The organisation was formed on 5 October 1919. In 1995, the organisation was reported to have 10,000 members, including artisans and small business owners. In 2005, the Knights of St Columba in
St Albans were involved in fundraising for school projects in
Indonesia. In 2012, the organisation made public calls, reported in the news, for a street in
York to be named after local
Elizabethan era Catholic saint
Margaret Clitherow, who had been canonized by
Pope Paul VI as one of the
Forty Martyrs of England and Wales. In 2018,
The Times of London reported that the Knights, after meticulous research, had made a ruling that
Alice Nutter, a
Lancashire noblewoman and
Recusant who was convicted and executed for attending a witches' coven on
Good Friday, 1612, was in reality a Catholic martyr. According to the Knights, Nutter had in reality been attending an illegal
Mass at the time of the alleged coven and the prosecution was a
frameup by a corrupt judge who coveted the Nutter estate, but who could not prove that Nutter was a Catholic. Accusing Nutter during the
Pendle witch hunt, according to the Knights, was an easy alternative, particularly as she could not prove her innocence of witchcraft without self-incrimination for Recusancy. The Knights accordingly expressed support for Alice Nutter's Canonization. Since 2020, the Knights' Council 1 at the
University of Glasgow has been promoting Fr
Alexander Cameron (1701-1746) by distributing
holy cards with a prayer for his Canonization as a Saint and a Martyr by the Catholic Church. Fr. Cameron (), was an
outlawed Jesuit "heather priest" working among
Clan Chisholm and
Clan Fraser of Lovat in
Strathglass,
the Aird, and
Glen Cannich during the
Penal Laws and
Jacobite Army military chaplain, who died after the
Battle of Culloden aboard a
Royal Navy prison hulk anchored in the
River Thames. The same Council has also been involved in spreading the
Legion of Mary and the
St Vincent de Paul Society to fellow
Millennial and
Generation Z students, and in launching the new Brecbannoch Pilgrimage; bearing the relics of
St Andrew, St Columba, and St
Margaret of Scotland, which are on loan from
Carfin Grotto, on foot inside a
replica of the
Brecbannoch of St Columba to
Iona Abbey. ==Organisation==