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  1. Apr 1, 2010 · written by Jamie Harrison. Last year, I coached the only American high school cricket team outside of New York City. It was created by a group of American kids who, without ever having played a hardball game, had already fallen in love with the sport. How did this come to pass? Well, it all started in Virginia, in April of 2008.

  2. In 2009, Cardinal Gibbons formed a Cricket Club, the first of its kind in any high school in the state of Maryland to regularly play and compete in the English national sport. [ 38 ] [ 39 ] A travel team would go on to play several youth teams in the metropolitan Washington, D.C., area.

  3. When American Roman Catholic prelate James Gibbons was elevated to cardinal in 1886, he became only the second churchman in North America ever to attain that rank. James Gibbons was born on July 23, 1834, in Baltimore, Maryland.

  4. May 17, 2018 · James Gibbons (1834-1921), an American Roman Catholic cardinal, did much to reconcile the Church with national institutions when American Catholicism was faced with momentous transformation and crisis. James Gibbons was born on July 23, 1834, in Baltimore, Md., of Irish immigrant parents.

  5. James Cardinal Gibbons (born July 23, 1834, Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.—died March 24, 1921, Baltimore) was an American prelate who, as archbishop of Baltimore from 1877 to 1921, served as a bridge between Roman Catholicism and American Catholic values.

    • Timothy Walch
  6. The second American cardinal, Gibbons was for many the public face of Catholicism during his long tenure in Baltimore, the place of his birth. His impact on the Church in America was enormous. Among the events in which he played a prominent part were the Americanist controversy , the founding of Catholic University of America , and the ...

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  8. Overview. James Cardinal Gibbons. (1834—1921) Quick Reference. (1834–1921), Catholic prelate. Born in Baltimore, Maryland, and raised in Ireland, Gibbons studied at St. Mary's Seminary in Baltimore, where he was ordained a priest in 1861. Named vicar apostolic ... From: Gibbons, James Cardinal in The Oxford Companion to United States History »