Background (1865–1869) 1865 ushered in the period of
Southern Reconstruction, during which time, the
Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, outlawing slavery, was passed. Ten former
Confederate states were divided into five military districts. As a condition of readmission to the Union, the former Confederate states were required to ratify the
Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution, which granted citizenship to all people born in the U.S. regardless of race. John Henry Dorsey, SSJ, was ordained in the society on June 21, 1902, becoming just the second black priest ordained in America (after Uncles). He would go on to help found the
Knights of Peter Claver in 1909 at
Most Pure Heart of Mary Catholic Church in
Mobile, Alabama. He would die tragically, however, in 1923 after being murdered by a student's father. The Josephites were elevated to the status of a
society of apostolic life of pontifical right in 1932. On his part (and mostly due to the unrelenting racism he saw in the US Catholic Church), Slattery would eventually lose hope in the mission, in Catholicism, and in Christianity overall—leaving his post, the priesthood and eventually the faith. He then married and became a successful lawyer, leaving his fortune and papers to the
New York Public Library upon his death the same year as Dorsey. Fr Uncles died an outcast
within the order in 1933, frustrated by racist circumstances to the point that he no longer considered himself a Josephite at all. This helped produce calls for more authentic black freedom and expression, as well as black oversight of black parishes and schools, causing tension across the Church—including at St Joseph's Seminary (the Josephite house) in Washington, D.C. Epiphany, the minor seminary in New York, rapidly lost numbers around the same time, and was merged with another society's minor seminary program in 1970; it would soon close altogether. Black laypeople protested at St Joseph's in summer 1971, and eventually a good number of seminarians would leave or be asked to leave altogether, causing the school to close for studies that same year. In 1987, the Josephites' Bishop
John Ricard founded the
National Black Catholic Congress, a revival of the
Colored Catholic Congress movement of the late 19th century. Both of the following superiors general have also been black, including the sitting, Bishop Ricard. == Organization and membership ==