Constellation Similarity Assertions

Connolly, Terence L. (Terence Leo), 1888-1961

Terence Leo Connolly was born on September 26, 1888 in North Attleboro, Massachusetts to Terence and Catherine (Hayden) Connolly. He received his early education at Grove Street Grammar School in Providence, Rhode Island, before attending Pawtucket High School in Pawtucket, Rhode Island. In 1908, Connolly entered the Jesuit Novitiate of St. Andrew-on-the-Hudson in New York, where he studied for four years. Connolly was ordained in 1922, having studied and taught at Woodstock College, Maryland, Fordham University, New York, and Georgetown University, Washington, DC. That same year, he earned a BA from Woodstock College, and went on to earn an MA from the same institution in 1924. In 1930, Connolly graduated with a PhD from Fordham University.

In 1929, Connolly became a professor of English and head of the English Department at Boston College in Massachusetts. Connolly had an interest in Catholic poetry, particularly the works of Francis Thompson, about whom he wrote Francis Thompson: In His Paths, published in 1944. He traveled extensively in England and Ireland. In 1946, Connolly became director of the Boston College libraries, and remained in the role until he was named director of special collections in 1959. Connolly died on March 24, 1961.

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Connolly, Vera L., 1888-1964.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w68p779s (person)

Vera Leona Connolly was a journalist and editor for many of America's popular magazines, particularly woman's journals such as "Good Housekeeping", "The Woman's Home Companion", and "Woman's Day", from the 1920s through the 1950s. Describing herself as a "crusading journalist--a stirrer-upper," Connolly wrote articles that publicized and criticized social problems in the United States, including juvenile delinquency, lax adoption regulations, ineffective narcotics law, sweatshops, a...

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