| A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | |
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1 | Last name | First name | Biography | Date of birth | Date of death | Entry date | Province membership | ||||||||||||||
2 | Aiken | John | from Tennessee; converted from Protestantism; St. Mary's Church, Alexandria, 1846-1850; Holy Trinity Church, Georgetown, 1850-1861 | 1814 | 1861 | 1837 | |||||||||||||||
3 | Anderledy | Anton | Elected Vicar General, 1883; took over Beckx's duties, 1884; elected Superior General, 1888, and served until his death in 1892 | 1819 | 1892 | 1838 | |||||||||||||||
4 | Anschwanden | Joseph | 1813 | 1834 | |||||||||||||||||
5 | Ardia | Joseph | arrived in US following Revolutions of 1848; professed, 1853; taught logic and metaphysics at Georgetown, Loyola in Baltimore and the scholasticate in Boston; superior and assistant at St. Joseph's Church, Philadelphia; | 1816 | 1906 | 1835 | |||||||||||||||
6 | Ashby | James | born in Lancashire, October 1714; educated St. Omers, 1732-1733; entered, 1739; Superior, Maryland mission, 1757- ; professed; served in Maryland c. 1741-1767; died at Newtown, 23 September 1767 Went by alias of J. Middlehurst | 1714 | 1767 | 1739 | British | ||||||||||||||
7 | Ashton | John | Born in Ireland, 1742; entered 1759; arrived in Maryland, 1767; served at White Marsh for 39 years; after formation of Corporation of Roman Catholic Clergymen, named Procurator General, 1783- ; financial agent, Georgetown College; did not re-join SJ after suppression ended; died at St. Thomas Manor, 1815. | 1742 | 1815 | 1759 | British | ||||||||||||||
8 | Attwood | Peter | From Worcestershire England. Educated at St. Omers. Entered September 1703. Served in Maryland from 1712 (Cecil and Charles Counties). Superior, Maryland mission, 1713-1714, 1733-1734; Became superior of Bohemia. Death on Christmas Day, 1734. From "Newtown Manor and Church" WL 13 (1884) 278: "In 1732," writes Mr. Johnston, 'in his History of Cecil County, "Peter Atwood, who was then said to be of St. Mary's County, purchased another tract: of land called 'Askmore,' from Vachel Denton. This tract was supposed to contain 550 acres, and had been granted to John Browning and Henry Denton in 1668. Denton claimed it by right of survivorship, and from him it descended to his son Vachel Denton, who, as before stated, sold it to Atwood." | 1682 | 1734 | 1703 | English Province | ||||||||||||||
9 | Bague | Charles | Born in Berne, Switzerland; exile from the Revolutions of 1848; taught at St. John's Frederick; Superior, White Marsh, where he visited Laurel, 1859- ; assistant pastor at White Marsh; assistant pastor, St. Joseph's Capitol Hill, 1874- ; died at Washington, 1877 | 1805 | 1877 | 1830 | |||||||||||||||
10 | Bally | Augustine | born 8 March 1806; entered 2 December 1830; fully professed, 13 November 1841; stationed at Goshenhoppen, 1851 | 1806 | 1830 | ||||||||||||||||
11 | Bapst | John | ordained 1846 and left Switzerland two years later; arrived in New York in 1848; assigned as missionary to Penobscot, Maine; moved to Eastport, ME, 1850; Bangor, Maine, where he built its first Catholic Church,1856-1859; Holy Cross College, 1859; Boston College, where he served as rector at the house of higher studies for scholastics, 1860; superior of all Jesuit houses in Canada (which included New York), 1869-1873; superior residence of Providence, 1879-1881; died at Woodstock, 1887 While in Maine, he founded several temperance societies in Maine and encountered the wrath of nativists. In 1854 they were outraged when he denounced public schools for forcing the Protestant Bible on Catholic children (Ellsworth, ME, which he served from Eastport). | 1815 | 1887 | 1835 | |||||||||||||||
12 | Barat | Louis | |||||||||||||||||||
13 | Barbelin | Felix | born Luneville, Alsace, 1808; entered Society of Jesus at White Marsh, 1/7/1831; stationed at Georgetown College where he taught French and assistant pastor, Holy Trinity; in 1837, assigned to St. Joseph's Church, Willings Alley, in Philadelphia; founder of St. Joseph's Hospital; first president of St. Joseph's College, 1852; died Philadelphia, 1869 | 1808 | 1869 | 1831 | Maryland mission | ||||||||||||||
14 | Barber | Samuel | Entered 3-10-1818; novitiate, White Marsh; studied in Rome, leaving in 1832-1835; stationed at Conewago, 1836-1837; studied in Rome, 1838-1839; returned to US and ordained, 1840; spiritual director and confessor of school boarders, Georgetown College, 1840-1844; stationed at Conewago, 1845; Rector, Frederick novitiate, 1846-1852; fully professed, 1851-06-08; Rector, Gonzaga College, Washington, 1851-1854-; teacher, Frederick novitiate, 1855- 1857; Superior, St. Thomas Manor, 1859-1861; died at St. Thomas Manor, 1864 | 1814 | 1864 | 1830 | |||||||||||||||
15 | Barber | Virgil | Born 9 March 1783; entered 2 June 1817; ordained 1822; never took final vows; pastor, died at Georgetown College, 1847 He passed his novitiate at Georgetown University, and subsequently spent time at missions in Claremont, New Hampshire, and Indian Old Town in Maine. Barber also was active in Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Washington, DC. | 1783 | 1847 | 1817 | Maryland mission | ||||||||||||||
16 | Barnum | Francis | Rev. Francis A. Barnum, SJ was born in Baltimore in 1849. After having attended Loyola School in Baltimore and Georgetown College in Washington, DC, Fr. Barnum joined the Society of Jesus, although circumstances warranted his withdrawal from Frederick Novitiate soon thereafter. He rejoined the Society in 1880, after a period of time spent traveling throughout the world. After ordination, Fr. Barnum was sent to Alaska, where he spent the better part of the 1890s. While there, he accumulated knowledge of Innuit, a native Alaskan language (now known as Central Yup'ik). In 1901 he published a grammar of Innuit, entitled 'Grammatical Fundamentals of the Innuit Language as Spoken by the Eskimo of the Western Coast of Alaska' (Boston: Ginn & Co., Publishers, The Athenaeum Press). Fr. Barnum left Alaska in 1898, after which time he served as a chaplain on Ward's Island in New York Harbor, finally settling at Georgetown, where he was made archivist. Fr. Barnum died at Georgetown in 1921. | 1849 | 1921 | 1880 | Maryland-New York Province | ||||||||||||||
