in
Oakland, Pittsburgh In the late fall of 1893 Croatian American journalist
Zdravko V. Mužina issued a call for a convention to organize a fraternal benefit society for Americans of Croatian descent. Three hundred people met in response to the call on January 14, 1894 in
Allegheny City, Pennsylvania. Only a handful of people signed up and paid dues to the new group. Mužina arranged for another meeting on September 2, 1894 which merged six Croatian societies into a new group, the
Croatian Federation. This group changed its name to the
National Croatian Society in 1897. In 1926 the National Croatian Society merged with the
Croatian League of Illinois of Chicago,
St. Joseph Society of
Kansas City, Kansas and the
New Croatian Society of
Whiting, Indiana to form the Croatian Fraternal Union. In 1939 the CFU absorbed the
Slovanic Croatian Union. The CFU built a
new Home Office building in the
Oakland neighborhood of Pittsburgh in 1928–29. The building featured ornate Flemish Gothic terra cotta ornamentation and was nominated as a Pittsburgh historic landmark in 2018. In 1961, the organization moved to a new headquarters in
Wilkins Township. A street in
Zagreb, capital of Croatia, is called
Street of the Croatian Fraternal Union. The
National and University Library in Zagreb, one of Croatia's central cultural institutions, is located in that street.
Josip Marohnić, founding father and first president of the CFU, also has a street named in his honor in Zagreb. == Benefits and activities ==