Founded by Father Michael J. McGivney, curate at St. Mary's parish in New Haven, CT, the Knights of Columbus
was chartered on March 29, 1882, in the state of Connecticut.
As the priest explained to a small group of men at a meeting in the basement of St. Mary's Church in October 1881, his
purpose in calling them together was manifold: to help Catholic men remain steadfast in their faith through mutual encouragement;
to promote closer ties of fraternity among them; and to set up an elementary system of insurance so that the widows and children
of members in the group who might die would not find themselves in dire financial straits.
The founder and first officers of the fledgling organization chose the name "Knights of Columbus" because
they felt that, as a Catholic group, it should relate to Christpher Columbus, the Catholic discoverer of America. This would
emphasize that it Catholics who discovered, explored, and colonized the North American continent. At the same time "Knights"
would signify that the membership embodied knightly ideals of spirituality and service to the Church, country and fellowman.
By the end of 1897, the Order was thoroughly rooted in New England, along the upper Atlantic seaboard
and into Canada. Within the next eight years it branched out from Quebec to California, and from Florida to Washington.
From such promising beginnings, Father McGivney's original group has blossomed into an international society of more
than 1.6 million Catholic men plus their families, in nearly 12,000 councils who have dedicated themselves to the ideals of
Columbianism: Charity, Unity, Fraternity and Patriotism.
Today members of the Order are found in the United States, Canada, Mexico, the Phillipines, Puerto Rico,
Cuba, the Dominican Republic, the Bahamas, the Virgin Islands, Guatemala, Guam, and Saipan. They belong to many races and
speak many different languages. They are diverse, yet they are one. Their diversity spells creativity; their unity spells
strength.