Don Wesley - Knights of Columbus Insurance

Don Wesley - Knights of Columbus Insurance Official Knights of Columbus Insurance Agent Servicing Southeastern Michigan. Thanks for joining us on Facebook! Wesley at 888-393-7539.

For over 140 years, the primary mission of Knights of
Columbus has been to provide financial security to our members and their families. With over 2 Million Members in 16,200 councils, Knights of Columbus is the world’s
largest Catholic family service organization, donating $1.55 billion and 691 million volunteer
hours to charitable projects over the past decade. Offering top-quality life insuranc

e, long
term care insurance, disability income insurance, and annuity products, we are your shield for
life. To learn more opportunities in the Macomb, Southern St. Clair, Eastern Oakland County areas, please contact Field Agent Don M.

05/28/2026
05/26/2026

Life insurance is about more than preparing for the future. It’s about protecting the people you love most. Life insurance helps provide stability and security for your family so they can move forward with confidence, even in the most difficult moments. If you want to talk with someone about protecting your family’s future, contact me today.

On Memorial Day, we pause to remember those who gave their lives in service to our country, and to honor the sacrifice t...
05/25/2026

On Memorial Day, we pause to remember those who gave their lives in service to our country, and to honor the sacrifice that makes our freedom possible.

We also remember the many members of the Knights of Columbus who have served with courage and faith, answering the call to defend both God and country. Their legacy lives on in those who continue to serve, protect, and lead with integrity.

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05/24/2026

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He collapsed at 38, certain he'd accomplished nothing. Two million people today owe him their lives.
Father Michael McGivney couldn't stop thinking about the widow who'd come to his door that morning. Her husband—dead in a factory accident. Three children. No money. Nowhere to go.
This was 1882 New Haven, Connecticut. If you were Irish Catholic in America, you were invisible at best, despised at worst. "No Irish Need Apply" hung in shop windows like a dare.
The jobs you could get were the ones that killed you. Factories. Construction sites. Twelve-hour shifts for pennies. And when—not if—you died on the job? Your family had nothing.
No insurance company would touch Catholic immigrants. No government programs existed. Your widow and children went to the poorhouse. Or they starved.
Michael was 29 years old, and he was watching it happen every single week.
"That's just how it is for poor people," the older priests told him.
Michael refused to accept that.
Late one night, exhausted after another funeral, he had an idea so obvious he couldn't believe no one had tried it: What if working men pooled their money? When one died, the others would catch his family.
Not charity. Brotherhood.
He started meeting with men in church basements. Factory workers with calloused hands. Immigrants who barely spoke English. Men who understood what it meant to lose everything in one day.
"You fall, we catch your family," Michael told them. "I fall, you catch mine."
They called themselves the Knights of Columbus. The name was deliberate—Columbus was Catholic. They belonged in America too.
Word spread through immigrant neighborhoods like wildfire. Here was dignity. Here was a way to make sure your children didn't end up on the street.
Michael threw every ounce of himself into it. He was already working eighteen-hour days—morning Mass, visiting the sick, hearing confessions past midnight. Now he added this: recruiting members, organizing chapters, traveling to spread the vision.
His friends begged him to slow down. He looked skeletal. Exhausted.
"There's no time," he'd say. "Families are suffering now."
The Knights grew. When members died, their families received money to keep their homes. Children stayed fed. Widows didn't have to beg. It worked.
But Michael's body was giving out. By 1890, he could barely stand. He had a terrible cough that wouldn't go away.
Then pneumonia swept through New Haven. Michael went to the dying anyway. Gave last rites. Held their hands. Breathed their infected air.
He caught it.
On August 14, 1890—two days after his 38th birthday—Father Michael McGivney died. Completely used up. Burned out.
When he died, the Knights of Columbus had about 6,000 members. A good start. Nothing more.
He died thinking he'd helped a few families in Connecticut. Made a small dent in one corner of the world.
He had absolutely no idea what he'd actually done.
Today, the Knights of Columbus has over 2 million members across the globe. They've donated billions to charity. They provide life insurance to millions of Catholic families. They run humanitarian programs in dozens of countries. They've built hospitals, funded disaster relief, supported refugees.
Every single dollar traces back to that exhausted 38-year-old priest who died thinking he'd barely made a difference.
In 2020—130 years after his death—Pope Francis declared him Blessed Michael McGivney, one step away from sainthood.
But here's what devastates me about his story:
He never saw it. Never got the validation. Never received the applause. Never knew his life's work would echo across centuries and touch millions of lives.
He just kept going until his body gave out, trusting that somehow—somehow—helping one family at a time mattered.
Most of us need proof. We want to see our impact. We want results, recognition, evidence that our work means something.
Michael McGivney got none of that. He worked himself to death for people he'd never meet, building something he'd never see completed.
And maybe that's the most profound kind of legacy there is.
The kind that doesn't demand anything in return. Just faith that somewhere down the line, long after you're gone—it mattered.
You mattered.
Even if you never know.

05/19/2026

Trust is everything when families are facing difficult moments. The strength of the Knights of Columbus brand and mission has given families peace of mind for generations. That trust, rooted in faith and service, continues to guide the work Knights do every day. If you’re looking for support from someone who understands what matters most, contact me today.

05/12/2026

It’s easy to put off planning for the future, but life can change in an instant. As Craig Pfeifer explains, having a conversation now can make all the difference later. Knights of Columbus agents help Catholic families better understand their options, including the added value and benefits that come with protecting what matters most. Contact me today to learn more.

Sending warm wishes to all the moms and those who mother us on this Mother's Day. Thank you for your love, dedication an...
05/10/2026

Sending warm wishes to all the moms and those who mother us on this Mother's Day. Thank you for your love, dedication and nurturing.

05/05/2026

No family’s needs are exactly the same, which is why no single solution fits everyone. At the Knights of Columbus, agents help Catholic families understand the different types of life insurance and long-term planning options available so they can choose what makes the most sense for their lives. Contact me today to learn more.

Address

2 Crocker Boulevard, Suite 301
Mount Clemens, MI
48043

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 4pm

Telephone

+18883937539

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