Historians Who Applied to CUA 1949 – 1950
Surname, Name |
Born |
Place of birth |
Died |
WWII |
B. A. |
M. A. |
PhD |
Further career |
Aisley, Harold1 |
Feb 22, 1916 |
Brockton, Mass |
2006 |
Army Ari Corps 1941-45 China, Burma, India, Europe |
City College, NY
|
UCLA |
(none) |
State Dept, Denmark Labor Dept Int. Labor, Geneva |
Aube, Raymond |
? |
? |
? |
Air Force |
|
|
|
|
Becker, Marvin2 |
1922 |
Philadelphia, PA |
2004 |
Army |
|
|
U Penn, 14th c. Florence |
U Michigan, et al |
Rev. Bender-Jacoby, Robert3 |
1926 |
Carlisle, PA |
2004 |
Navy |
Franklin & Marshall College B. D. 1946 |
U Penn |
|
1951-65 Teaching Fellow, Church History Princeton Theol. Sem Duarte, Cal. |
Bennett, Henry Louis |
1923 |
|
|
Army |
Yale, 1944 |
Yale, 1948 |
|
|
Bernard, Louis L4 |
1917 |
New Orleans, LA |
|
Navy, 1940-45 |
Tulane, 1936 |
|
|
1950 Ass Prof Notre Dame |
Betts, John5 |
1917 |
Bloomsbury, NJ (grew up Pennsylvania) |
1971 ? |
Army, 1942-45 |
Princeton, 1938 |
Columbia |
Columbia |
Boston College US history, Sports history |
Bobula Helcz, Ida6 |
1900 |
Budapest, Hungary |
1981 |
REFUGEE Hungary |
|
Bryn Mawr |
Budapest, 1923 |
adjunct at Limestone College, Gaffney, SC |
Brewer, James Fitzgerald7 |
1916 |
Baltimore, MD |
|
Naval, Marine Reserves |
La Salle, 1938 |
Niagara 1939 |
PhD GWU 1967 |
Assoc. Naval Acad. Annapolis 1947-62 |
Doehler, Edward A8 |
1909 (or 1910) |
New York City (moved to Baltimore 1912) |
2004 |
|
|
|
George- town 1935 |
Mount St Agnes College (1947-71), Loyola College (1971-86), Baltimore MD |
Doherty, James J9 |
? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Boston College 1950 Asst Prof. |
Dvornik, Francis Fr10 |
1893 |
Chomýž, Moravia, Austria-Hungary |
1975 |
REFUGEE Czech |
|
|
|
Famous Byzantist, Harvard U |
Freiberg, Malcom11 |
1919 |
Newbury Port, Mass |
2011 |
Army |
|
Middlebury College |
Brown |
Editor, Massachusetts Colonial History Society |
Fennelly, Catherine12 |
1918 |
State Island, NY |
2019 |
|
|
|
Yale |
|
Rev Hughes, Philipp13 |
1895 |
Manchester, UK |
1967 |
PRIEST |
|
|
Louvain, BE |
1955-67 Prof. of Reformation, Notre Dame U |
Huntley, Francis14 |
1912 |
Berkeley, Cal. |
1968 Vietnam |
Navy, 4 yrs |
|
UC Berkeley MA 1947 |
UC Berkeley PhD 1949 |
St Mary’s Coll. Cal, NAVY |
Gayet, Robert Lacour15 |
1896 |
Paris, France |
1989 |
WW I |
|
|
|
|
Iggers, Georg Gerson16 |
1926 |
Hamburg, Germany |
2016 |
REFUGEE |
|
|
U Chicago |
Arkansas, Buffalo Famous historian |
Jung-Inglessis, Eva-Maria17 |
1920 |
Berlin, Germany |
2007 |
REFUGEE |
|
|
Rome |
Georgetown, then Rome |
Lagattuta, Charles A |
1922 |
Boston, Mass |
? |
Army |
|
St. John’s, Mod. Europ. Hist. |
|
? |
Lewis, Anthony18 |
1913 |
Boston, Mass |
? |
|
Boston Teacher’s College M Ed |
|
U Michigan, 1946 |
Prof. Detroit 1938 – 44 |
McCormick, Patrick J |
1925? |
|
|
US AF 1943-46 |
|
Fordham, MA 1949 |
