Boston College. Office of the President.

Dates:
Active 1918
Active 1975
Active 1864
Active 1891
Active 1937
Active 1975
Active 1868
Active 1930
Active 1915
Active 1930
Active 1911
Active 1947
Active 1950
Active 1996
Active 1898
Active 1929
Active 1909
Active 1993
Active 1929
Active 1970
Active 1914
Active 1979
Active 1953
Active 1975
Active 1866
Active 1895
Active 1898
Active 1900
Active 1922
Active 1982
Active 1813
Active 1981
Active 1920
Active 1945
Active 1921
Active 1971
Active 1851
Active 1982
German, French, Latin, English

History notes:

The Office of the President was established at the founding of Boston College in 1863. Rev. Edward I. Devitt, SJ, served as president from 1891 to 1894.

From the description of Edward I. Devitt President's Office Records, 1864-1891. (Boston College). WorldCat record id: 37830431

Boston College office.

The Office of the President was established at the founding of Boston College in 1863.

William L. Keleher, Jesuit and Boston College president.

Keleher was born in Woburn, Massachusetts (1906), attended Boston College High School, graduated from Holy Cross College (1926), and entered the Jesuit Order at Shadowbrook (1926). He taught at the College of the Holy Cross (1932) and received an MA in Chemisty (1933). Keleher completed his theological training at Weston and was ordained (1937). He then served as assistant to the Provincial of the New England Province of Jesuits and as master of novices for the novitiate at Shadowbrook before becoming president of Boston College (1945). Keleher presided over significant growth and expansion at Boston College, including accommodation of veterans returning from World War II, launch of a $1 million capital fund campaign (1946), new construction, founding of the School of Nursing (1947), and the groundwork for founding the School of Education, which opened soon after he left office. Also during Keleher's tenure at Boston College was the Boston Heresy Case, which involved then-Jesuit priest Leonard Feeney. Following his presidency at Boston College, Keleher serving as a professor, administrator, and trustee at Holy Cross. Keleher died 1975.

From the description of William L. Keleher, SJ, President's Office records, 1937-1975, (bulk 1945-1951). (Boston College). WorldCat record id: 37830481

Boston College office.

The Office of the President was established at the founding of Boston College in 1863.

Thomas I. Gasson, Jesuit, professor, and Boston College president.

Gasson was born in Kent, England (1859) and attended Saint Stephen's Anglican School in London (1868). He went to the United States at age 14 and lived in Philadelphia. The nuns of the Convent of the Sacred Heart instructed him in the Catholic faith. Gasson was baptized a Roman Catholic (1874), and the following year he entered the Jesuit Order. He studied at Woodstock College and the University of Innsbruck and was ordained (1891). He was assigned to the faculty of Boston College (1895) and appointed Boston College president (1907). As president of Boston College, he dealt with overcrowding on the Boston College campus in the South End by purchasing property in Chestnut Hill and moving the university to the newly-constructed facilities there (1913). After serving as Boston College president, Gasson was appointed dean of the Graduate School and professor of philosophy and economics at Georgetown University; he was later assigned to Loyola College, Montreal, Quebec, where he taught philosophy, economics, and theology. Gasson died in Montreal (1930). His body was returned to Boston for a funeral Mass in Immaculate Conception Church on Harrison Avenue, the former site of Boston College.

From the description of Thomas I. Gasson President's Office records, 1868-1930, (bulk 1907-1914). (Boston College). WorldCat record id: 37830446

The Office of the President was established at the founding of Boston College in 1863. Rev. William Devlin, SJ, served as president from 1919 to 1925.

From the description of William Devlin President's Office records, 1915-1930, (bulk 1919-1925). (Boston College). WorldCat record id: 37830458

The Office of the President was established at the founding of Boston College in 1863. Rev. William J. Murphy, SJ, served as president from 1939 to 1945.

From the description of William J. Murphy President's Office records, 1911-1947, (bulk 1939-1945). (Boston College). WorldCat record id: 37830477

The Office of the President was established at the founding of Boston College in 1863. Rev. J. Donald Monan, SJ, served as president from 1972 to 1996.