17 | Barrister | John | Vice-Rector, Washington College, 1851-1857; Frederick novitiate, -1858; professor of theology, Georgetown College, 1859; Loyola College, Baltimore, 1860; St. Mary's, Boston, 1861-1862; Conewago, stationed at Littlestown, 1863 | 1823 | 1843 | ||||||||||||||||
18 | Bauer | Mark | Born in Easton, PA;, 1912 BA and MA, St. Joseph's College, Philadelphia, 1933 and 1935 respectively; entered SJ 1935; novitiate St. Andrews-on-the-Hudson; studied at Woodstock Theological College, 1941-1945; ordained, 1944; Ph.D. Princeton University, Biology, 1950; final vows, 1951; returned to St. Joseph's College, 1950- ; associate professor, biology and research associate in physiology, Georgetown University, 1958-1963; vice-president, GU Medical Center, 1963-1968; returned to teaching at GU until his retirement in 1977; acting rector, Georgetown Jesuit community, January-August 1979 during tenure as vice-president of GUMC, oversaw expansion plans of medical and dental; received honorary degree in science from GU, 1974 | 1912 | 1986 | 1935 | Maryland-New York | ||||||||||||||
19 | Baxter | Roger | Born in England, 1782; studied at Stonyhurst; entered 1810; immigrated to US, c. 1817 and then ordained by Archbishop Neale 31 May 1817; professor of languages and literature, Georgetown College; Richmond, 1818-1819; prefect and professor of philosophy, Georgetown College, October 1819-1826; tertianship in France; died at St. Joseph's, Philadelphia, 1827 | 1782 | 1827 | 1810 | |||||||||||||||
20 | Beatty | Vincent | born in Brooklyn, NY, 1914; graduated Georgetown University, 1936; entered 1936; novitiate Wernersville, Pa; studied at Fordham University, Spring Hill College and Woodstock College; ordained in 1947; began teaching chemistry at Loyola College Baltimore in 1941; served as its president; member Georgetown Jesuit community, 1964-1979; director, Manresa-on-Severn Retreat House, Maryland ,1964-1966; rector, Georgetown Prep, 1966-1973; development executive, Georgetown University and Georgetown Prep 1954 on 4-member team to record solar eclipse at Faeroe Islands; received honorary doctorate of science from Georgetown, 1955; received John Carroll Award, 1978 | 1914 | 1979 | 1936 | Maryland-New York Province | ||||||||||||||
21 | Beckx | Peter | Elected Superior General, 1853 and stepped down because of infirmity, 1883 | 1795 | 1887 | 1820 | |||||||||||||||
22 | Beeston | Francis | Born in Lincolnshire, England, 1751; entered SJ at Ghent, 1771; after suppression, became Master at English Seminary in Liege; Emigrated to America, 1786; Bohemia Manor, 1790- ; assigned to St. Joseph's in Philadelphia; Rector of Cathedral, Baltimore, - 1809 Noted by Devitt in his history of the Province, Bohemia, as an excellent keeper of church records and diary. Devitt also notes his ministry among sufferers of yellow fever. | 1751 | 1809 | 1771 | outside US | ||||||||||||||
23 | Bellwalder | Ignatius | Born in Switzerland, 1814; entered at Brigg, Oct. 10th, 1833 and continued his studies there and at Fribourg; ordained in Fribourg, 1846 and made tertianship in Lucerne France. In 1867 arrived in Boston and remained their six months, when he was sent to Conewago, c. 1868-1870; stationed in Buffalo, c. 1870-1878; returned to Boston, 1878-1883, 1885-1888; died at Mount Hope Retreat, Baltimore, 1888. | 1814 | 1888 | 1833 | |||||||||||||||
24 | Berrigan | Daniel | Born May 9, 1921; entered 1939; novitiate St. Andrew-on-the Hudson; St. Peter's Preparatory School, Jersey City, 1946-1949; M.A., Woodstock Theological College, 1952; ordained 1952; founded Catholic Peace Fellowship, 1963; founded Clergy and Laymen Concerned about Vietnam, 1965; assistant director, Cornell University United Religious Work, 1966-1970; A leading anti-war activist, Berrigan is best known for his participation in the Catonsville Nine, for which he was imprisoned between 1969-1972; also organized the Plowshares Eight, which committed civil disobedience at nuclear power plant in King of Prussia, PA. Throughout his career, he taught at Union Theological Seminary, Loyola College New Orleans, Cornell, and Yale. His longest tenure was at Fordham, where he died April 30, 2016. | 1921 | 2016 | 1939 | Maryland-New York Province | ||||||||||||||
25 | Beschter | John William | Born in duchy of Luxemberg, Belgium; ordained in Europe; arrived in Maryland Province and entered SJ, 1807; Overseer, Lancaster, 1808-1811; Master of Novitiates, St. Inigoes, 1813; Master of Novitiates, Frederick, 1814-1815; Overseer, Conewago, 1816-1818; Overseer, St. Thomas, 1820; Overseer, St. Joan, Baltimore, 1821-1828; Consultor Province, 1826-1830; in residence Georgetown College, 1828-1830; president, Georgetown College, 1829; Superior, Paradise, 1830-1842; died in Paradise, PA, 1842 | 1763 | 1842 | 1807 | Maryland mission | ||||||||||||||
26 | Bitouzey | Barnaby | Born in Normandy; Newtown, 1794 -c. 1797; St. Thomas Manor, Charles Co., 1801; White Marsh, 1802; Regarded by Bishop Carroll as "a French priest of great intelligence and unalterable evenness of temper," able administrator esteemed by Catholic and Protestant neighbors at White Marsh. He conveyed land to the CRCC, as authorized by act of Maryland Assembly in 1808. Returned to Europe before 1815 Secular priest. Superintendent of White Marsh and managed it with success; objected to the use of White Marsh as novitiate; returned to France in 1815, after it accepted its exile. Seen spelled Bitonzey | non-Jesuit religious | |||||||||||||||||
27 | Bixio | Joseph | Born in Italy; Stationed at the residence and mission at St. Mary's Church, Alexandria, 1852-1854; died in Santa Clara, 1889 | 1819 | 1889 | 1838 | |||||||||||||||