NYU cand. PhD |
|
McCoy, Donald19 |
1928 |
|
1996 |
Army Signal Corps |
|
U Chicago, 1949 |
AU, DC 1954 |
National Archives, U Kansas (disting. Prof) 1957 |
McGarry, Daniel Doyle20 |
1907 |
Los Angeles, Cal. |
1999 |
Marine Corps Reserve 1943-46 |
Immaculate Heart College, LA |
UCLA 1938 |
UCLA 1940
|
Prof. St. Louis |
McNeill, John
|
|
|
|
|
1938? |
|
|
|
Quay, Eugene21 |
1892 |
Washington, DC |
1972 |
WW I |
St Mary’s 1909 |
CUA 1913 |
|
Lawyer, Georgetown Law Journal |
Rock, Thomas Francis |
1923 |
|
|
Army Field Infantry |
Columbia 1948 |
M. A. Columbia, 1949 |
Ph D cand. Columbia 1950 |
|
Roohan, James E |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ph D Yale 195222 |
Ass. Prof. Iowa City PhD published only in 1976 |
Skrzypek, Stanisław Tadeusz23 |
1911 |
|
2007 |
Polish Army, Soviet Army REFUGEE |
|
|
Fordham 1955 |
|
Strott, Howard J24 |
1921 |
Baltimore, MD |
2004 |
Army Air Force |
Loyola, Balt. 1945
|
St Louis 1947 |
|
School Principal, Baltimore |
Tierney, Brian25 |
|
UK |
|
Royal Air Force |
|
|
Cambridge, UK 1951 |
CUA 1951-59, Cornell |
Trimble, William Raleigh26 |
1913 |
Portland, OR |
2002 |
|
|
Chicago 1944 |
Harvard 1950 |
Loyola, 1955-80 Reed College |
Wade, Hugh Mason27 |
1913 |
|
1986 |
|
|
|
|
CUA 1951 Embassy U Rochester, Canadian Stud. |
Wallach, Luitpold28 |
1910 |
Munich, Germany |
1981 |
Refugee, Concentration camp |
|
|
Tubingen 1932 (Mediev. H), Cornell 1947 (Classics) |
Rabbi, Prof. Oregon, Oklah., CUNY |
Winter, William L29 |
1916 |
Ackley, Iowa |
|
|
|
|
UCLA 1945 |
Prof. Kansas U |
1https://www.hardestyfuneralhome.com/obituary/Harold-Aisley/Annapolis-MD/328019
3https://archive.org/stream/biographic ;
4http://www.archives.nd.edu/Scholastic/VOL_0092/VOL_0092_ISSUE_0003.pdf
5https://www.nassh.org/honors-addresses/
Born in Bloomsbury, NJ, grew up in Pennsylvania.
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00221473.1972.10617265?journalCode=ujrd18
6Bobula was an important representative of the Hungarian Conservative Womens’ Movement in 1920s and 1930s Hungary, cf. Cf. Papp, Claudia. " Die Kraft der weiblichen Seele": Feminismus in Ungarn, 1918-1941. Vol. 25. LIT Verlag Münster, 2004. Uj Magyar Eletrajzi Lexikon, Daughter of architect, studied history, 1923 PhD since 1939 Privatdoz. Geschichte in Budapest Debrecen, active in Female Student Movement of 1920s, 1924-26 at Bryn Mawr College, 1926 Ref. in Ministry of Culture (resp. for female university dormitories), Adjunct for Sociology in Bp. Ida Bobula, 1933-44 led a female student dorm in Bp., 1947 emigration to USA, 1947 -48 adj. at New Jersey Women’s College, 1960 – led the information branch of the World Confederation of the Organization of the Teaching Profession, since 1967 adjunct at Limestone College, Gaffney, SC. Publications La femme Hongroise, Budapest 1937, Origin of the Hungarian Nation, Gainesville, 1966.