From the description of J. Donald Monan President's Office Records, 1950-1996, (bulk 1972-1996). (Boston College). WorldCat record id: 37868119

The Office of the President was established at the founding of Boston College in 1863. Rev. Timothy Brosnahan, SJ, served as president from 1894 to 1898.

From the description of Timothy Brosnahan President's Office Records, 1898-1929, (bulk 1898-1900). (Boston College). WorldCat record id: 37830437

Boston College office.

The Office of the President was established at the founding of Boston College in 1863.

James H. Dolan, Jesuit, professor, and Boston College president.

Dolan graduated from Boston College High School and attended Boston College before entering the Society of Jesus in (1905). He studied at Woodstock College, taught at Georgetown University, returned to Woodstock to study Theology (1917), and lectured at Holy Cross College (1922-1925). From 1925 to 1932, Dolan served as Boston College president. Dolan's tenure included significant physical and academic development for Boston College: construction of Bapst Library and addition to St. Mary's Hall; the Boston College "Graduate School" was officially open to both male and female students for afternoon and evening classes; the Law School was inagurated; and an Extension School of the Law School was established. After serving as president of Boston College, Dolan earned his doctorate in Theology from the Gregorian University in Rome, was appointed the Socius to the Provincial of the New England Province (1932-1937) and the Province Prefect of Studies (1932-1935). He became New England Province Provincial (1937) and, later, Fairfield University president (1944-1951). Dolan returned to Boston College as a professor of Philosophy. Dolan died in 1977.

From the description of James H. Dolan, SJ, President's Office records, 1909-1993, (bulk 1925-1932). (Boston College). WorldCat record id: 37830462

The Office of the President was established at the founding of Boston College in 1863. Rev. Joseph R.N. Maxwell, SJ, served as president from 1951 to 1958.

From the description of Joseph R.N. Maxwell President's Office Records, 1929-1970, (bulk 1951-1958). (Boston College). WorldCat record id: 37830484

The Office of the President was established at the founding of Boston College in 1863. Rev. Charles W. Lyons, SJ, served as president from 1914 to 1919.

From the description of Charles W. Lyons President's Office Records, 1914-1979, (bulk 1914-1919). (Boston College). WorldCat record id: 37830453

The Office of the President was established at the founding of Boston College in 1863. Rev. W. Seavey Joyce, SJ, served as president from 1968 to 1972.

From the description of W. Seavey Joyce President's Office Records, 1953-1975, (bulk 1968-1972). (Boston College). WorldCat record id: 37868118

Boston College office.

The Office of the President was established at the founding of Boston College in 1863.

Robert Fulton, Jesuit and president of Boston College.

Fulton was born in Virginia in 1826 and entered the Jesuit novitiate in Frederick, Maryland in 1843. He was ordained in 1857 and first came to Boston 1861. Fulton settled in Boston in 1863. He began as an instructor at Boston College in 1864, served as first prefect, and became the third and eighth president of Boston College (1870-1880 and 1888-1891). Fulton died in 1895.

From the description of Robert J. Fulton, SJ, President's Office papers, 1866-1895, undated. (Boston College). WorldCat record id: 37830424

Boston College office.

The Office of the President was established at the founding of Boston College in 1863.

W.G. Read Mullan, Jesuit and president of Boston College.

Mullan was born in 1860 in Baltimore, Maryland. He entered Loyola College (1874) and the Jesuit Novitiate at Frederick, Maryland (1877), began his training in theology at Woodstock (1888), and was ordained to the priesthood (1890). He served as Prefect of Studies at Fordham University, Superior of the Woodstock Scholastics, and professor at the College of the Holy Cross before his appointment as president of Boston College (1898-1903). At Boston College, Mullan was involved in the educational controversy concerning the exclusion of Boston College from approved institutions for admission to Harvard Univeristy Law School and remarks from Charles W. Eliot disparaging Jesuit institutions. After his presidency at Boston College, Mullan was Prefect of Fordham Univeristy, Georgetown Univeristy, and Loyola College. Mullan died in 1910.