28 | Blenkinsop | Peter | Teacher of Mathematics and grammar, 1839; teacher of math and grammar, Georgetown College, 1839; teacher of math and grammar, Frederick novitiate, 1840; teacher of math, French, and grammar, Georgetown College, 1841-1843; Prefect, Georgetown College, -1847; Minister and Procurator of residence, College of Holy Cross, Worcester, MA, 1848-1857; professed, 01-16-1853; Vice-rector, College of Holy Cross, 1854-1857; Minister and Procurator, St. Joseph's College, 1858- | 4191818 | 11051895 | 8151834 | Maryland | ||||||||||||||
29 | Blox | John | Prefect, Georgetown College, 1836- Rector, stationed at Philadelphia, 1845; stationed with Missouri Province, 1846; St. Xavier College, Cincinnati, 1847-1848; Rector Washington College, 1848- ; Consultor, Maryland Province, 1849- ; stationed at Boston and served St. Joseph's, 1853- | 1810 | 1832 | ||||||||||||||||
30 | Blumensaat | Hermann | Born in Lippstadt, Westphalia, 1845; immigrated to US in 1866; entered Jesuit novitiate at Sault-au-Recollect, 1874; Fordham; Woodstock; final vows, 1876; assistant pastor, German congregation in NYC, 1882-1886; tertianship, Frederick, 1887; stationed at almshouse and workhouse on Blackwell's Island, NY, 1887-1901. His work at Blackwell's was interrupted by a cholera epidemic in 1892, during which time he stayed at Fire Island and ministered quarantined sufferers of the disease. | 1845 | 1901 | 1874 | Maryland Province | ||||||||||||||
31 | Boarman | Bennet | |||||||||||||||||||
32 | Boarman | Charles | Brother of John and Sylvester Boarman. | ||||||||||||||||||
33 | Boarman | John | Born in Charles County, 1743; entered 1762; novitiate at Ghent; theological and philosophical studies at Liege; returned to Maryland, March 1774; Died at Newtown, 1797. He attended meetings of the counsel during the years of suppression. One of the 22 priests who lived in Maryland and Pennsylvania at the time the Society was disbanded. Brother of Charles and Sylvester Boarman. | 1743 | 1794 | 1762 | |||||||||||||||
34 | Bodnar | Edward | Born 26 September 1920; entered SJ 14 August 1940; ordained, 22 June 1952; final vows, 15 August 1957 professor of classics at Georgetown University from 1967-1991, taught Latin, Greek, and classical archaeology, and continued to be an active part of the Georgetown community as an emeritus professor until his death in 2011. Bodnar came to Georgetown as an undergraduate, entered the Jesuit novitiate, and was ordained in 1952. He earned his Ph.D. in Classics from Princeton University in 1958, writing his dissertation on the figure that would define the rest of his professional life, Cyriacus of Ancona. | 1920 | 2011 | 1940 | Maryland-New York Province | ||||||||||||||
35 | Bolton | John | An Englishman, born in 1742; entered SJ, 1761; ordained, 1771; arrived in Maryland, 1771; Charles County, 1779-1780; assigned to St. Joseph's Mission on Eastern Shore, 1787-1801; he was noted for his confirmations and converts at the mission; renewed Jesuit vows, 1805; died at Newtown, September 9, 1809 (c. 1805 is alternative). Elected to the first Board of Trustees, Corporation of Roman Catholic Clergymen. | 1742 | 1809 | 1761 | British | ||||||||||||||
36 | Boone | Edward | Born in Washington, DC, 1833; descendant of old Maryland families and admirer of Maryland achievements; graduated Holy Cross, 1851; entered novitiate in Frederick, 1852; stationed at Georgetown, Frederick, and St. Joseph's; Boston College, 1860; studied theology at Georgetown; ordained 2 July 1866 in chapel of St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore; parish priest, Leonardtown, 1866- ; vice-president, Loyola College, 186_-1870; held professorships at several colleges; rector, Holy Cross College, 1879-1883; Loyola College, 1890-1916; chaplain, jail and House of Corrections, Baltimore, 1890-1904; died at Mercy Hospital, Baltimore, 1916 He was the first alumnus to serve as president of Holy Cross. | 1833 | 1916 | 1852 | Maryland Province | ||||||||||||||
37 | Brady | Robert | born in Hancock, MD, 1825; Professor, Humanities, Georgetown College, 1845-1847; Professor, Humanities, Holy Cross, 1847-1852; studied theology at Georgetown and ordained in 1857; President, Holy Cross, 1867-1869; President, Boston College, 1869-1870; Rector Provincial, Maryland Province, 1877-1882; President, Holy Cross, 1883-1887; pastor, Holy Trinity Church, Washington, -1891 | 1825 | 1891 | 1843 | |||||||||||||||
38 | Brandi | Salvatore | born in Italy, May 2, 1852; entered Roman Province, March 9, 1870; naturalized US citizen; professor of theology Woodstock College, where he also helped establish churches throughout Howard County; returned to Rome, where he became editor of Civilata Cattolica; assisted Pope Leo XIIIl; died in Italy September 5, 1914 | 1852 | 1914 | 1870 | Roman | ||||||||||||||
39 | Breen | Francis A. | born in Philadelphia; entered Frederick, 1900; ordained at Woodstock College, 1915; Loyola College;, 1907-1909 Fordham University, 1909-1910; St. Francis Xavier College, 1910-1912; treasurer and manage, America Press, 1916-1919; assistant Procurator, 1922-1923; Provincial Procurator, 1933-1939; director of Jesuit Seminary Fund and Shrine of Our Lady of Martyrs, Auriesville; assistant pastor, St. Aloysius, Leonardtown, 1939-1940; pastor, St. Nicholas, Pearson, MD. | 1879 | 1945 | 1900 | Maryland-New York | ||||||||||||||
40 | Breslin | John | Born New York City on Aug. 19, 1943; graduated Regis High School in New York, 1961; entered SJ, 1961; novitiate St. Andrew on the Hudson in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., 1961- ; Loyola Seminary, 965-1967; student of English literature, Campion Hall in Oxford, England; taught English at Regis High School, 1969-1970. At Woodstock College, he studied theology from 1970-1973, and was ordained in 1973. In 1977, he studied at Yale where he earned a M.A. in English in 1978 and a Ph.D. in English literature in 1983. vice-president, Georgetown University, 1992-1996; Writer, editor, professor of English at Georgetown, director of GU Press. died at Fordham, 2016 see bio for more details. | 1943 | 2016 | 1961 | Maryland Province | ||||||||||||||
