 4, 57 298 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York~ ~
350 2, 4, 58 298 | Corrigan to Scalabrini124~ New York, August 5, l901~ ~Most
351 2 298(124)| Scalabrini had arrived in New York on August 3. As he
352 2 298(124)| 36, Scalabrini to Mangot, New York, August 4, 1901.~
353 2 298(125)| Ellis Island is in New York Bay and served for
354 2 298(125)| panorama of the great cities of New York, Brooklyn, Newark and
355 2 298(125)| York, Brooklyn, Newark and New Jersey(sic), that extend
356 2 298(125)| etc. Here truly ferment the new and grand ideas.” AGS AN
357 2 298(125)| 38, Scalabrini to Mangot, New York, August 9, 1901.~
358 2 298(126)| of immigrants landing in New York. Opened in 1875, when
359 2 299(127)| Father Pietro Bandini in New York in 1891. The home was
360 2, 4, 59 299 | Corrigan to Scalabrini128~ New York, September 17, l90l~ ~
361 2, 4, 59 299 | Excellency will return to New York, we can spend a few
362 2, 4, 59 299 | Catholic institutions of New York. I hope you will not
363 2, 4, 59 300 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York~ ~
364 2, 4, 60 300 | Corrigan to Scalabrini130~ New York, September 17, 1901~ ~
365 2, 4, 60 300 | third of this month from New Haven.~ After my return
366 2, 4, 60 300 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York~ ~
367 2 300(132)| The Catholic Club of New York (120 Central Park South)
368 2 300(132)| evening, the Catholic Club of New York gave me a solemn reception,
369 2 300(132)| 58. Scalabrini to Mangot, New York, October 16, 1901.~
370 2, 4, 62 301 | of the Catholic Club of New York to Bishop Scalabrini134~
371 2, 4, 62 301 | to Bishop Scalabrini134~ New York, October 15, 1901~ ~
372 2, 4, 62 301 | Catholic Club of the City of New York, to extend to you the
373 2, 4, 63 302 | Bishop Scalabrini at the New York Catholic Club135~ New
374 2, 4, 63 302 | New York Catholic Club135~ New York, October 15, 1901~ ~
375 2, 4, 63 303 | your sheep love for their new pastures, gratitude for
376 2 303(136)| Scalabrini to Mangot, New York, November 6, 1901.~
377 2, 4, 64 304 | to Bishop Scalabrini137~ New York, October 15, 1901~ ~
378 2, 4, 64 304 | your compatriots in the New World discovered by their
379 2, 4, 64 304 | distinctively Italian churches in New York. You have added two
380 2, 4, 64 305 | tempt the broad ocean is a new title to our gratitude.
381 2, 4, 65 305 | at the Catholic Club of New York138~ New York, October
382 2, 4, 65 305 | Catholic Club of New York138~ New York, October 15, 1901~ ~
383 2 305(138)| Scalabrini’s address at the New York Catholic Club was published
384 2 305(138)| Club was published by the New York Italian-language newspaper,
385 2 305(138)| Andrew Brizzolara, c.s. (New York and Chicago: Missionaries
386 2, 4, 65 306 | will usher the secrets of a new era into the 20th Century,
387 2, 4, 65 306 | moistened the ground of New England with his blood.Finally,
388 2, 4, 65 307 | principles are diffused, new and mysterious forces are
389 2, 4, 65 308 | particular, the Catholics of New York, to surround by true
390 2, 4, 66 309 | Corrigan to Scalabrini139~ New York, November 3, l901~ ~
391 2, 4, 66 309 | the 9th and will arrive in New York on November twelve.
392 2, 4, 66 309 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York~ ./.