From the description of W.G. Read Mullan, SJ, President's Office records, 1898-1900. (Boston College). WorldCat record id: 37830440

The Office of the President was established at the founding of Boston College in 1863. Rev. William James McGarry, SJ, served as president from 1937 to 1939.

From the description of William James McGarry President's Office Records, 1922-1982, (bulk 1937-1939). (Boston College). WorldCat record id: 37830474

Boston College office.

The Office of the President was established at the founding of Boston College in 1863.

John McElroy, Jesuit, missionary, chaplain, and Boston College founder.

McElroy was born in 1782 in Northern Ireland. His education was rudimentary. McElroy went to the United States on a ship bound for Baltimore, Maryland (1803), entered the Society of Jesus at Georgetown College (1806), and was ordained (1817). McElroy was appointed pastor of Trinity Church, Georgetown, where he was involved with the missionary work of his parish, development of local Catholic education, and spiritual retreats. President Polk selected McElroy as one of the first Catholic priests to be a chaplain for the United States Army (1845). McElroy was transferred to Boston (1847) and worked to establish a Jesuit school there. Boston College was incorporated (1863). McElroy served as the first vice-president and was instrumental in the building of the Church of the Immaculate Conception, the College's first chapel. Following his tenure in Boston, McElroy retired to Maryland, where he continued to serve as a priest. He died in 1877.

From the description of John McElroy, SJ, collection, 1813-1981, (bulk 1813-1878). (Boston College). WorldCat record id: 37830415

The Office of the President was established at the founding of Boston College in 1863. Rev. Louis J. Gallagher, SJ, served as president from 1932 to 1937.

From the description of Louis J. Gallagher President's Office records, 1920-1945, (bulk 1932-1937). (Boston College). WorldCat record id: 37830468

The Office of the President was established at the founding of Boston College in 1863. Rev. Michael P. Walsh, SJ, served as president from 1958 to 1968.

From the description of Michael P. Walsh President's Office Records, 1921-1971, (bulk 1958-1968). (Boston College). WorldCat record id: 37868109

Boston College office.

The Office of the President was established at the founding of Boston College in 1863.

John Bapst, Jesuit, missionary, and Boston College president.

Bapst , born in Switzerland (1816), attended the Jesuit College of Fribourg, entered the Jesuit order (1835), and was ordained (1846). Bapst was assigned to the missions in Maine, where he ministered to the native Penobscot population and Canadian and Irish immigrants. He was met with scorn and violence at the hands of anti-Catholic persecutors, including being tarred and feathered. In 1859, Bapst became the first rector of the then-Scholasticate Boston College. He was elected the first official president of Boston College (1863), established the foundation of Boston College, and oversaw its doors open (1864). Bapst served as president until his retirement (1869). He died in November of 1887.

From the description of John Bapst, SJ, collection, 1851-1982, bulk 1851-1887. (Boston College). WorldCat record id: 37830420

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Subjects:

  • Affirmative action programs
  • Campus planning
  • Catholic universities and colleges
  • Chaplains, Military
  • College buildings
  • College presidents
  • Excavations (Archaeology)
  • Fourth of July orations
  • Law schools
  • Mexican War, 1846-1848
  • Missionaries
  • Penobscot Indians
  • Penobscot Indians
  • Public schools
  • Salvation outside of the Catholic Church
  • Salvation outside the Catholic Church
  • School integration
  • World War, 1914-1918
  • World War, 1939-1945
  • Penobscot Indians

Occupations:

not available for this record

Places:

  • Maine (as recorded)
  • Massachusetts (as recorded)
  • Ellsworth (Me.) (as recorded)
  • Massachusetts--Boston (as recorded)
  • Lebanon (as recorded)
  • Ksar Akil Rockshelter (Lebanon) (as recorded)
  • Chestnut Hill (Mass.) (as recorded)
  • Bangor (Me.) (as recorded)
  • Lebanon--Ksar Akil Site (as recorded)