41 | Brocard | Ignatius | born 1793; entered 1814; fully professed in 1831; Rector Provincial, Swiss Province; Rector of College in Compagna; Rector Provincial, 26 June 1848-1852; died of typhoid fever at age 59 at Georgetown, 4/1/1852 He was appointed by Father Jan Roothan As Rector Provincial of the Province of Maryland, Brocard welcomed clerical refugees displaced by the Revolutions of 1848. He used the opportunity to bring theological and philosophical faculty that strengthened offerings at all Jesuit colleges. | 1793 | 1852 | 1814 | German Province | ||||||||||||||
42 | Brock | John | Superior, Mission of Maryland, 1638-1641 Used alias J. Morgan | 651641 | |||||||||||||||||
43 | Brooke | Ignatius Baker | Born in Maryland, 1751; entered 9/7/1770; he was in Ghent in 1773, the first year of the suppression; ordained 1801; stationed at Newtown, 1802; became superior at Newtown, 1805 and was succeeded by Edelen upon his death c. 1809. Even though he oversaw Newtown and petitioned with former Jesuits for restoration in 1802, there is no evidence that he re-entered SJ. Probably nephew of Ignatius Brooke who died at St. Omers in 1751. Heir to the property of his father Baker Brooke who died intestate. He transferred the property to Charles Neale | 1751 | 0.1809 | 1770 | British | ||||||||||||||
44 | Brooke | Robert | probably related to Roger Brooke Taney and born in Frederick County | 1819 | 1841 | 1837 | |||||||||||||||
45 | Brooks | Robert | Superior, Maryland mission, 1710-1713 | 1663 | 1684 | ||||||||||||||||
46 | Brown | Albert | Born in Baltimore; student at Georgetown 1887, but did not graduate; entered Society of Jesus at Frederick, Md., in 1887; graduate, Woodstock; president, St. Joseph's College, 1921-1927; Georgetown, 1930-1935 | 1935 | 1887 | Maryland Province | |||||||||||||||
47 | Brute | Simon | Born on March 20, 1779, at Rennes, France; began studying medicine in 1796 and graduated in 1803, though he never practiced medicine. Instead, entered the reopened seminary of Saint Sulpice in Paris in November 1803 and was ordained, 1808; joined the Society of Saint-Sulpice and taught theology in the diocesan seminary at Rennes from 1808 through 1810. In 1810, he went to Baltimore with Benedict Joseph Flaget, who served in Bardstown Kentucky; he worked at Mount St. Mary's College, Emmittsburg, between 1810 and 1834 with the exception of 1815-1818 when he served at St. Mary's Seminary in Baltimore. He left the Sulpician order in 1826, the year it stopped serving Mount St. Mary's. In 1834, named the bishop of Vincennes, when the Pope created that diocese from Bardstown. He was spiritual director for Elizabeth Seton. He became an American citizen in 1835, partially because of land ownership requirements. | 1779 | 1839 | ||||||||||||||||
48 | Brzozowski | Tadeusz | Entered 1765; in 1782 he left for Polatsk, in the Russian Empire, (Polotsk, Belarus) to be readmitted among the Jesuits. In 1797 he was named Secretary of the Society; at the Regional Congregation of 1802, named Assistant of the newly elected Superior General of the Jesuits in Russia, Gabriel Gruber. After the death of Gruber in 1805, Brzozowski became Superior General. He worked tirelessly for the full restoration and reaffirmed as the Superior General in 1814. | 1749 | 1820 | 1765 | |||||||||||||||
49 | Buell | David Hillhouse | born 19 June 1862; entered SJ, 12 November 1883; converted to Catholicism at Yale; administrator of university; president, Georgetown University, 1905-1908; left SJ to marry, 1912; taught at New England preparatory schools; became Episcopalian priest, 1922, died, 1923 His presidency was controversial because he imposed a rigid system of discipline and enrollment declined as a result. | 1862 | 1923 | 1883 | Maryland-New York Province | ||||||||||||||
50 | Bunn | Edward | Born Baltimore, 25 March 1896; graduated Loyola College, Baltimore, 1917; entered SJ, 7 September 1923; master's degree St. Andrew-on-the-Hudson; ordained 29 June 1929; final vows 2 February 1935; president Loyola College Baltimore, 1938-1947; director of labor school, University of Scranton, 1947-1948; regent, Schools of Medicine and Dentistry, Georgetown U, 1948-1952; 44th president of Georgetown University, 1944-1964; died at Georgetown, 1972 As GU president, he was known for his fundraising abilities and oversaw the expansion of the school, both in terms of enrollment and physical plant. During his presidency, GU completed a 10-year capital improvement plan which included the construction of Reiss Science, Gorman Diagnostic, Kober-Cogan and New South. | 1896 | 1972 | 1923 | Maryland-New York Province | ||||||||||||||
51 | Byrne | Andrew | |||||||||||||||||||
52 | Byrne | John | from Harper's Ferry, Va; was prominent at the time of the John Brown's Raid. | 1814 | |||||||||||||||||
53 | Byrne | Michael | |||||||||||||||||||
54 | Byrnes | Francis | |||||||||||||||||||
55 | Campbell | Colin | Born in Calgary, Alberta, in 1943, Colin Campbell received his B.A. in political science from Gonzaga University in Spokane, Washington, in 1965. After obtaining his M.A. in political science at the University of Alberta in 1966, Campbell earned his Ph.D. in political science at Duke University in 1973. In addition, in 1975, he completed the degree of Master of Divinity from the Jesuit School of Theology at Berkeley in California. Between 1975 and 1983, Campbell served as a professor of political science and the coordinator of the Public Policy and Administration Program at York University. On two occasions, Campbell was a guest scholar at the Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C. (1979 and 1982-83). At Georgetown University, Campbell directs the Graduate Public Policy Program and teaches political science. Campbell has published eight books: The US Presidency in Crisis (1998), The End of Whitehall? (1995), Political Leadership in an Age of Constraint: The Australian Experience (1992), Politics and Government in Europe Today (1990, 1995), Managing the Presdiency: Carter, Reagan, and the Search for Executive Harmony (1986), Governments Under Stress: Political Executives and Key Bureaucrats in Washington, London, and Ottawa (1983), The Superbureaucrats: Structure and Behavior in Central Agencies (1979), and The Canadian Senate: A Lobby From Within (1978). | 1943 | SJ, unknown province | ||||||||||||||||