7Brewer, James Fitzgerald was born on November 20, 1916 in Baltimore. Son of Stephen Retalic and Mary Honora (Fitzgerald) Brewer. Bachelor of Arts cum laude, LaSalle College, 1938. Master of Arts, Niagara University, 1939. Doctor of Philosophy, George Washington University, 1967. Instructor history Amherst College, Massachusetts, 1945-1946. Instructor history Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, 1946-1947, adjunct professor, 1947-1962. Associate professor United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland, 1947-1962. Adjunct professor Loyola College, Baltimore, since 1948, advisor, dean advisor, since 1985. Instructor history Amherst College, Massachusetts, 1945-1946. Instructor history Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, 1946-1947, adjunct professor, 1947-1962. Contributor articles to professional journals. Editor: Maryland 350 A History of Religious Toleration, 1984. Served with United States Naval Reserve, 1940, United States Marine Corps Reserve, 1941. Member American Association of University Professors (past president Maryland Conference since 1967, past vice president since 1979), Six Napoleons. Club: Army-Navy (Washington). https://prabook.com/web/james_fitzgerald.brewer/1077685
8Ziegler wrote Doehler on Nov 6, 1949, that he could not offer him a summer course because Dr Degenhard was teaching Early Modern History. https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/bs-xpm-2004-01-16-0401160016-story.html
Edward A. Doehler, who joined the faculty of Loyola College as the school's only history professor and taught there for 55 years, died Monday at the Stella Maris rehabilitation center in Timonium of complications after surgery for a perforated ulcer. He was 94. Dr. Doehler was the oldest living alumnus of Loyola High School, where he graduated in 1926, his wife said. Four years later, he graduated from Loyola College, and in 1996 he received the college's highest honor - an honorary doctorate. For decades of Loyola College students, the answer to "Did you have Doehler?" was "Yes." "He was just Loyola through and through," said Michael J. Goff, the college's vice president for development and college relations. "From his boyhood days until the end of his life, he was involved in Loyola every year except one." It wasn't uncommon, friends said, for someone who looked older than Dr. Doehler to approach him at a restaurant to discuss a grade he gave in the 1930s. Often, they said, the professor would remember his former student. Before moving to a residence at Stella Maris in 1996, Dr. Doehler lived for many years at the Village of Cross Keys in Baltimore, and spent time at a restored log cabin near Hereford. For 37 years, he was married to the former Catherine Byrne, a mortgage banker. "He dearly worshipped the ground that she walked on," said Jenkins Cromwell, who has known Dr. Doehler for 40 years. "They made a beautiful team." Dr. Doehler was born in New York City and moved to Baltimore with his family as a 3-year-old. After graduating from Loyola College, he left the school for one year to earn his master's in history at Georgetown University. He returned to Loyola as its only history professor from 1931 to 1947. He was one of the college's first teachers who was not a Jesuit priest, Dr. Goff said. Dr. Doehler attended Georgetown University while he taught at Loyola, earning a doctorate in history in 1935. Friends said he had a personal teaching style, lacing his lessons with anecdotes and photos from his travels. Though he was trained in medieval history, he became known for his knowledge of Latin American history - including research conducted on pre-Columbian native cultures and the modern problems of countries there. Dr. Doehler joined the faculty at Mount St. Agnes College in 1947 and taught there until 1971, while also teaching at Loyola's evening college. He recently received the Mount St. Agnes Alumnae Association Lifetime Achievement Award. Upon leaving Mount St. Agnes, he rejoined the history faculty at Loyola, where he taught until 1986. "I am confident his legacy here at Loyola will long remain for his distinguished achievements and devotion to his alma mater," said Loyola's president, the Rev. Harold Ridley. Dr. Doehler, named a professor emeritus, was a former alumni association president, received the medal given to outstanding alumni and was president of the alumni club for graduates of more than 50 years. In that role, he was known for writing dozens of personal letters to members. Whenever a history department job candidate arrived at Loyola, professors made sure he met Dr. Doehler. "He had kind of a light that shone out of his eyes," said John Breihan, chairman of the history department. "It was quite usual after speaking with [Dr. Doehler] that you felt better about yourself." Dr. Doehler was a member of several historical and church groups, including the Knights of Malta. He was one of the original members of the Serra Club of Baltimore, a Catholic organization that promotes vocations for the priesthood. He also loved music. For his 94th birthday, his wife bought him a ukulele. Since 1990, Dr. Doehler had served as a board member on the Basilica of the Assumption Historic Trust - the group directing the restoration of the nation's first Roman Catholic cathedral. Others involved in the project said it played to four of his strongest passions - history, Baltimore, architecture and the Catholic Church. Trust executive vice president Robert J. Lancelotta Jr. said Dr. Doehler was the group's "wise adviser." A funeral Mass was offered Wednesday at Stella Maris. In addition to his wife, Dr. Doehler is survived by two nieces.
9Rev James L. Burke, SJ, Chair of the Dept. of History at Boston College asked Ziegler whether they had a summer teaching position for James J. Doherty, who would be promoted to assistant professor at Boston College in Septmeber. (Letter March 7, 1950). Ziegler replied they did not have any positions open. http://bcm.bc.edu/fullstory/from-bc-to-vietnam (Did he serve in Vietnam?)
