founded by the Missionaries of St. Charles Borromeo in 1965 in
Bedford, England The founding of the institute was approved by
Pope Leo XIII in a
papal brief dated 25 November 1887 and the approval of its Constitution by a decree of the
Sacred Congregation of Propaganda followed on 3 October 1908. The expediency of providing for the spiritual and also, to some degree, for the temporal needs of Italian emigrants to
the Americas was brought to the attention of Bishop Scalabrini by the pathetic sight of a number of such emigrants waiting in the great railway station of
Milan. Acting upon this inspiration, and encouraged by Cardinal
Giovanni Simeoni, then
prefect of the
Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith, Scalabrini acquired a residence in Piacenza where he established the "Christopher Columbus Apostolic Institution", forming there a community of priests which became the nucleus of a new congregation. This congregation, which was henceforth to be known as the Missionaries of St. Charles Borromeo, was to be governed by a
superior general, dependent upon the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith. Its primary aim was to maintain the practice of the Catholic faith among Italian emigrants in the New World, and "to ensure as far as possible their moral, civil, and economic welfare." It was to provide priests for the emigrants, as well as committees of persons who would give good advice and practical direction needed by poor Italians who were new arrivals in foreign ports; to establish churches, schools, and missionary homes in the various Italian colonies in North and South America; and to train youths for the priesthood. The members of the congregation promise obedience to their superiors in the congregation and the ecclesiastical hierarchy. Seven priests and three
lay brothers of Scalabrini's institute left Italy on 12 July 1888, of whom two priests and one lay brother were bound for
New York City, five priests and two lay brothers for various parts of Brazil. On this occasion,
Cesare Cantú, the famous Italian historian, addressed to the Bishop of Piacenza some memorable words of congratulation, asking leave to add to the bishop's blessing on the departing missionaries, "the prayers of an old man who admires a courage and an abnegation so full of humility." A welcome had already been assured these first missionaries of the congregation by a commendatory letter (1 June 1888) of Leo XIII addressed to the American bishops. Immediately after their arrival in New York City, the missionaries secured a favourable site in
Centre Street, where there was a colony of Italians, and in a short time a chapel was opened; soon after this, the Church of the Resurrection was opened on
Mulberry Street; lastly, a building on
Roosevelt Street, which had been a
Protestant place of worship, became the property of the Scalabrini Fathers, who transformed it into the
Church of St. Joachim, the first
national parish for Italian immigrants in the
Archdiocese of New York. The Society of St. Raphael, an emigrant aid society, was organized at
Ellis Island. The Scalabrini's work thereafter spread rapidly through the continent. ==Formation in the Philippines ==