We will do what no other newspaper published by Colored men has ever dared to do—give the great Catholic Church a hearing and show that she is worthy of at least a fair consideration at the hands of our race, being, as she is the only one on this Continent, where rich and poor, white and black, must drop prejudice at the threshold and go hand in hand to the altar. We will also continue to fight for the eternal principles of liberty, justice and equality before the laws. The publishers will endeavor to make the AMERICAN CATHOLIC TRIBUNE national in its character and fearless in advocating the policy adopted.
During its eleven years, the Tribune covered news of interest to African-Americans in general, and African-American Catholics in particular. Rudd was also a driving force behind the five Black Catholic Congresses held between 1889 and 1894. By 1897, however, poor circulation and financial trouble forced the paper to fold. But Rudd continued to work for racial justice in the deep South until his death on this day in 1933 at age seventy-nine.
There’s never been a newspaper quite like The American Catholic Tribune, an independent Catholic newspaper published between 1886 and 1897. What made it unique was that it was a paper published for African-American Catholics, by African-American Catholics. The driving force behind the paper was a Daniel A. Rudd (1854-1933), a former slave from Bardstown, a heavily Catholic community in Kentucky. As a young man, Rudd moved to Ohio, where he started the paper. He stated his goal in the paper’s first issue: