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Knights of Peter Claver

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Knights of Peter Claver
AbbreviationKPC
FormationNovember 7, 1909; 114 years ago (1909-11-07)
TypeCatholic fraternal service organization Service
Headquarters1825 Orleans Ave,
New Orleans, Louisiana
Supreme Knight
James K. Ellis
Key people
Saint Peter Claver
Websitewww.kofpc.org

The Knights of Peter Claver, Inc. and Ladies Auxiliary is an international Black Catholic fraternal service order. It is also the largest and oldest extant Black Catholic lay-led organization overall. They are currently led by their Supreme Knight, James K. Ellis.

History

The organization was founded in 1909 by a group including Josephite Father Conrad Friedrich Rebesher, a native of Kłodawa, Poland and pastor of Most Pure Heart of Mary Parish; 3 other Josephite priests: Father Samuel Joseph Kelly, Father Joseph Peter Van Baast, and Father John Henry Dorsey; and 3 laymen: Gilbert Faustina, Francis Xavier "Frank" Collins, and Francis "Frank" Trenier.[1]

The Order is named after St. Peter Claver, a Jesuit priest from Spain who ministered to African slaves in Cartagena, Colombia, South America, in the 17th century. Peter Claver is said to have converted over 300,000 slaves to Catholicism. The organization's model was based on other Catholic fraternal orders such as the Knights of Columbus. The Knights of Peter Claver is a member of the worldwide International Alliance of Catholic Knights.

The Sublimed and Meritorious Fourth Degree was organized in 1917.[1] This division is open to Knights who after two years of continual membership have proven themselves to be active workers in the Church, the community, and the Noble Order.

In 1922, a Ladies Auxiliary was formed to provide the same opportunities for Catholic action to African American lay women.[1] The Auxiliary was officially recognized as a division of the Order in 1926. A Fourth Degree for the Auxiliary, the Ladies of Grace, was established for members of the Ladies Auxiliary in 1979.

A program for Junior Knights existed from the Order's earliest days. The constitution of the Junior Knights Division was adopted in 1917 and the division formally recognized in 1935. The Junior Daughters division was officially recognized in 1930.

Organization

The organization is active in the United States of America and South America. It has over 400 Councils (men) and Courts (ladies) throughout the U.S. and on San Andres Island in Colombia. For youths between the ages of 7 and 18 years old, the organization has Junior Councils (young men) and Junior Courts (young ladies).

Members of the Fourth Degree Knights are addressed as "Sir Knight," and members of the Fourth Degree Ladies of Grace are addressed as "Gracious Lady."

Activities

The Knights of Peter Claver and Ladies Auxiliary provides opportunities for all Catholics to be actively involved in their faith by living the Gospel message. The Knights of Peter Claver and Ladies Auxiliary engages in a variety of church and community service projects. It supports charitable appeals of many national and international organizations such as the NAACP and the United Negro College Fund, Catholic elementary and secondary schools and Xavier University in New Orleans.

In 2006, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops renewed a grant to the organization to continue the National Environmental Health and Justice Literacy Project, a program designed to educate citizens of poor communities about environmental health hazards. Recently, the organization has provided disaster relief support on several occasions and has adopted numerous social justice causes as its mantra. Most notably, the Junior Division (youth) are promoting clean water initiatives and sufficient housing for the world's underserved in addition to their efforts to eradicate diabetes in the black community.

Purposes

  • To support a local pastor, parish and bishop.
  • To become active, as a group, in a Knights respective community.
  • To instill civic pride & action.
  • To engage Knights in opportunities that will allow them to demonstrate their Catholicism.
  • To allow for social interaction by creating gatherings that might foster a sense of community.
  • To provide for the awarding of scholarships.
  • To develop the character of youth.
  • To provide social and intellectual stimulation for its members[2]

Supreme Knights and Supreme Ladies

Supreme Knights

The following is a list of the Most Worthy Supreme Knights who have served as chief executive officers of the Knights of Peter Claver (and their terms of service):

  1. Gilbert Faustina † (1909–1926)
  2. Louis Israel † (1926–1940)
  3. Alphonse Pierre Auguste † (1941)
  4. John Henry Clouser † (1941–1946)
  5. Joseph Roland Prejean † (1946–1952)
  6. Beverly Victor Baranco Jr., KSG † (1952–1958)
  7. Eugene Boone Perry † (1958–1964)
  8. Shields Gilbert Gilmore † (1964–1970)
  9. Ernest Granger Sr., KSG † (1970–1976)
  10. Murry J. Frank † (1976–1982)
  11. Chester J. Jones, KSG (1982–1988)
  12. Paul Camille Condoll † (1988–1994)
  13. Andrew Jackie Elly (1994–2000)
  14. Arthur Cecil McFarland, Esq. (2000–2006)
  15. Gene Anthony Phillips Sr., KHS (2006–2010)
  16. Fredron DeKarlos Blackmon, OblSB, KHS (2010–2016)
  17. James Kenneth Ellis (2016–Present)

Supreme Ladies

The following is a list of the Most Esteemed Supreme Ladies who have served the Knights of Peter Claver Ladies Auxiliary (and their terms of service):

  1. Mary Lula Figaro Lunnon † (1926–1928)
  2. Alfaretta Ruth O'Ferrall Aubry † (1928–1952)
  3. Lucy Elizabeth Huff Jones † (1952–1958)
  4. Inez Young Bowman † (1958–1964)
  5. Thelma Perrault Lombard † (1964–1970)
  6. Florence Madeleine Woodfork Lee (1970–1976)
  7. Elise LeNoir Morris (1976–1982)
  8. Consuella Broussard † (1982–1988)
  9. Dorothy B. Henderson † (1988–1994)
  10. Leodia Gooch (1994–2000)
  11. Mary Louise Briers (2000–2006)
  12. Geralyn Carmouche Shelvin (2006–2012)
  13. Vertelle Amos Kenion (2012–2018)
  14. Micaela J. A. LeBlanc (2018–present)

Buildings

Notable Members

References

  1. ^ a b c "History", Knights of Peter Claver
  2. ^ ""Goals and Objectives"". Archived from the original on 2014-02-26. Retrieved 2013-06-28.
  3. ^ Roulhac Toledano; Mary Louise Christovich; Betsy Swan (1971). New Orleans Architecture Volume VI: Faubourg Treme and the Bayou Road. p. 83. ISBN 978-1-56554-831-2.