10Francis Dvornik (Chomýž, 14 August 1893 – Chomýž, 4 November 1975), in Czech František Dvorník, was a priest and academic, and one of the leading twentieth-century experts on Slavic and Byzantine history, and on relations between the churches of Rome and Constantinople. Dvornik taught at Charles University in Prague, the Collège de France, and Harvard University.Arguably Dvornik's greatest contribution to research lay in rehabilitation, from a Catholic standpoint, of the Byzantine patriarch and writer, Photius.[citation needed] In 1956 Harvard University Press published a collection of Essays Dedicated to F. Dvornik on the Occasion of his 60th Birthday (Harvard Slavic studies no. 2) Born Chomyz, Moravia, Theolo. Olmouc 1916, Charles U Prague, Church History 1925 – 1938 London, 1946 Birckbeck Lecturer, Trinity Coll, Cambridge, UK. (Wikipedia)
11Malcom Freiberg specialized in American history, Phd from Brown, Army v et. Born in Newburyport, Mass, December 24, 1919 . Editor: Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society 1976 (died 2011) https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/bostonglobe/obituary.aspx?n=malcolm-freiberg&pid=152266062 He received his B.A. from Middlebury College and his PhD. from Brown University. Emeritus Editor of Publications at the Massachusetts Historical Society and author of "Prelude to Purgatory: Thomas Hutchinson in Provincial Massachusetts Politics, 1760-1770", and many sketches of Sibley's Harvard Graduates. Malcolm and Mildred Freiberg Fellowship This award supports research relating to reading and publishing. Massachusetts Colonial Society https://www.colonialsociety.org/search?keywords=Freiberg
12Catherine Mary Fennelly, 100 years old, died at her home in Ashlar Village in Wallingford, Connecticut on January 12, 2019. "Kate" was born on October 24, 1918 on Staten Island, New York. She was the daughter of Patrick Henry Fennelly and Catherine Agnes Schrowang Fennelly. She graduated from Notre Dame of Staten Island (later St. John's University). She earned her master's degree in History from Columbia University in New York City, and her Ph.D. from Yale University. Most of her working life was as Director of Research and Publications at Old Sturbridge Village in Sturbridge (OSV), in Sturbridge, Massachusetts. She was predeceased by brothers Richard E. Fennelly and Joseph P. Fennelly. She is survived by her brother, Robert F. Fennelly (Eleanor Ann) and many nieces and nephews. Her infectious smile and dry sense of humor will always be fondly remembered. On Saturday, January 19th at 10:00 a.m. there will be a Mass in her honor at the Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Catholic Church in Hamden, CT. Burial will be at St. Mary's Cemetery on Evergreen Ave. in Hamden. Arrangements through Beecher & Bennett Funeral Service, 2300 Whitney Ave., Hamden. To view Catherine's full obituary or to send a condolence to her family, visit www.beecherandbennett.com. Published in The New Haven Register on Jan. 16, 2019 1963, Notre Dame U: Sturbridge Village. Catherine, who received her doctorate from Yale University, is historian at the restoration village. Ziegler wrote Fennelly on Nov 28, 1950, that he wanted her to teach a summer course at “Catholic University branch summer school at San Rafael, California.”
13Ziegler wrote Hughes on May 1950 telling him that the Department was “enthusiastic about the possibility” that Rev. Hughes would join it for a year. In the Catholic Historical Review of 1921, Hughes published “History teaching at Louvain”. In 1956, Hughesbecame a member of Notre Dame History faculty. “Father Hughes has published three volumes of his History of the Church. He also has published The Reformation in England in three volumes … and several other works.”
http://archives.nd.edu/pr/pdf/PR_1956_02.pdf Hughes, Rev. Philip, A History of the Church, Vol. I-III. London: Sheed and Ward, 1934 & 1979. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Hughes_(historian)
Hughes was born in Gorton, Manchester, on 11 May 1895. He received his early education at St Augustine's RC School, Manchester prior to being admitted to St Bede's College, Manchester in September 1907, graduating at midsummer 1912. He then studied at St Cuthbert's College, Ushaw and Leeds Seminary, where he was ordained deacon on 16 June 1917, prior to continuing his studies at Louvain University where he received his degree in 1921. He was ordained as a priest in 1920.After ordination Hughes spent three years in Rome, undertaking research. In 1923, he was appointed history professor at St Thomas College in Minnesota, United States. The following year he was recalled to the Diocese of Salford and began parish work as curate at Salford Cathedral, moving to St Chad's, Cheetham Hill in 1925, St Anne, Fairfield in 1929 and finally to St Thomas of Canterbury, Higher Broughton in 1930. In 1931, Hughes moved to London, to lecture at the new Catholic Centre for Higher Studies, founded by Frank Sheed. In 1934 he was appointed archivist for the Archdiocese of Westminster. He remained in London until 1955 when he was offered a post as professor of reformation history at the University of Notre Dame. He was awarded the title of monsignor in 1957. Hughes died in America on 6 October 1967 and was buried in South Bend, Indiana, United States.