56 | Campbell | Gerard | |||||||||||||||||||
57 | Campbell | Thomas | Born in New York City, 1848; novitiate Sault-au-Recollet, 1867-1870; taught classics at Fordham, 1870-1873; philosophical studies, Woodstock College; philosophical and scientific studies, Woodstock College, -1876; studied at Louvain University; ordained, 1881; tertianship, Frederick, 1881 ; Fordham University president, 1885-1888, and 1896-1900; Provincial, Maryland-New York Province, 1888-1893; vice-rector, St. Francis Xavier, 1893; gave missions and retreats, 1893-1895; editor of America, 1910-1914; St. Francis Xavier, 1916; St. Joseph's, Philadelphia; lecturer, Fordham, - 1925; died in Monroe, NY 1925 One of the first to publish on the Kentucky mission; published extensively on the history of the Catholic church in Canada and Great Lakes region; wrote the Pioneer Priests of North America, The Pioneer Laymen of North America, and The Jesuits, 1534-1921 (1921). | 1848 | 1925 | 1867 | Maryland-New York Province | ||||||||||||||
58 | Campion | Donald | born in Brooklyn, 1921; graduated Regis HS, 1939; entered 1939; continued his studies at St. Louis University, taught briefly at Xavier High School in Manhattan and Le Moyne College in Syracuse and studied theology at Woodstock College in Maryland; ordained in 1952; University of Pennsylvania, Ph.D. in sociology; associate editor, America, 1957-1965; correspondent for America Magazine from Rome, when he wrote about the impact of Vatican II; editor-in-chief, America Magazine, 1968-1975; information officer Jesuits in Rome, 1975-1978; moved to Fordham infirmary, 1984; spiritual director for seminarians at Fordham, 1984- trustee of several institutions, including Fordham, Woodstock, Holy Cross, St. Peter's and Boston Colleges | 1921 | 1988 | 1939 | Maryland-New York Province | ||||||||||||||
59 | Carbery | Joseph | born in Britton's Neck, MD, 1784; ordained 1815; stationed at Newtown, 1815-1816; pastor of St. Inigoes, 1816; and remained there until his death, 1849. Built church at St. inigoes and houses on St. George's Island. Brother of Mrs. Mattingly; known as an effective evangelist at St. Inigoes; from a well known and regarded Washington family. His brother Thomas Carbery was mayor of Washington. | 1784 | 1849 | 1819 | |||||||||||||||
60 | Cardella | Philip | Philip Cardella (1846-1901) was an Italian sent from the Province of Rome to New York in 1882. He spent much of his life and activity with the Spanish community in New York City. He attempted to build a Spanish Church for them, went to Mexico to raise money for it, but did not get the task accomplished. Upon Cardella's death in New York in 1901 his papers were wantonly destroyed, only the small number in this collection remaining, which Father Barnum brought to Georgetown. | 1846 | 1901 | outside US | |||||||||||||||
61 | Carrell | George | Born in Philadelphia, June 3, 1803; son of Irish immigrant who worked as a grocer; Georgetown student, 1817-1820; entered SJ, 1820; novitiate at White Marsh; left the order two years alter; taught at St. Mary's College Baltimore, 1824-1825; ordained, 1829; assistant to Rev. Patrick Kenny, Wilmington, DE, 1829; stationed West Chester, PA, 1830; re-entered SJ in Missouri, 1835; consecrated first Bishop of Covingtron, KY, 1853; died September 26, 1868l | 1803 | 1868 | 1835 | Maryland mission and Missouri | ||||||||||||||
62 | Carroll | Anthony | Ordained at Liege, 1754; returned to Maryland with cousin John Carroll, 1774; returned to England and served Liverpool, Exeter, Worcester, etc.; died from injuries after attack in Red Lion Court, Fleet Street, September 5, 1794. | 1722 | 1794 | ||||||||||||||||
63 | Carroll | James | Born in Ireland 5 August 1717; entered English Province at Watten on the 7th of September, 1741; arrived in mission of Maryland, 1749; died at Newtown, 1756 Buried at Newtown | 1717 | 1756 | 1741 | British | ||||||||||||||
64 | Carroll | James | The son of Anthony Carroll of Lisheenboy and immigrated from Tipperary, Ireland; brother of Daniel Carroll of Ireland and Michael Carroll of Ireland; uncle of Anthony (1722-1794) son of Daniel, a Jesuit; James (1717-1756) son of Michael, a Jesuit; rent roll keeper of both shores, 1707-1729; merchant For other extended relationships see Hardy dissertation, pp. 447-448; James Carroll never married and he named his two nephews Anthony and Daniel as heirs. He named Charles Carroll of Annapolis and Dr. Charles Carroll (who left the Catholic Church and turned on fellow Catholics) as executors. When Anthony and James claimed their inheritance, they ended up in court seeking the return of property that Dr. Charles Carroll had embezzled. Dr. Carroll countered by stating that the laws in Britain that limited the inheritances of Catholic families applied in Maryland as well. | 1729 | |||||||||||||||||
65 | Carroll | John | John Carroll (1735-1815) was a prominent American Roman Catholic priest best remembered as the first Bishop in the United States and the first Archbishop of Baltimore. Born on January 8, 1735, in Upper Marlborough, Maryland, John Carroll was the son of Daniel Carroll and Eleanor (Darnall) Carroll. John Carroll was educated at home, presumably by his mother. At age 12, he attended the Jesuit school at Bohemia Manor, Maryland, which soon became defunct. At age 13, he was sent to school at St. Omers in France. In 1753, Carroll entered the Jesuit novitiate in Watten. Next, he studied at Liege. He was ordained in Liege in 1767. In 1773, the Society of Jesus was suppressed. Carroll returned to America as the American Revolution developed. In 1776, he accompanied Benjamin Franklin, Samuel Chase, and Charles Carroll as commissioners to Canada. After the war, John Carroll helped organize the Catholic Church in the new, independent United States of America. On November 14, 1789, John Carroll was appointed Bishop of the United States. John Carroll became involved with several educational initiatives. In 1789, he founded Georgetown College, the first Roman Catholic college in the United States. Moreover, he was instrumental in creating St. Mary's Seminary in Baltimore and Mt. Saint Mary's College in Emmitsburg, Maryland. Bishop John Carroll supported the construction of a cathedral in Baltimore, but he did not live to see its completion in 1821. He became the first Archbishop of America in 1811. John Carroll died on December 3, 1815. [Source: Biography Resource Center Online.] | 1735 | 1815 | 1753 | British | ||||||||||||||
