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James Fitton (priest)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

James Fitton.

James Fitton (10 April 1805 in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A. – 15 September 1881 in Boston) was an American Catholic priest and missionary, active in New England.

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Transcription

Carolina barbecue is a really kind of ancient primal way of preparing food where you essentially are taking a whole animal and you are cooking it very slowly over a wood fire. The recipe couldn't not be more simple. It is pig plus wood fire plus time and a little salt. It's as close as we get to that primal scene of our proto human ancestors two million years ago roasting the big animal over a fire which is a wonderfully communal event because it requires a lot of cooperation, somebody's got to stay up with the fire and not let it go out. Someone has to prepare the animal to be cooked. Someone has to carve it and divide up the portions. And pitmasters today stand in for the, you know, this lineage that goes back probably a couple million years and passes along the way through the priests and Greek culture who oversaw the rights, the ritual sacrifice or the Rabis in the old testament who also did ritual sacrifice. There was for a very long time the priests, the butchers and the cooks were the same person. That was a very prestigious job. There were a lot of rules that went with it because it was so momentous. I mean meat was very special, it was sacred. And you had to deal with the Gods and we started by actually burning meat to a crisp as an offering to the Gods. And then somebody figured out, you know, they don't really eat meat probably. They really just want the smoke. And so we gave them the smoke and that was the way, you know, how else do you get it up to heaven. And then we got to eat the meat. And -- but we continued to have that religious overlay. And the word in Greek for priest and butcher and cook is the same, mageiros. And the word magic is buried in that word, the origins for the word magic because it was magic. It was transformation of this carcass, dead animal into this food fit for the Gods. You know, one of the most striking things about modern life is that we eat meat without giving it a thought. We eat meat without realizing what is at stake. The fact that an animal has died, that an awful amount of effort is taken, there's the sacrifice of the animal, there's the effort of raising it or killing it if you're hunting it. And we eat it without ceremony. We have meat two, three times a day in this country without giving it a thought. It's just shrink wrapped protoplasm from the supermarket or the restaurant. But for most of history you realize eating meat was a profound almost sacramental occasion. People understood the sacrifice involved. They understood that an animal had died because they had probably participated in that process. And they also understood how precious this stuff was. It was delicious. It was nutritious. You didn't have it every day. You had to work really hard to get it. And so we surrounded meat eating with a great deal of ceremony and somberness and rules. You know the proper accompaniment for meat in world history if you look at it appears to be rules whether they're the kosher rules that you eat this meat and not that or you eat this part of this animal and not that part or you don't have meat with this or that. Halal rules also govern meat -- what can and cannot be eaten. But then you have the rules of barbecue. In some parts of the South barbecue is whole hog with just vinegar and salt and, you know, a little pepper. But you move to the other side of the same state and they have a ketchup based sauce and they cook pork shoulders. And then you move to South Carolina and they're barbecuing pork shoulders and they're using a mustard based sauce. And then you go to Tennessee and they're eating ribs. And you go to Texas and they're eating brisket. They're eating beef. Every one of those traditions has deep roots and every one of those traditions looks down on every other tradition. That's fine but it's not barbecue. So rulemaking seems to surround meat eating. And I think that that's a reflection of how much was at stake for people and how wonderful it was for people. And we have lost that. We eat meat in this incredibly thoughtless, cavalier way. We waste it. We don't give a thought to the animal. We don't give a thought to the person who raised it or hunted it. And I think in the process we've lost something. And that carelessness, it now infects the way we raise the meat. That we treat the animals really badly and we don't honor it the way we need to honor it.

Biography

His father, Abraham Fitton, went to Boston from Preston, England; his mother was of Welsh origin and a Catholic convert. His primary education was received in the schools of his native city, and his classical course was made at Claremont, New Hampshire, at an academy conducted by Virgil Horace Barber, a Catholic convert. He learned theology from Bishop of Boston, Benedict Joseph Fenwick, by whom he was ordained priest, 23 December 1827.[1]

In 1828, he was sent as a missionary to the Passamaquoddy people. He subsequently labored among the scattered Roman Catholics of New Hampshire and Vermont, and soon the territory between Boston and Long Island was placed under his charge, with Hartford, Connecticut, as the center of his district.[2] He travelled, often on foot, from Eastport and the New Brunswick line on the northeast, to Burlington and Lake Champlain on the northwest; from Boston in the east, to Great Barrington and the Berkshire Hills in the west; from Providence, Rhode Island and Newport, Rhode Island in the southeast, to Bridgeport and the New York State line in the southwest. During his missionary career, he was pastor of the first Catholic church at Hartford, and at Worcester, Massachusetts.[1] By 1836, he had stationed his headquarters in Worcester. This was also the same year that the Penobscot Indians began making annual visits to St. John’s Parish, camping on Vernon Hill before returning to Maine.[3]

He erected the Church of the Holy Name of Mary, Our Lady of the Isle at Newport. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Mary%27s_Church_(Newport,_Rhode_Island) In 1840, while pastor of the church at Worcester, he purchased the site of the College of the Holy Cross, and erected a building for the advanced education of Catholic young men. In 1842, he deeded the grounds and building to Bishop Fenwick, who placed it under the care of the Jesuits. In 1855 he was appointed by Bishop Fenwick pastor of the church of the Most Holy Redeemer in East Boston. Here he worked for the remaining twenty-six years of his life, and built four more churches.[1] He was instrumental in establishing the first Roman Catholic newspaper in the United States.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b c  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "James Fitton". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  2. ^ a b One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainWilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1900). "Fitton, James" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
  3. ^ [1], "To Preserve The Flame" (1984). Copyright St. John's Church, Temple Street
This page was last edited on 24 January 2024, at 04:54
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