14Letter from May 8, 1949. Prof. Lawrence A Harper, UC Berkeley to Ziegler. “On the suggestion of Father Cadden I am writing to recommend one of my students, Francis Huntly, for a position in your department.” Colonial American History. Ziegler answered on June 27, 1949 that “we have no place… we are well equipped in American colonial and Latin-American history. We are disinclined to take anyone onto our faculty before he has done some publications.” Huntley taught at St Mary’s College, California, then continued his career at the U. S. Navy. He fought in Korea and Vietnam where he died in 1968. The Seaborne Trade of Virginia in Mid-Eighteenth Century: Port Hampton (pp. 297-308). Francis Carroll Huntley. https://www.jstor.org/stable/4245787.
15Lacour-Gayet came from a family of intellectuals, teachers, and historians. His maternal grandfather was Paul Janet, a French philosopher. His father, Georges Lacour-Gayet, was a historian who published a famous biography of Talleyrand. His brother, Jacques Lacour-Gayet, was an economic historian with whom he frequently collaborated. He served as an artillery officer during World War I, for which he received the Croix de Guerre.[1] Lacour-Gayet studied at the Lycee Louis-le-Grand, l'Ecole des sciences Politiques, and the University of Paris, from which he held both a Master's and Doctorate in Law, as well as a Doctorate in Economic Science. In 1921, Lacour-Gayet was admitted to the Council of the Inspector General of Finance in France, and was subsequently named Financial Representative of France in the United States (1924-1930). He then became Director of the Economic Department for the Bank of France in 1930, before being named Chief of the Office of Inspectors General of Finance in 1939, a position he held until 1945. He was given the title of Inspecteur général honoraire des Finances.[2 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Lacour-Gayet ]
Lacour-Gayet began his teaching career in the United States in 1945 as a Lecturer in Administrative Law at The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. He began teaching at St. John's University in 1946, and was appointed Associate Professor and Chairman of the Department of History and Government in 1950. Lacour-Gayet was promoted to Professor in 1954, and remained at St. John's until 1957, when he became Professor Emeritus. He frequently taught evening classes at New York University, and during Summers at the Universite Laval. He became president of the Société des Professeurs Français en Amérique in 1953. Lacour-Gayet returned to Paris in 1957 to teach American history and literature at the Catholic Institute of Paris. He was honored in 1966 with the Homme de Lettres from la fédération des Alliances Françaises aux Etats-Unis.[3] St. John's University awarded him an Honorary Doctor of Letters on March 23, 1964.[4]
Beginning in the 1920s, Lacour-Gayet was a regular contributor to Revue des deux mondes, Revue de Paris, Revue d'histoire diplomatique, and L'Actualité économique, among other publications. In the United States, he contributed articles to the Proceedings of the Academy of Political Science in the City of New York and the American Journal of Economics and Sociology, as well as book reviews to the Catholic Historical Review. He was the author, co-author, or editor of nineteen books, ranging from economic histories of France to popular histories of Canada, South Africa, Australia, and the United States.
16Georg Gerson Iggers (December 7, 1926 – November 26, 2017) was an American historian of modern Europe, historiography, and European intellectual history. He was Distinguished Professor Emeritus at University of Buffalo. January 1949, Georg and Wilma had teaching positions in Akron, OH , Wilma also taught at a Jesuit John Carroll University in Cleveland, Wilma was the first non-Christian (she was Jewish) who taught there. In 1950, Georg and his wife Wilma received teaching positions at Philander Smith College, Little Rock, Arkansas (cf. Two Lives in Uncertain Times: Facing the Challenges of the 20th Century as .. By Wilma Iggers, Georg G. Iggers.)
http://www.buffalo.edu/ubnow/working/obituaries.host.html/content/shared/university/news/ub-reporter-articles/briefs/2017/11/obit-georg-iggers.detail.html Iggers wrote Ziegler on July 30, 1949, “Although I have been asked to stay at the university of Akron, I am very eager to teach in a school or in or near a city with adequate library and graduate study facilities.”
