July 8 - An anti-Catholic riot in Bath, Maine, destroys a church used by Irish Catholics.
It was destroyed in 1844, when the church was burned during Philadelphia's anti-Catholic riots.
Violence had broken out, and there had been anti-Catholic riots in Belfast.
In the 1930s he was a champion of Catholic rights especially after the anti-Catholic riots of 1935.
When this was burnt down in anti-Catholic riots in 1688, Mass continued to be offered in various improvised chapels until 1862.
An example of how poorly law enforcement agencies worked together was in May, 1844 when an anti-Catholic riot erupted in Kensington.
Members of the group were active in anti-Catholic riots in 1935, and later in the year, some members gained seats in local elections.
But the anti-Catholic riots continued, keeping unrest at a fever pitch.
In August 1855, Spalding faced an anti-Catholic riot, known as Bloody Monday.
Two years after the church was consecrated, in 1863, St Pancras was the target of an anti-Catholic riot.