393 2, 4, 67 310 | Corrigan to Fr. Alussi141~ New York, November 10, 1901~ ~
394 2, 4, 67 310 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York~ ~
395 2, 4, 68 310 | Corrigan to Scalabrini142~ New York, December 15, l901~ ~
396 2, 4, 68 310 | here. The beginning of the New Year is not far. I send
397 2, 4, 68 310 | let us wish each other a new year of consolations and
398 2, 4, 68 310 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York~ ~
399 2, 4, 69 310 | Corrigan to Scalabrini143~ New York, January 11, l902~ ~
400 2 311(144)| 39, Scalabrini to Mangot, New York, August 12, 1901. To
401 2 311(144)| newspaper L’Araldo Italiano of New York of November 19, 1901,
402 2 311(144)| all.” On its part, also the New York Archdiocesan paper
403 2, 4, 69 312 | of the Catholic Club of New York.146 I do not know if
404 2 312(145)| for Migration Studies of New York, Inc.: Rendiconto della
405 2, 4, 69 312 | mention this.~ Everything in New York proceeds normally.
406 2, 4, 69 312 | York proceeds normally. The new Municipal Administration
407 2 312(146)| of the Catholic Club of New York, John A. Sullivan,
408 2, 4, 69 312 | Augustine, Archbishop of New York~The answer of Your
409 2 313(2) | ten years elapsed before new documentation and reference
410 2, 5 314 | turn, reminds him that his new Congregation is “destined
411 2, 5 314 | After this first meeting in New York in August 1901, the
412 2, 5 314 | I have met him twice in New York. If he has obeyed me,
413 2, 5 314 | him for a short time in New York, remained fascinated
414 2 315(10) | 01. Scalabrini to Mangot, New York, October 16, 1901.~
415 2, 5, 1 316 | priests you have sent to New York and I had to take note
416 2 316(13) | in the structure of the new Congregation.~
417 2 317(14) | two centers in Chicago and New York would have been sufficient.
418 2 317(14) | Holiness recently approved a new Institute to be established
419 2 317(14) | granted by Divine Providence a new help in your pastoral service
420 2 317(14) | reside and there constitute new parishes to be entrusted
421 2, 5, 2 320 | and learned bishops in the New World.~ Propaganda was not
422 2, 5, 4 323 | Ireland to Scalabrini19~ New York, November 6, 1901~ ~
423 2, 5, 4 323 | Paul, but before leaving New York I want to wish you
424 2, 5, 5 323 | attention Mr. Amasa Thornton of New York.~ Mr. Thornton will
425 2, 5, 5 323 | Together with other citizens of New York and with the ~Government
426 2, 6 325 | of Cincinnati, Hartford, New Orleans, Kansas City and
427 2, 6 325 | dioceses, the difficulties of new ministry across language
428 2, 6 325 | priests’ adaptation to their new environment, of the lack
429 2, 6 326 | return regularly with every new wave of immigrants, in the
430 2, 6 326 | a city located between New York and Boston, as Your
431 2 327(1) | Hartford in 1879, had a new cathedral erected, organized
432 2 327(1) | cathedral erected, organized 48 new parishes and 70 additional
433 2, 6, I, 1, 327 | spiritual help. In the city of New Haven there are at least
434 2, 6, I, 2, 328 | you, therefore, prepare in New Haven a modest residence
435 2, 6, I, 2, 328 | close as possible to the new church you acquired (for
436 2, 6, I, 2, 328 | not only the Italians of New Haven but from time to time
437 2 328(4) | Your Excellency that in New Haven, a city between New
438 2 328(4) | New Haven, a city between New York and Providence, the
439 2 328(4) | Hartford, on whose diocese New Haven depends, came here
440 2, 6, I, 6, 330 | Church of St. Michael’s in New Haven and we have been obliged
441 2, 6, I, 6, 330 | second Italian church in New Haven will soon be ready
442 2, 6, I, 6, 330 | will also be ready. The new church in Waterbury will
443 2, 6, I, 6, 331 | strength and a Holy & Happy New Year, I remain, ~Yours very
444 2, 6, I, 8, 332 | from St. Patrick’s Church New Haven. The officers of the
445 2, 6, I, 9, 333 | My Dear Bishop:~I was in New Haven last Sunday to dedicate
446 2, 6, I, 9, 333 | last Sunday to dedicate the new St. Anthony’s Church, bless
447 2, 6, I, 10, 334 | or 5,000 in Bridgeport. New Haven is improving some.
448 2, 6, I, 10, 334 | they will do more for this new priest than they did for
449 2, 6, II 334 | II~Archdiocese of New Orleans~ ~ ~
450 2, 6, II, 1, 334 | Janssens to Scalabrini14~ New Orleans, November 10, 1888~ ~
451 2 334(14) | appointed Archbishop of New Orleans in 1888. Born in
452 2 334(14) | States. While Archbishop of New Orleans, he called both
453 2 334(14) | where he died on his way to New York and Europe in June
454 2, 6, II, 1, 334 | thousand Italians living in New Orleans. We have an Italian
455 2, 6, II, 1, 335 | Janssens, Archbishop of New Orleans~ ~
456 2 335(15) | letter that the Archbishop of New Orleans sent me. I replied
457 2 335(15) | have, my dear Francesco, a new field of action. From fifteen
458 2 335(15) | thousand Italians live in New Orleans. Even the Archbishop
459 2 335(15) | must write to the Bishop of New Orleans and then go to see
460 2, 6, II, 2, 335 | Janssens’ letter in the New Orleans ~ Catholic Newspaper16~
461 2, 6, II, 2, 336 | with the erection of the new Church.17 Though oppressed
462 2 336(17) | Scalabrini: “Now, about New Orleans. As I have written
463 2 336(18) | found on his arrival in New Orleans of $324,759. Cf.
464 2, 6, II, 3, 336 | missions in our diocese of New Orleans, United States.
465 2, 6, II, 3, 336 | Janssens, Archbishop of New Orleans~ ./.
466 2, 6, III, 1, 338 | and protect you during the new year and always.~ Your most
467 2, 6, III, 2, 338 | of Missionary Father from New York for Kansas City. He
468 2, 6, IV, 2, 340 | sending the Missionaries for New Orleans last November 21,
469 2, 6, IV, 2, 340 | November 21, I added one for New York, with orders for the
470 2, 6, IV, 2, 340 | possible to take away from New York this father because
471 2, 6, VI, 1, 343 | he said. He returned to New York very sad indeed, saying
472 2, 6, VII, 1, 343 | Martinelli has left us for his new mission, and I wish him
473 2 345(32) | Boff... will advise the new Bishop to remove Father
474 2 345(32) | Italian parishes, was not new. Again, Father Zaboglio
475 2 345(32) | be said of the states of New York, Massachusetts, Louisiana
476 2 345(32) | flying missionaries based in New York, like the Passionists,
477 2 346(33) | Church in the State of Ohio,” New York Freeman’s Journal and
478 Bibl 349 | Bibliography, second edition (New York: Center for Migration
479 Bibl 349 | North America (1887–1934). New York: Center for Migration
480 Bibl 349 | Lady of Pompei, 1892–1992. New York: Center for Migration
481 Bibl 349 | Translated by Alba I. Zizzamia. New York: Center for Migration
482 Bibl 349 | Pastoral Series No. 4. New York: Center for Migration
483 Bibl 349 | CMS, Occasional Paper. New York: Center for Migration
484 Bibl 349 | Insight into His Spirituality. New York: Center for Migration
485 Bibl 350 | Autobiography of Giacomo Gambera. New York: Center for Migration
486 Bibl 350 | Connecticut, 1870–1920. New York: Center for Migration
487 Bibl 350 | by Margaret Koche, O.P. New York: Center for Migration
488 Bibl 350 | Pastoral Series No. 7. New York: Center for Migration
489 Bibl 350 | Pastoral Series No. 5. New York: Center for Migration
490 Bibl 350 | Pastoral Series No. 2. New York: Center for Migration
491 Bibl 350 | Italian Parishes in the New York Metropolitan Area,
492 Bibl 350 | Metropolitan Area, 1880–1930. New York: Center for Migration
493 Bibl 350 | North America (1888–1988). New York: Center for Migration