The National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception Collection

Publications, printed material, clippings, and photographs documenting the activities of the National Shrine. Series 1: Shrine Publications and Printed Material includes the newsletter of the National Shrine, Salve Regina and Mary's Shrine. Issues of the Salve Regina are both bound and unbound....

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Tác giả của công ty: The Catholic University of America, The American Catholic History Research Center and University Archives
Định dạng: Bản thảo
Ngôn ngữ:English
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099 |a ACUA 048 
110 2 0 |a The Catholic University of America, The American Catholic History Research Center and University Archives 
245 1 0 |a The National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception Collection 
300 |a 7.7 linear feet; 11 boxes 
351 |a ArrangementThe National Shrine collection consists of five series:Series 1: Shrine Publications and Printed Material, 1910-1996, n.d. (Boxes 1-8)Series 2: Newspaper and Periodical Clippings, 1911-1996 (Box 9)Series 3: Images, ca. 1910s-1970s (Boxes 9-11)Series 4: Memorabilia, 1923Series 5: Oversize Materials, ca. 1971-1997 
506 |a Restrictions on AccessThere are no access restrictions. 
520 2 |a Publications, printed material, clippings, and photographs documenting the activities of the National Shrine. Series 1: Shrine Publications and Printed Material includes the newsletter of the National Shrine, Salve Regina and Mary's Shrine. Issues of the Salve Regina are both bound and unbound. The newsletter probably changed names sometime in the 1950s, but the collection does not cover that period of time. Shrine Printed Material contains books published by and about the National Shrine including Father Bernard McKenna's memoirs as the first director. The series also includes annual reports from the late 1950s to mid-1960s. Important service programs include the dedication of the Shrine, the organ, and various chapels. Most of the early Shrine printed materials relate to fundraising and construction while post-1959 materials pertain to events such as organ recitals and pilgrimages. Printed material dating from the 1980s includes a significant number of donation requests. 
544 1 |a Related MaterialThe American Catholic Research Center and University Archives:The Catholic Daughters of America PapersThe Bernard Aloysius McKenna PapersThe Catholic University Mullen Library:The National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, Washington, D.C.: America's Tribute to Mary (1994?)National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, volume two (1928) 
545 |a Among the ten largest churches in the world, the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception has been a prominent site of Roman Catholic worship honoring Mary, the patroness of the United States, since the 1920s. After securing the support of Pope Pius X in 1913, Bishop Thomas J. Shahan, the fourth rector of the Catholic University of America, launched a fundraising campaign that culminated in the laying of the cornerstone on September 23, 1920. By that time, Shahan had begun publishing Salve Regina, a fundraising and information newsletter (later called Mary's Shrine), and had named Father Bernard McKenna of Philadelphia as the first director. 
546 |a English 
610 1 0 |a Catholic University of America 
610 1 0 |a National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception (Washington, D.C.) 
650 0 |a Catholicism 
651 0 |a Washington (D.C.) 
856 4 2 |u http://libraries.cua.edu/achrcua/natshrine.html  |z View the finding aid online.