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This journal covers the history of the Canadian Catholic Church, including its personalities, history, dioceses, religious communities and more.
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Historical Studies back issues
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Editors' foreword.(Editorial)
January 1, 2008... We are pleased to present Volume 74 of Historical Studies, featuring papers presented at the 2007 annual meeting of the English Section of the Canadian Catholic Historical Association at the University of Saskatchewan. Papers presented at the 2007 conference but not published here for various...
Papers presented at the annual meeting.(Bibliography)(Brief article)
January 1, 2008... University of Saskatchewan, 28 May--29 May 2007 but not included in this volume:
Keith Thor Carlson, "Saskatchewan: A Re-appraisal of 19th Century Oblate-Aboriginal Relations: Oral History and Archival Documents in the Middle-ground of Memory"
Michael Pomedli, "Ojibwa and Christian...
"The pirates of the penitentiary": religion and politics in late 19th century British Columbia.(Essay)
January 1, 2008... Chronic reports of mismanagement in the British Columbia Penitentiary resulted in several investigations and a recommendation that Arthur McBride, the long-time warden, be superannuated. That set off a contest for the wardenship between the Orangeman, provincial gaoler William Moresby, who...
"To enlarge our hearts and to widen our horizon": Archbishop Neil McNeil and the origins of social catholicism in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Toronto, 1912-1934.(Toronto, Canada)
January 1, 2008... From 1912-1934 Archbishop Neil McNeil of Toronto introduced a new paradigm of Catholicism that revolutionized how English-speaking Canadian Catholics were to understand and live their faith. Known as social Catholicism, this understanding of Catholic morality forged a link between the mission...
Beginning to restructure the institutional church: Canadian social catholics and the CCF, 1931-1944.(Cooperative Commonwealth Federation)(Essay)
January 1, 2008... Following the formation of the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation in the early 1930s, prominent Archbishops in Quebec issued episcopal directives against participating in and voting for the party. Re-examining how the Church opened to the CCF and offered limited acceptance by the mid-1940s...