McGarry, William James, 1894-1941
William J. McGarry, SJ, was the eighteenth president of Boston College, leading the College from 1937 to 1939. McGarry was born in Hamilton, Massachusetts, on March 14, 1894, and began his association with Boston College as a pupil of Boston College High School. Upon graduation in 1911, he entered the Society of Jesus. As a student, he focused on biblical scholarship at Fordham University and later earned his degree as a Doctor of Sacred Theology from Woodstock College. After being ordained in 1925, McGarry attended the Pontifical Biblical Institute in Rome from 1928 to 1930 to earn his degree as Licentiate in Sacred Scriptures with Honors. Prior to his appointment as Boston College president, McGarry was the assistant editor of Thought starting in 1934 and taught at Boston College’s Graduate School during the 1936-1937 academic year. He was also dean at Weston College and taught sacred scriptures and dogmatic theology there from 1930 to 1937.
Although a brief two years, McGarry’s presidency included significant accomplishments for Boston College. McGarry founded the College of Business Administration. Also under McGarry’s administration, the Boston College community celebrated the seventy-fifth anniversary of its foundation with a week of symposiums, debates, plays, and a Papal Benediction from Rome. The school also published a pictorial history of the College and held an ode-writing contest.
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2023-02-09 02:02:15 pm |
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2016-08-15 01:08:46 am |
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