Rank |
Color |
Supreme Master |
Dark Blue Cape and
Chapeau |
Vice Supreme Master |
Light Blue Cape and
Chapeau |
Master |
Gold Cape and Chapeau |
District Marshall |
Green Cape and Chapeau |
Faithful Navigator |
White Cape and Chapeau |
Assembly Commander |
Purple Cape and Chapeau |
Color Corps Members |
Red Cape and White
Chapeau |
The Fourth Degree is the highest
degree of the order. Members of
this degree are addressed as
"Sir Knight". The primary
purpose of the Fourth Degree is
to foster the spirit of
patriotism and to encourage
active Catholic citizenship.
Fewer than 18% of Knights join
the Fourth Degree, which is
optional; of a total 1,703,307
Knights there were 292,289
Fourth Degree Knights. A Knight
is eligible to join the Fourth
Degree after six months from the
date of his First Degree,
providing he has completed the
2nd and 3rd degrees beforehand.
Assemblies are distinct from
councils and are led by a
separate set of elected
officers. The Supreme Board of
Directors appoints a Supreme
Master, currently Lawrence G.
Costanzo, and twenty Vice
Supreme Masters to govern the
Fourth Degree. Each Vice Supreme
Master oversees a Province which
is then broken up into
Districts. The Supreme Master
appoints District Masters to
supervise several assemblies.
Each assembly is led by a
Navigator. Other elected
assembly officers include the
Captain, Admiral, Pilot, Scribe,
Purser, Comptroller, Sentinels
and Trustees. A Friar and Color
Corps Commander are appointed by
the Navigator. Assembly officers
are properly addressed by using
the title "faithful" (e.g.
Faithful Navigator). Assemblies
are numbered in the order in
which they chartered into the
Order and are named by the local
membership.
Only Fourth Degree Knights may
optionally purchase the full
regalia and may join the
Assembly’s Color Corps. The
Color Corps is the most visible
arm of the Knights as they are
often seen in parades and other
local events wearing their
colorful regalia. Official dress
for the Color Corps is a black
tuxedo, baldric, white gloves,
cape and naval chapeau. In warm
climates and during warm months
a white dinner jacket may be
worn, if done as a unit Baldrics
are worn from the right shoulder
to left hip and are color
specific by nation. In the
United States, Panama and the
Philippines, baldrics are red,
white and blue. Red and white
baldrics are used in Canada;
red, white and green in Mexico;
and blue and white in Guatemala.
Service baldrics include a
scabbard for a sword and are
worn over the coat while social
baldrics are worn under the
coat. The colors on a Fourth
Degree Knight's cape, and
chapeau, denote the office he
holds within the Degree.
Faithful Navigators and Past
Faithful Navigators are
permitted to carry a white
handled silver sword. Masters
and Vice Supreme Masters, as
well as Former Masters and
Former Vice Supreme Masters, are
also denoted by their gold
swords.
The need for a patriotic degree
was first considered in 1886 and
a special plea was made at the
National Meeting of 1899. The
first Fourth Degree
exemplification followed in 1900
with 1,100 Knights participating
at the Lenox Lyceum in New York
City. Today there are more than
2,500 Assemblies. |