66 | Cary | John | immigrated to US, 10 August 1810; entered 2 September 1810; ordained December 1811 by Bishop Neale; died at Bohemia spent career at Southern Maryland missions | 1772 | 1843 | 1810 | |||||||||||||||
67 | Cattani | John B. | born in Bavaria, 1805; entered SJ, 1836; fully professed, 1847; assistant Conewago, 1849-1854; prefect, St. Mary's Boston, 1855; Superior, Holy Trinity, Boston, 1856-1858; Superior, Conewago, 1858-1865; died at Conewago, 1865 | 1805 | 1865 | 1836 | |||||||||||||||
68 | Causey | Joseph Gardner | born 12 September 1876; entered SJ, 1893; novitiate St. Andrew-on-the-Hudson; final vows 2 February 1913; taught senior philosophy, Georgetown College, 1919-1922; became librarian Loyola College; GU Archivist, 1941-1947 | 1876 | 1947 | 1893 | Maryland-New York Province | ||||||||||||||
69 | Cerrute | Edmund | Born in New York, 1889; graduated Fordham, 1911; studied at Woodstock College and ordained in 1914; assistant dean of discipline, Georgetown, 1934-1937; faculty moderator, The Hoya, 1934-1938; St. Francis Xavier, New York; dean of men, Loyola College, Baltimore; dean of men, Regis High School, New York, where he died. | 1889 | 1943 | Maryland-New York Province | |||||||||||||||
70 | Chazelle | Peter | Born in France, 1789; ordained as secular priest; enter SJ, March 1822; rector, college of Montmorillon, 1822- ; left that post when the government of France pushed the Jesuits out; rector, St. Mary's College, Kentucky, 1832-1839; moved to Canada and established a house in Montreal, 1842; spent last years among Native Americans in the areas evangelized by Marquette; died in 1845 | 1789 | 1845 | 1822 | France | ||||||||||||||
71 | Chester | John A. | born May 6, 1854; taught at Gonzaga College, Washington; entered SJ, 1871, at Frederick where he stayed until 1876; studied philosophy Woodstock College, 1876-1878; third year philosophy, Woodstock College, 1881; taught classics at Holy Cross and Georgetown; went to Las Vegas, NM, to convalesce after an illness; taught classics, Fordham; ordained, 1886; procurator, Georgetown University, 1894; procurator, Maryland-New York Province, 1893-1903; treasurer, Woodstock College; treasurer of novitiate at St. Andrew-on-the-Hudson; assistant pastor, St. Ignatius Church, 1896-1906; died in New York, December 20, 1906 | 1854 | 1906 | 1871 | |||||||||||||||
72 | Cheverus | John | born 1768; ordained 1790; consecrated by John Carroll Bishop of Boston, 1808-1823; Bishop of Montauban, 1823-1826; Archbishop, Archdiocese of Bordeaux, 1826-1836; died 1836 | 1768 | 1836 | ||||||||||||||||
73 | Ciampi | Anthony F. | Born in Rome, 1816; entered Society, 1832; ordained, 1847; president, Loyola College, Baltimore; president, Holy Cross College, Worcester, 1851-1854, 1857-1861, and 1869-1872; died as resident of St. Aloysius Church in Washington. | 1816 | 1893 | 1832 | Maryland Province | ||||||||||||||
74 | Clark | James | Born in Pennsylvania, 1809; from a Pennsylvania and Protestant revolutionary family; graduated from West Point in 1829; served one year in US Army. He became a seminarian at St. Mary's College; entered SJ, 1844; prefect of discipline, professor of mathematics and chemistry, 1846-1850; prefect of discipline and professor of chemistry and mathematics, Holy Cross College, 1850-1851; professor of mathematics, Georgetown College, 1851-1854; studied theology, Frederick, 1854; treasurer, Georgetown College, 1855-1859; vice-president, prefect of discipline and professor of higher math, Georgetown College, 1855-1859; president, Holy Cross College, 1862-1868; treasurer, Georgetown College, 1868-1869; President and Treasurer, Gonzaga college, Washington, 1869-1875; professor of higher math, Georgetown College, 1876-1879; retired 1880 after paralyzing stroke; died at Georgetown infirmary in 1885. | 1809 | 1885 | 1844 | Maryland Province | ||||||||||||||
75 | Clark | William F. | born in Smithtown, Long Island, 1856; entered novitiate at Sault-au-Recollet, Canada, 1876; Woodstock College; taught classics, Georgetown, 1882-1887; ordained, 1890; tertianship, Frederick; prefect of studies and professor of rhetoric, Frederick; socius, 1893-1896; rector, St. Joseph's College, Philadelphia, 1896; consultor of the Maryland-New York Province, 1896- ; during the following eighteen years, he was prefect of studies at St. Francis Xavier College, St. Andrew-on-Hudson, first prefect general of studies for the province, prefect of studies at Holy Cross College, Canisius College, and Brooklyn College. In 1918 he was made rector of Woodstock College, and 1921 rector of St. Andrew-on-Hudson. From 1927 to 1935 he was superior at Kohlmann Hall, New York City. | 1856 | 1947 | 1876 | |||||||||||||||
76 | Clarke | Sylvester | born 18 January 1800; entered 31 December 1826; final vows, 2 February 1841; infirmarian, Georgetown College, 1828-1829; bookkeeper, Georgetown College, 1830-1868; died at Georgetown 5 July 1868 Never ordained; permanent coadjutor | 1800 | 1868 | 1826 | |||||||||||||||
