Knights Getting New Uniform After 79 Years
TORONTO
(CNS)
--
A
long-standing
tradition
will
end
this
summer
as
the
Knights
of
Columbus
discard
the
ceremonial
capes and plumed chapeaus of its fourth-degree members.
July
1
will
mark
the
end
of
a
79-year
era
when
the
Knights
change
the
ceremonial
Color
Corps
regalia
long
associated
with
the
fraternal
Catholic
order.
The
Color
Corps,
which
acts
as
an
honor
guard
at
religious
and
civic
functions,
is
distinguishable
by
its
official
regalia
of
tuxedo,
cape,
chapeau, white gloves and sword.
The
preferred
dress
for
fourth-degree
members
worldwide
will
no
longer
include
the
cape
and
chapeau.
The
new
uniform
will
be
a
jacket
and
beret.
The
ceremonial
swords
will continue to be part of the uniform.
It's
all
part
of
the
Knights'
efforts
to
attract
new
members,
particularly
younger
men,
said
Dan
Heffernan,
Ontario
state deputy for the organization.
The
Knights
have
undertaken
extensive
research
in
how
to
attract
new
members
and
have
heard
one
constant
from
men as to why they won't join the order.
"If
I
had
to
wear
that
regalia,
I
wouldn't
join
the
Knights,"
is the refrain Heffernan said he has heard often.
It
was
a
major
point
raised
in
a
roundtable
in
March
at
the
Archdiocese
of
Toronto
chancery
when
the
Knights
gathered
a
group
of
men
to
discuss
their
impressions
of
the
organization.
Several
men
noted
the
cape
and
chapeau
as
drawbacks.
Heffernan
said
some
misconceptions
exist
about
the
uniform.
Many
believe
all
Knights
must
wear
the
regalia,
but
it's
only
for
fourth
degree
members,
"and
even
then
you
don't
have
to
wear
the
regalia,"
he
said.
"You
could
become
a
member,
be
a
fourth
degree
and
never
buy
a
uniform.
...
You're just not part of the color guard."
The
uniform
of
the
fourth
degree
has
undergone
several
changes
since
it
was
adopted
in
1900.
But
it
has
remained
relatively
the
same
since
1940,
consisting
of
a
plumed
chapeau,
a
tuxedo,
a
cape
and
a
ceremonial
sword.
The
modernized
version
will
be
a
blue
blazer
with
the
fourth-
degree
emblem,
dark
gray
slacks,
a
blue
tie
and
a
black
beret.
In
2017,
the
international
Knights'
board
of
directors
unanimously
voted
to
adopt
a
new
uniform
for
the
fourth
degree.
The
new
look
debuted
at
the
135th
Supreme
Convention
in
St.
Louis
that
year.
The
vote
came
after
three
years
of
testing
and
discussion
within
the
membership.
Board
members
believe
it
will
open
the
doors
to
a
new
generation of Knights.
The
move
has
been
met
with
significant
resistance,
much
of
it
from
Canada,
Heffernan
said.
That
included
an
online
petition
that
garnered
almost
10,000
signatures
"to
reconsider
the
consequence
of
this
proposed
change
and
keep
the
existing
regalia
of
the
Fourth
Degree
Assemblies
that
the
Knights
and
the
rest
of
the
world
has
come
to
recognize and love."
Heffernan
understands
and
sympathizes
with
those
seeking
to keep tradition alive.
"You're
always
going
to
have
the
diehards
who
are
going
to
wear
the
old
regalia,"
he
said.
"If
I
was
80
years
old,
I'm
not going to go out and buy a new uniform."
The
Knights
have
recognized
this,
and
the
old
regalia
has
not
been
outlawed.
Members
pushed
for
a
grandfather
clause
to
allow
Knights,
particularly
older
members,
to
continue to wear the old regalia and it was granted, he said.
While
there
has
been
resistance,
there
has
also
been
significant
buy-in,
Heffernan
said.
Overall,
Knights
numbers
are
stable,
even
growing
worldwide,
with
almost
2
million members across the globe.
"It's
not
holding
people
back
from
becoming
fourth-degree
members," Heffernan said.
There
are
55,000
Knights
in
Ontario,
with
3,400
being
fourth
degree.
Heffernan
said
the
mandate
is
to
bring
in
2,000
new
members
this
fiscal
year,
which
ends
June
30,
and
they
are
just
shy
of
attaining
that
number.
That
will
keep
the
membership
stable
because
up
to
1,500
members
die each year, he said, and others leave for various reasons.
That
stability
is
reflected
in
demand
for
the
new
regalia.
Heffernan
said
their
supplier
is
having
difficulty
keeping
up
with
orders
and
there
is
a
long
waiting
period
before
a
member can get the new uniform.
"Even
as
it
is
right
now,"
he
explained,
"the
supplier
is
making
the
uniforms
as
fast
as
they
can,
but
if
you
were
to
order
one
now
it
would
probably
be
the
fall
before
you
could get one.
A member of the Knights of Columbus is shown sporting the Knights new uniform.
(CNS photo/Knights of Columbus)
Mickey Conlon -
Catholic News Service
May 29, 2019