17Eva-Maria Jung-Inglessis (1920- 2007), PhD candidate at Notre Dame, Ziegler: no reason to work at CUA
http://www.archives.nd.edu/Scholastic/VOL_0090/VOL_0090_ISSUE_0016.pdf
“The Notre Dame Scholastic”, Feb. 18, 1949 Woman Researcher Named To Mediaeval Institute Staff. A new member has been added to the staff of Notre Dame's Mediaeval Institute, the Rev. Gerald B. Phelan, director of the Institute said last week. She is Dr. Eva Maria Jung, of Berlin, Germany, who has been appointed to the historical staff of the Institute as research instructor and senior librarian. Dr. Jung, who began her new position Tuesday, holds a degree in paleography (the science of deciphering ancient writings) from the Vatican library in Rome. She received her doctorate in history from the University of Rome, and has also studied at the University of Berlin, the University of Freiburg-in-Breisgau, and the Universities of Munich and Geneva. Eva-Maria Jung published "On the Nature of Italian Evangelism in Sixteenth Century Italy," Journal a/the History a/Ideas 14 (1953): 514. In 1950, she taught at Georgetown University. She was married by Pope John XXIII who had known her husband, the Greek historian Emilios Inglessis, who knew the Pope from his time as Apostolic Delegate in Istanbul. The couple live in Rome until Jung’s death in 2007.
18LEWIS, Anthony (1913), B. in Boston, B. A. 1934 Boston M. Ed. Boston Teacher’s College 1935 1937-43 Instructor U Detroit; 1943 – 44 Ass. Prof. ; 1944 – 46 ; PhD U Michigan 1946; (not to be mixed up with Pulitzer prize winning journalist Anthony Lewis, born 1927 in NYC).
19Donald R. McCoy was born January 18, 1928 in Chicago, Illinois. He served with the U.S. Army signal corps at the end of World War II, returning to civilian life in 1947. He thereafter received his B.A. from the University of Denver in 1949, his M.A. from the University of Chicago in 1949, and his Ph.D. in 1954 from American University. While working on his doctorate, McCoy worked as an archivist with the National Archives of the United States, in the Department of the Interior's records, and was on the faculty of State University of New York College at Cortland. McCoy joined the faculty of the University of Kansas in 1957 in the History Department, reaching full Professor status in 1964. He was named a University Distinguished Professor in 1974 and retired in 1995. McCoy's main research interests were in 20th century United States history, particularly political history and the institution of the U.S. Presidency. His published books included Angry Voices: Left of Center Politics in the New Deal Era, Landon of Kansas, Calvin Coolidge: The Quiet President, Quest and Response: Minority Rights and the Truman Administration, and The Presidency of Harry S. Truman. At the same time, McCoy held a deep interest in archives and archival work; his book The National Archives: America's Ministry of Documents, 1934-1968 (1973) won him the Society of American Archivists' Waldo Gifford Leland prize. McCoy also served on several advisory committees for the National Archives and for the Harry S. Truman and Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Libraries. He helped establish the University Archives at the University of Kansas and the master's program in historical administration and museum studies at KU. McCoy also served as president of the Kansas Historical Society from 1981-1982, in addition to several years of service on the KSHS board of directors and membership on the editorial advisory board for Kansas History: A Journal of the Central Plains. Donald R. McCoy died in Lawrence, KS on November 12, 1996. Donald R McCoy Collection, University of Kansas Libraries, Kenneth Spencer Research Library.
20McGarry, Daniel Doyle was born on November 10, 1907 in Los Angeles, California, United States. Son of Daniel F. and Ana (Doyle) McGarry. Bachelor in History, Immaculate Heart College, Los Angeles, 1931. Master of Arts in History, University of California at Los Angeles, 1938. Doctor of Philosophy in History, University of California at Los Angeles, 1940.
Instructor history and philosophy, Mount St. Joseph College, Cincinnati, 1940-1943; instructor history and philosophy, The Athenaeum of Ohio, 1940-1943; assistant professor of history, Indiana U., Bloomington, 1946-1950; from associate professor to professor of history, St. Saint Louis University, 1950-1976; executive director, Ednl. Freedom Foundation, St. Louis, since 1976. Research director Thomas J. White Ednl. http://www.indiana.edu/~histgrad/depthist.pdf
Daniel D. McGarry (March 23, 1949)-assistant professor of History at the University of Indiana Bloomington; specializes in Medieval, Reformation, Renaissance and general European history (1945-50). https://prabook.com/web/daniel_doyle.mcgarry/417853.
