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About Us
The Ancient Order of Hibernians
by Mike McCormack National Historian.
The Ancient Order of Hibernians is the oldest Catholic lay
organization in America. Formed in New York in 1836, it is
the fusion of several organizations derived from a common
source born in anger centuries earlier in Ireland. Since
the sixth century Ireland had been subjected to a series of
invasions by those who would master the Irish and alter
their Gaelic life style. Inflexible opponents like the
Vikings were fought until their power was broken; others,
like the Normans, were absorbed until they became as Irish
as the Irish themselves. Through it all, the Irish
maintained their heritage: language, traditions, and
religion. The 16th century however, brought their greatest
challenge.
A Protestant Reformation swept Europe in the 1500s, sparked
by the Church of Rome.s growing materialism and marked by
Royal intrigues over the Church.s wealth. The result was
the banning of Catholicism, seizure of Church assets, and
violence in many countries. In England, the Reformation
made inroads from the reigns of Henry VIII to Elizabeth I,
who declared the Church of England the State religion. At
the time of this declaration Elizabeth considered Ireland
part of her empire, even though the Irish did not agree.
The Papacy launched a counter reformation, and Ireland
became a battlefield between the two forces as the Irish,
who had embraced the Church introduced by St. Patrick,
became the target of a campaign to reduce Rome's power by
converting the masses to Protestantism. Those Anglo Lords
in Ireland who had provided a base for assaults on the
Irish heritage, now supported assaults on Catholicism, and
in the conflict great tracts of land were seized and given
to Crown supporters who professed the "State" religion.
The Irish fought the theft of their lands, and the
persistence with which they clung to their traditions and
religion drove the English to extremes in repression. Penal
laws disenfranchised Irish Catholics from the political,
social, and economic life of their own country; they became
an underground society practicing their religion in secret.
Not surprisingly, clandestine groups were formed to protect
the values under attack. In various locales, secret
societies were identified with attacks on oppressive
landlords, and each of these societies included in its
avowed purpose the protection of their Church and its
clergy. As time and government prevailed, some societies
were suppressed, but most immediately reorganized under a
new name combining the two strongest motives that bind men
together . defense of faith and fatherland. By the
mid-1800s these societies were collectively known as
Ribbonmen, although history provides us with the names of
some of the earliest contributing groups like the Whiteboys,
Rockites, Terry Alts, and Defenders. We even have limited
details of some. We know, for example, that the motto of
the Defenders was Friendship, Unity, and True Christian
Charity, but the secret manner in which these groups
operated left few records for modern analysts. As a result,
a true history of their deeds may never be written.
Today's AOH, with its motto Friendship, Unity, and
Christian Charity, is the most recent link in the evolution
of those ancient ideals and, as such, is the successor to
the secret societies of old. Although use of the name
Hibernians by one of the societies can only be traced back
to 1641, the AOH can claim continuity of purpose and motto
unbroken back through the centuries to the Defenders, and
indeed to the very beginning of militant opposition in
1565. The birth of that organization to America came in the
same manner as its birth in Ireland.
As the Irish immigrants arrived in American cities, they
were often alone and in need of lodgings and work. They
sought fellow County men for assistance and, in many cases,
found those who had been involved in the same secret
societies as they had in Ireland. They renewed old
alliances in America forming new societies based on the
structure of the ones they.d left behind . only this time
they were more fraternal than militant and dedicated to
assisting their own. Some kept the names of the societies
to which they had belonged in Ireland like the Hibernian
Sick and Funeral Society, and the St Patrick.s Fraternal
Society, while others took names denoting their purpose,
origin or allegiance like Boston.s Charitable Irish
Society, Pennsylvania.s Friends of Ireland, and New York.s
Corkonians, O.Connell Guards, and Roche Guards, among
others.
Then in the 19th century, the rise of the Native American
or Know Nothing Party ushered in an era of unparalleled
bigotry in America. Anti- Catholic, anti-Irish sentiment
had originally come to the British colonies with the
representatives of the Crown and that prejudice was
manifested up to the time of the American Revolution. The
service of the Irish in Washington.s army mitigated the
intensity of that intolerance to a degree, but the basic
bigotry had already taken root. The great number of Irish
Catholics who arrived diseased and destitute at the time of
Ireland.s Great Hunger gave new fuel to those fires of
bigotry which were still smouldering. The massive influx of
Irish, fleeing starvation in their native land, focused
Know Nothing hatred on that unfortunate group, and on the
Catholic Church which they supported. Employers closed
their doors to Irish workers, and legislation, reminiscent
of the penal laws, was sought against the immigrant
population who, it was stated, diluted American principles.