77 | Clarke | William F. | Born in Washington City, 1816; educated Gonzaga College; entered SJ, 1833; novitiate, White Marsh; professor of grammar, Georgetown College, c. 1835-1837; ordained 1842; professor of philosophy, Georgetown College, 1845; socius to the master of novices, Frederick, 1846; following the break down of his health, stationed at Bohemia; pastor St. Joseph's Church, Baltimore, 1849-1858; president, Loyola College, Baltimore, 1858-1860; rector, Gonzaga College, Washington, 1860-1861; procurator, Loyola College, 1861- ; and preacher, St. Ignatius Church, 1861-1888; Gonzaga College, August 1888-1890. A noted lecturer of Christian doctrine. At St. Joseph's in Baltimore, he introduced instruction to the parish, established a sodality for colored parishioners, and brought the Oblate Sisters (black) to St. Joseph's; his assistant Father Vicinanza, SJ, gave services in Italian. While a pastor of St. Joseph's during 1853 and 1854, he wrote to the Baltimore Sun to defend Catholicism and the Jesuits of Georgetown in particular under the pseudonym "A Graduate of Georgetown College." He was the descendent of Hon. Robert Clarke, one of the founders of Maryland under Lord Baltimore; mother's side from Boone. | 1816 | 1890 | 1833 | |||||||||||||||
78 | Cleary | William | Born Alexandria, 8/11/1837; student, Washington Seminary; ordained, 1866; Professor of Rhetoric, Georgetown College; Minister & Vice-President, Gonzaga College and resident of St. Aloysius; succeeded Father Bapst at church and residence of St. Joseph's Church, Providence, RI, 1879-1884 (during his tenure he was appointed moderator of clerical conferences); died of peritonitis, 5/30/1884. | 1837 | 1884 | Maryland Province | |||||||||||||||
79 | Coleman | Jeremiah F.X. | Born August 20, 1851; Entered, July 30, 1874; Fully professed, February 3, 1890; Loyola School, New York -1914 | ||||||||||||||||||
80 | Collins | John J. | born November 15, 1856 in Marysville, KY; entered Dec. 5, 1876; professed Feb. 2, 1885; taught at Fordham, 1883-1888; Woodstock College, 1888- ordained, 1891; prefect of discipline and board of consultors, Holy Cross College, 1891-1892; Minister of community and prefect, St. Francis Xavier, New York, 1893' completed tertianship, Frederick, 1893; assigned to mission, British West Indies, 1894, the year it became part of the Maryland-New York Province; prefect of studies, St. George's College, Kingston, and member of board of consultors of the mission of Jamaica, 1894-1902; held retreats in mid-Atlantic, 1902-1904; rector, St. John's College, Fordham, 1904-1906; administrator apostolic, 1906-1907; superior, Jamaican mission, 1906-1907; named titular bishop of Antphello and Vicar Apostolic of Jamaica, June 12, 1907; consecrated October 28, 1907; resigned March 16, 1918; remained until next vicar apostolic installed, 1920; returned to Fordham, 1920, where he served as spiritual father; died at Fordham, November 30, 1934 | 1856 | 1934 | 1876 | Maryland-New York Province | ||||||||||||||
81 | Combs | Ignatius | Born in Great Mills, MD, 1794; entered February 1815; studied philosophy, Georgetown College; professor, Georgetown College, 1822; studied theology, Washington Seminary, 1823; Conewago; ordained, 1825; missionary St. Thomas Manor, Charles County, 1826-1833; White Marsh, 1834-1835; superior White Marsh, 1836-1840; Superior, Newtown, 1840; Superior, St. Joseph's, Philadelphia, 1840-1845; Minister, Georgetown College, 1845; Superior, Alexandria residence, 1846; Socius of Provincial, Consultor, and Procurator of Province, 1847- ; died at Newtown, 1850. | 1794 | 1850 | 1815 | |||||||||||||||
82 | Coniff | Arthur | born in Baltimore, 1901; AB, Loyola College; MA, Weston College, MA; entered SJ, 1924; teacher, Gonzaga High School, 1928-1931; ordained, 1934; chairman, Georgetown Biology Department, 1936-1963; taught Georgetown biology, 1936-1971; died in Illinois at age of 76. Recipient of the Distinguished Alumus Citation, 1974; Georgetown Presidential Medal of Merit, 1965; and University's Vicennial Gold Medal, 1956 | 1901 | 1977 | 1924 | Maryland Province | ||||||||||||||
83 | Connolly | Edward | Entered September 1876; Ordained, 1882; Vice-President, Prefect of Studies, and Professor of Elocution, 1887 | 1843 | 1911 | 1882 | Maryland Province | ||||||||||||||
84 | Conwell | Henry | born c. 1748, Londonderry, Ireland; ordained, 1776; Vicar General, Archbishop Armagh; installed bishop of Philadelphia, 1819; consecrated bishop, 1820; removed from post and returned to Rome, 1826; against the wishes of the Vatican, he returned to Philadelphia. Although granted permission to say the liturgy, he lived in seclusion. Died in Philadelphia, 1842, Conwell's tenure as bishop of Philadelphia was known for his arguments with the lay trustees of the parishes; he removed and excommunicated William Hogan, priest at St. Mary's Church in Philadelphia; even though the sides reconciled in 1826, the Vatican believed that he ceded too much authority to the lay people and he was recalled to Rome. | 1748 | 1842 | ||||||||||||||||
85 | Cook | Walter | born c. 1916; grew up in Silver Spring, MD; graduate, Gonzaga College; entered in Wernersville, PA, 1939; philosophy, Woodstock College; taught St. Joseph's College High School, Philadelphia; ordained, St. Mary's Kurseong, IN; remained at St. Mary's until enrolling in doctoral program in linguistics at Georgetown, which he received in 1965; taught syntax and semantics; chairman, department of Linguistics, for two terms; wrote standard texts "Introduction to Tagmenics" (1969); "Case Grammar: Development of Matrix Model," (1979), "Case Grammar Theory," (1989); retired in 1993; died at GU Hospital, 1999 | 1916 | 1999 | 1939 | Maryland Province | ||||||||||||||
86 | Corvin | Boniface | born at Wilma, Poland, 1777; entered at Polotsk, 1795; professed at Riga, 1814; arrived in US, 1822; Goshenhoppen, 1822-1837, and tended to missions in Berk's Buck's, Montgomery, Lehigh and Schuylkill Counties; died in Philadelphia, 11 October 1837 | 1777 | 1837 | 1795 | |||||||||||||||