“Daniel Doyle McGarry, American educational foundation administrator. Fluent in Latin, French, Spanish and German. National director, treasurer Citizens for Educational Freedom, Washington and St. Louis, since 1965. Lieutenant colonel United States Marine Corps Reserve, 1943-1946” (1949 review of “Church and State in Guatemala), in The Americas, 1950?) CHR 1976 / Association of Catholic Historians: McGarry (St Louis) His translation of The Metalogicon (1159) was the first to appear in any modern language The microfilming of the vatican manuscript library† First published: January 1958 . https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/asi.5090090108
21QUAY, Eugene (1892 in DC died 1972), B. A. 1909 St Mary’s College 1912 M. A. CUA 1913 LL. B Georgetown. 1912 Editor-in-Chief of the Georgetown Law Journal (first issue). Served in World War I. (In his CV he mentions that he never taught and has no publications! Very honest!) Quay published an article in the Georgetown Law Journal in 1960/61 on abortion On the history of Georgetown Law https://scholarship.law.georgetown.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2719&context=facpub
Eugene Quay practiced Law in Chicago, (member of American Bar) where his wife, Effie, was a newspaper journalist as well as a pro-life author and activist. Respected by his colleagues, Eugene ascended to the legal stratosphere of membership in the American Law Institute (ALI) which still today remains the most powerfully corrosive influence on America. http://www.canonlaw.info/a_tribute.htm
Quay’s wife, Effie Alley was born in 1899 in the Oklahoma Territories. She was raised as a Methodist, but after graduation from the University of Arkansas, she became and remained for many years an ardent atheist. She held several jobs as a newspaper reporter before finally moving to Chicago where she met and married a young Catholic attorney by the name of Eugene Quay in 1923. A son Paul Michael was born in the next year, and a daughter Clare four years later. Paul Quay, now a Jesuit theologian at Loyola University of Chicago and a renowned pro-life author in his own right, said that he and his sister were raised as Catholics, even though his mother at that time did not share her husband's faith. throughout those trying years, Effie constantly supported and encouraged her husband's largely unheralded efforts. And as the years passed and Eugene Quay's eyesight weakened, she took on the additional difficult task of legal research and writing under his direction, a sacrifice that enabled her husband to continue his value pro-life contributions for several more years. Finally, in 1972, after more than a dozen years of intensive work on behalf of the life issues, Eugene died.
22Roohan’s Yale dissertation “American Catholics and the Social Question, 1865-1900” was not published until 1976. In 1952, he became assistant professor at Yale, coming back from Iowa.
23Stanisław Tadeusz Skrzypek (born May 29, 1911, died on September 24, 2007) - Polish-American historian, lawyer and economist. He graduated in law (1932 - senior assistant of the Department of Economics) at the University of John Casimir in Lviv, there doctorate in economics (1935). Senior assistant at the Department of Political Economy under Stanisław Głąbiński at the Faculty of Law of UJK. From 1933 in the All-Polish Youth. Then a member of the National Party. During World War II, a participant of defense from Warsaw in 1939. After returning to Lviv (September 23, 1939), he became involved with the underground National Stronnictwo. November 19, 1939 Dr. Stanisław Skrzypek was arrested by the NKVD. He was imprisoned initially in Lviv (until February 1940) and then in the Moscow Lubianka, from December 22, 1944 in the prison in Butyrki. In January 1941 he was sentenced to 10 years in a labor camp. He was in the Wiatłag camp in the district of Kirov. Released as a result of the amnesty on September 2, 1941. Then he was a lieutenant of the Polish Army in the USSR and in the 2nd Corps. In the US since 1951. He defended his doctorate in history at Fordham University in New York in 1955 under the direction of Oskar Halecki (The Soviet elections in Eastern Poland, October 1939) [1]. Librarian at the Polish Research Center at the Polish government in exile in London. In the years 1951-1956 an analyst at the Free Europe Committee in New York. From 1951-1955 he lived in New York, where he worked in the Polish section of the Department of Press and Publication of the Free Europe Committee. From 1955, he lived in Washington, DC, where he initially worked in the editorial office of 'Głos Ameryka'. In the years 1956-1981, he was an analyst at the United States Information Agency (USIA) in Washington. Member of the the Polish Scientific Institute in New York (Secretary General of 1953-1955), Polish Veterans of World War II (president of 1970-1972). The first editor of The Polish Review. At the end of his life he lived in Portland, Maine [2]
24Howard J. Strott, Homeland, MD. (Letter, June 12, 1947 “specializes in American history in the hemispheric sense”, graduated 1938 at Loyola High School (MD), studied at Johns Hopkins until 1941 to enlist in Army Air Corps. 1945 B. A. at Loyola College, MD. M. A. St Louis U (1947), Air force vet. Worked for the Maryland Historical Society (library) and the Maryland Historical Magazine. Later he retired as Baltimore public school principal. Died 2004 in Baltimore. “After studying at the National University in Santiago, Chile, and owning and operating a restaurant there, he returned to Baltimore in 1949 and began teaching history at Harbor View Elementary School in Brooklyn. He was promoted to assistant principal at the old Lake Montebello Elementary School and later was principal of Guilford and Oliver Cromwell elementary schools. He was principal of William Paca Elementary at his retirement in 1981.” https://archive.org/stream/marylandhistoric42brow/marylandhistoric42brow_djvu.txt; https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/bs-xpm-2004-08-03-0408030055-story.html.
