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20th century history of the Catholic Church in the United States : ウィキペディア英語版 | 20th-century history of the Catholic Church in the United States
The 20th-century history of the Catholic Church in the United States was characterized by a period of continuous growth for the Church in the United States, with Catholics progressively evolving from a small minority to a large minority. ==Early 20th day== In 1900 the Catholic population was 10 million, under the control of 14 Archbishops, 77 bishops, and 12,000 priests . The community had built 10,000 churches, of which two-thirds had resident pastors. Catholic schools educated nearly 1,000,000 children and youth. Catholics were heavily concentrated in the industrial and mining centers of the Northeast; few were farmers and only a small fraction lived in the South, chiefly in Louisiana. Catholics comprised less than one in 7 of the national population of 76 million.〔Thomas T. McAvoy, "The Catholic Minority after the Americanist Controversy, 1899-1917: A Survey," ''Review of Politics'' (1959) 21#1 pp. 53-82, at p 59 (in JSTOR )〕
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