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For Faith and Fortune
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For Faith and Fortune : ウィキペディア英語版
For Faith and Fortune
''For Faith and Fortune: The Education of Catholic Immigrants in Detroit, 1805-1925'' is a 1998 book by JoEllen McNergney Vinyard and published by the University of Illinois Press. It discusses Catholics in Detroit from the Michigan territorial era through the 1920s and how these Catholics educated their children.〔Sullivan, p. 500.〕
Vinyard is an Eastern Michigan University history professor.〔Divita, p. 206.〕
==Contents==
The book spans the years 1805 through 1925. Initially Protestants and Catholics both supported the establishment of public schools, but a rise in nativism,〔Kramer, p. 648-649.〕 activism to use the King James Bible, preferred by Protestants, caused the cooperation to collapse. By the 1880s immigrant Catholics established their own school system in response to these social changes.〔Perko, p. 1692.〕 The Catholics believed that education according to their faith was crucial and that the family had the responsibility of their children's education rather than the government.〔Walsh, p. 790.〕 The author discusses the differences in Catholic schools in different parishes.〔Walsh, p. 791.〕 The book discusses how there was overall less anti-Catholic sentiment and more inter-denominational cooperation in Detroit compared to other American cities. The later parts of the book document a failed Ku Klux Klan attempt to abolish Catholic schools by state constitutional amendment.〔Kramer, p. 649.〕
Earl Boyea of the Sacred Heart Major Seminary referred to Chapters 3-7 as "the heart of the book" and the "most fascinating" portion.〔Boyea, p. 322.〕 Michael F. Perko of the Loyola University of Chicago wrote that the book is "strongest" in discussion the religious sister staff of the schools, and that the book also has ample exposition discussing the immigrant communities making up Detroit's Catholic community.〔 The ethnic groups discussed include Belgians, Germans, Hungarians, Irish, Italians, and Poles.〔

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