Columbian Squires

Mark A. Butler Circle, No. 3678
Sponsored by the Knights of Columbus Council 1702

History of the Order

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How did the Squires get started?
  

     At the annual meeting of the Supreme Council of the Knights of Columbus held in Atlantic City in August, 1922, the Most Rev. Thomas J. Walsh, Archbishop of Newark, New Jersey, made a plea to the Knights of Columbus to enter the field of boy work.
He said, "If the Knights of Columbus will take care of the growing boy, then the boy grown into manhood will take care of not only the Knights of Columbus, but of the Church and the nation as well."  The sincerity and urgency of the archbishop's request prompted Supreme Knight James A. Flaherty to name a special committee headed by then Deputy Supreme Knight Martin H. Carmody to study the feasibility of organizing a junior order.   At about the same time that the Knights were setting up their special committee, Brother Barnabas McDonald, FSC, a Christian Brother regarded by many to be an expert in the field of youth apostolate, was working on a 

Brother Barnabas McDonald

proposition for the Knights of Columbus to become involved in the field of boy welfare.  Brother Barnabas' plan included formation of an elite group of boy leaders as the junior organization of the Knights of Columbus.  His plan was brought to the attention of the Knights' special committee, which eagerly approved the proposal and recommended its adoption at the June, 1923 meeting of the Board of Directors.  This recommendation was formally adopted at the Supreme Council meeting in Montreal in August, 1923. 
     Two years later, on August 4, 1925, the first Columbian Squires circle - Duluth Circle 1, Duluth, Minnesota - was instituted in ceremonies that highlighted the Knights of Columbus' annual convention.  In the years to follow, the program experienced widespread and rapid growth.  Circles were instituted throughout the United States, in Canada, Mexico, Puerto Rico, Guam and the Philippine Islands.  Today, there are over 22,000 young Catholic men between the ages of 12 and 18 holding membership in and participating in the programs of approximately 1,000 Columbian Squire circles.

 

The Squires emblem symbolizes the ideals which identify a squire.  On the arms of a Maltese cross are the letters “P”, which represents the physical development necessary to make the body as strong as the spirit; “I”, which stands for the intellectual development needed for cultural and mental maturity; “S”, which represents the spiritual growth and practice of our faith and “C”, which stands for the development of citizenship and civic life.  The larger letters “C”, representing Christ; “S”, the Squires; and “K” the Knights of Columbus by whom the Squires program is sponsored, are intertwined in the center of the cross.  They are the three foundations of the program.  “Esto Dignus”, the Squires’ motto encircling the emblem, is Latin for “Be Worthy.”

 



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"The Supreme Purpose of the Columbian Squires
is character building."
- Brother Barnabas   

Page Last updated:  August 30, 2003 A.D.                                                          © 2001, Dennis L. Calaway.  All rights reserved.