After threats and attacks on Irish and Church property in
several cities, the Irish immigrant resorted to a familiar
tactic. Those societies which had formed as fraternal
organizations added a militant dimension to their charters,
and stood in defense of Church and community.
As they had done in Ireland, some of these organizations
banded together. As the Know Nothings expanded nationwide,
the need for a national protective society for the Irish
increased. On St Patrick.s Day, 1836, a group from the
Hibernian Benevolent Society of Schuylkill County,
Pennsylvania, traveled to New York.s annual parade and a
meeting with leaders of the St. Patrick.s Fraternal Society
to discuss a national merger. Many in both organizations
had been member of Ribbon Societies in Ireland, and they
agreed that the time had come for an American version of
that organization. The members of the Hibernian Benevolent
Society returned to Pennsylvania and three month later the
Ancient Order of Hibernians was founded simultaneously in
Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania and at St. James Church in
lower Manhattan near the infamous Five Points tenements.
True to their purpose, they stood guard to defend Irish and
Church property. After their formation, actual attacks were
few and far between, but the long, cold, and lonely nights
of vigil were many. At about this time, the Ribbon
Societies in Ireland also adopted the name Ancient Order of
Hibernians, and the Order now had connections with the
mother country. The early AOH in America remained a secret
society, and little is known of its activities except that
it provided a monetary stipend to immigrants who arrived as
members of the Irish societies, assisted Irish immigrants
in obtaining jobs and social services, and, quite
naturally, became nurseries for the preservation of their
Irish heritage in America.
As the heroism of the Irish Brigade and other Irish units
in the American Civil War had America cheering for the
exploits of the sons of Erin in American uniform, the
honesty, devotion, and natural charm of the Irish girls,
who had found employment as domestic help, were winning
admirers on the home front. The natural result of this new
regard was a decrease in the prejudice against the Irish,
and the Know Nothing Party, recognized for the bigoted body
it was, faded away. It would emerge again in organizations
like the Ku Klux Klan, and other groups dedicated to ethnic
hatred and anti-Catholic propaganda, but never again would
America support a national army of zealots. The AOH, on the
other hand, grew stronger. It followed Irish immigrants as
they worked their way across the country. As the need for
militant support of their Church dwindled, the AOH shifted
its purpose to charitable activities in support of the
Church's missions, community service, and the promotion and
preservation of their Irish cultural heritage in America.
Today they stand, not only as the oldest Catholic Lay
organization in America, but as the largest Irish ethnic
society in the world with Divisions across the United
States, and close ties with the AOH in Ireland, England,
Scotland, and Wales. In America, the Division is the basic
unit of the Order. Divisions are combined into County
Boards, which are in turn governed by State Boards, and an
overall National Board elected every two years. Annual
dances, concerts, and parades sponsored at all levels of
the Order raise millions for charity while providing a
showcase for the positive contributions the Irish have made
in every walk of American life.
The many Divisions and Hibernian Halls across the country
have traditionally provided a welcome for new immigrants.
Here, the unique art, dance, music, and other interests of
the Irish are fostered and preserved, making the AOH a home
away from home for many. Together, they are at the
forefront of support for issues concerning the Irish such
as Emigration Reform, MacBride Legislation, and the Right
to Life. They have served their Church well, yet, they
never forgot their ancestral homeland, and can always be
found actively lobbying, praying, and working for the total
independence of a united 32 county Ireland . as their
constitution avows: "by all means constitutional and
lawful".
The initials AOH may tell the story best. Those who say it
means "Add One Hour" are describing the easygoing, no rush
attitude of many of its members, while "America.s Only
Hope" has been used to define the loyalty of the Irish to
the principles of their adopted land. In any case, the
Order is best described by the statement, "To be Irish is a
Blessing, To be a Hibernian is an Honor."
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Meetings
Division 2
Monthly Meetings
Second Tuesday of Every Month 8 PM
Albertus Magnus High School
Corner of Germonds & Route 304
Bardonia, New York

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