Includes a history of the first 40 years of the SSPX and the Most Asked Questions about the SSPX taken from The Angelus Magazine. Who was Archbishop Lefebvre? What is the Society of Saint Pius X? Weren't the SSPX and Archbishop Lefebvre excommunicated? What are Catholics to think of Vatican II? The 1983 Code of Canon Law? The Catechism of the Catholic Church? The Indult Mass? The Fraternity of Saint Peter? The New Mass? Sedevacantists? Pope John Paul II?
Includes a history of the first 40 years of the SSPX and the Most Asked Questions about the SSPX taken from The Angelus Magazine. Who was Archbishop Lefebvre? What is the Society of Saint Pius X? Weren't the SSPX and Archbishop Lefebvre excommunicated? What are Catholics to think of Vatican II? The 1983 Code of Canon Law? The Catechism of the Catholic Church? The Indult Mass? The Fraternity of Saint Peter? The New Mass? Sedevacantists? Pope John Paul II?
First called Hart's Mills, after its founder Charles Hart who settled here in 1835, early Wauwatosa resembled a New England village, complete with a commons. Its first pioneers were Yankees and New Yorkers, later joined by Germans who would mold the growing community. Wauwatosa became the most highly developed, unincorporated settlement in Milwaukee County. It attained a degree of sophistication with its commercial mix of mills, a pickle factory, inns, modest businesses, and nearby stone quarries and breweries. Vital links to Milwaukee in 1851, the Watertown Plank Road and the state's first railroad through the village center to Waukesha, enhanced this development. In 1852, the County Board selected a site nearby for its poor farm. Wauwatosa incorporated as a village in 1892, attaining city status in 1897. The streetcar of the 1890s and the automobile fueled residential growth. Wauwatosa became known as the "City of Homes." In the 1950s, Wauwatosa tripled in size with final annexations and was transformed into a major center of commercial and industrial development, while retaining large public green spaces, parkways, and recreational sites.
Tucked among the great pioneer destinations on the Oregon Trail is the fertile agricultural area of the Willamette Valley. Today the valley forms the cultural and political heart of Oregon and is home to three-quarters of the states population. The beginning of the 20th century saw the entrance of Filipinos into the valley, arriving from vegetable farms in California and Washington, fish canneries in Alaska, and from the pineapple and sugar plantations in Hawaii. At the same time, the U.S. territorial government in the Philippines started sponsoring Filipino students, beginning in 1903, to study in the United States. Oregons two biggest centers of education, todays University of Oregon in Eugene and Oregon State University in Corvallis, became home to Filipinos from the emerging independent Philippine nation. They were mostly male, the children of wealthy Filipinos who had connections. Most of them returned to the Philippines upon graduation; some stayed and created a new life in America.
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