87 | Cowardin | William | Born in Richmond, 1849, son of William Reynolds Cowardin, founder of Richmond Dispatch; entered Georgetown college, 1860; entered Richmond Boy Company at outbreak of the Civil War; returned to Georgetown after the war and entered the Society in 1870; ordained, 1880; prefect of Georgetown, Holy Cross, and Fordham; director, Georgetown College, 1881-1884, 1885-1897; last Jesuit Superior, Conewago, 1899-1901; St. Mary's, Boston, MA | 1849 | 1925 | 1869 | Maryland Province | ||||||||||||||
88 | Coyne | George W. | Born 1933; entered c. 1951; B.A., Fordham University, 1958; Ph.D. astronomy, Georgetown University, 1962; ordained, 1965; astronomer; former director, Vatican Observatory; head of its research group, University of Arizona, Tuscon; McDevitt Chair of Religious Philosophy, LeMoyne, Syracuse, 2012-present | 1933 | 1951 | Maryland Province | |||||||||||||||
89 | Creaghan | John | born in Baltimore c. 1917; entered 1930; ordained at Woodstock, 1943; MA Fordham and Ph.D. Princeton. scholastic, Georgetown, 1939-1941, when he moderated drama department; Chair of Classics Department, Georgetown; appointed in 1950 to represent GU at American Academy of Rome School of Classical Studies; when Jesuits opened Loyola Seminary in NY, he moved to teach there; died after a long illness at Loyola in 1960 Collaborator in Christian Inscriptions from Early Athens; interested in Byzantine archaeology | 1917 | 1960 | 1930 | Maryland-New York Province | ||||||||||||||
90 | Creeden | John B. | Entered Society of Jesus, 1890; Studied in Jesuit novitiate in Frederick, 1890-1898; President of Georgetown University, 1918-1924; Founder, Georgetown School of Foreign Service, 1919; instrumental in opening Georgetown Prep, 1919; Regent, Boston College Law School, 1924-1939; history teacher, Cranwell Preparatory School, Lenox, MA, 1939-1943; resident of Shadowbrook, Lenox, MA, 1943-1948. | 1871 | 1948 | 1890 | Maryland Province | ||||||||||||||
91 | Creighton | Patrick | born 1816; entered 1842; Newtown station, 1855; professor of grammar and arithmetic, Washington Seminary, 1856; Conewago Residence, serving Littlestown mission, 1857 | 1816 | 1842 | ||||||||||||||||
92 | Cryan | Thomas | born 10 March 1859; entered 30 July 1879; professed, 2 February 1899; St. Michael's Residence, Ridge; stationed at Ridge residence, 1919-1922; stationed at Chaptico residence, 1923-1924; stationed at St. Michael's Residence, Ridge, 1925-1927; Superior, St. Regis Rectory, Great Mills, 1927-1928; died in Washington, DC, 3 November 1928 | 1859 | 1928 | 1879 | |||||||||||||||
93 | Curley | James | Born in County Roscommon, Ireland, 1796; arrived in Philadelphia, 1817; entered, 1827; Georgetown and Frederick. Fr . Curley was to return to Georgetown, there to serve as a Professor of physics, mathematics, and botany. In 1840, Fr. Curley suggested that Georgetown construct an observatory; when the idea was approved, Fr. Curley drew up the plans for the building, and supervised construction on the project. Not long after the Observatory opened, Fr. Curley computed the meridian of Washington DC with a degree of precision previously unknown. Subsequent calculations were to prove the accuracy of Fr. Curley's computations. It was also around 1840 that Fr. Curley assembled a collection of natural history items for display at Georgetown. Socius and Procurator for Province, 1850-1860; Fr. Curley taught at Georgetown until 1879; died there a decade later,in 1889. Buried in College cemetery. | 1796 | 1889 | 1827 | Maryland Province | ||||||||||||||
94 | Curley | Michael | born in Althlone, County Westmeath, Ireland, 1879; ordained, 1904; archbishop of Baltimore, 1921-1947; first archbishop, archdiocese of Washington, 1939-1947 | 1879 | 1947 | ||||||||||||||||
95 | Curran | R. Emmett | Born 1936; entered 1958; ordained 1968; took final vows; left the Jesuit order during 1990s. R. Emmett Curran was a long-time member of the History department and author of a three-volume history of Georgetown University entitled A History of Georgetown University. | 1936 | 1958 | Maryland Province | |||||||||||||||
96 | Daugherty | Jerome | Born March 25, 1849; entered Frederick novitiate, August 14, 1865; fully professed, August 15, 1885; ordained June 1880; St. Francis Xavier College, New York, 1981-1982; prefect of studies, Boston College, 1884-1885; vice-president, Gonzaga College High School; vice-president, Georgetown University; Holy Cross College, Worcester, Mass; Assistant to Provincial, 1901; president, Georgetown University, 1901-1905; | 1849 | 1865 | ||||||||||||||||
97 | de Barth | Louis | Adolphus Louis de Barth Walbach born and raised in Alsace, 1764; emigrated with his family during French Revolution; ordained as secular priest; assistant at Bohemia Manor; PortTobacco, 1792-1795; assigned to Conewago, 1795-1803; Superior, Conewago, 1804-1814; apostolic administrator, 1814-1820; Conewago, 1820-1828; pastor, St. John's German Catholic Church, Baltimore, 1828-1841; retired to Washington, 1841 and died there, 1844 | 1764 | 1844 | ||||||||||||||||
98 | de Cloriviere | Joseph Pierre Picot | Lived at Georgetown Visitation; considered its second founder; buried in its crypt. de Cloriviere had been involved in a plot to kill Napoleon that had gone awry, killing many innocent people in an explosion. de Cloriviere was an alias for Joseph Pierre Picot de Limoelan. | 1826 | |||||||||||||||||
99 | deBarth | Louis | Born in Munster, Germany, 1764; entered Seminary at Strasbourg; ordained in Strasbourg, 1790; emigrated to US; Conewago, 1804- Vicar General to Bishop Egan, Philadelphia; appointed administrator of the diocese of Philadelphia upon his death; entered SJ, 1815; White Marsh novitiate, 1815; left SJ 1816; procurator, Conewago, - 1838; retired at Georgetown, 1838-1844; died Georgetown College, 1844 Buried in Old Graveyard at Georgetown | 1764 | 1844 | 1816 | |||||||||||||||
100 | deNeckere | Francis X. | born 1810; entered SJ in the Belgian province, 1844; immigrated from Belgian Province with brother Hippolyte, 1846; Holy Trinity, c. 1846- c. 1848; Conewago, 1849-1859; professor of Greek and Latin, Frederick, MD, 1859; Newtown, 1860-1861; Conewago, 1862; Conewago, 1864-1879. noted variously as brother or nephew of Hippolyte DeNeckere | 1810 | 1879 | 1844 |