25Brian Tierney, (many) corresponding letters with Ziegler in early 1950s offering a position at CUA, but Tierney cannot accept in order to finish his PhD, however other letter discuss his obtaining a visa to come to the US from England. Letters in 1951 suggest he has accepted a role as an instructor, including a form allegedly filled out by the dean for his appointment in 1951. In 2003, CUA awarded Tierney with the CUA Medal for Excellence in Scholarship and Leadership in Religious Studies. Brian Tierney served in the Royal Air Force on heavy bombers during World War II. After the war was over he studied medieval history at the University of Cambridge, where he received his doctoral degree in 1951. His first teaching job was at The Catholic University of America. In 1959 he moved to Cornell University, where he held the Bryce and Edith M. Bowmar Professorship of Humanistic Studies. Tierney is a past president of the Catholic Historical Association. Among his many publications are “The Crisis of Church and State, 1050-1300,” “Foundations of the Conciliar Theory: The Contribution of the Medieval Canonists from Gratian to the Great Schism,” “The Idea of Natural Rights: Studies on Natural Rights, Natural Law and Church Law 1150-1625,” “Medieval Poor Law: A Sketch of Canonical Theory and Its Application in England,” and “Rights, Laws and Infallibility in Medieval Thought.”
26William Raleigh Trimble was born in 1913 in Portland, Oregon, the son of William A. Trimble and grandson of W. F. Trimble. After teaching in public high schools and at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville, he was a professor at Loyola University in Chicago from 1955 to 1980. He specialized in English history. In 1964, he published a book, "The Catholic Laity in Elizabethan England, 1558-1603." Following his retirement, he returned to Portland, where he died in 2002. http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv161010
William Raleigh Trimble ’37, December 22, 2002, in Portland. Following receipt of his bachelor’s degree in history from Reed, William taught in public high schools, and then went on to earn an MA from the University of Chicago in 1944 and a PhD from Harvard University in 1950 in the field of history. His teaching career included work as an instructor at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville from 1948 to 1951, and as professor at Loyola University in Chicago from 1955 to 1980, after which he retired as an emeritus professor of history and returned to Portland. William also studied at Oxford and at the Institute of Historical Research of the University of London. His academic focus was in English history, specifically the Tudor-Stuart era. His book, The Catholic Laity in Elizabethan England, 1558-1603, was published by the Belknap Press of Harvard University in 1964. Appeared in Reed magazine: May 2003.
27WADE, Hugh Mason (1913-86) many corresponding letters between Zeigler and Wade, culminating in his appointment in 1950 to replace Richard Purcell. He left CUA in 1951, serving as Publ. Aff. Officer at the US Embassy in Ottawa.
1946-1948 Lecturer, Laval University; edited The Journals of Francis Parkman (1948)
1950 Appointed Professor, Catholic University of America
1951 Married Eloise Bergland
1951-1953 Foreign Service Reserve Officer; Public Affairs Officer, United States Embassy, Ottawa
1953 Received honorary M.A. degree from McGill University
1954 Gray Lecturer, University of Toronto
1955 Published The French Canadians, 1760-1945
1955-1965 Director, Canadian Studies program, University of Rochester
28Barbara Wallach. Luitpold Wallach: A Biography. Illinois Classical Studies. University of Illinois Press. Volume 42, Number 2, Fall 2017, pp. 269-272. “After 1933, unable to find or keep university positions in Germany because of the political situation, many German historians emigrated to the united states. Luitpold Wallach was among the younger refugees who had their doctoral degrees but could not expect to hold academic positions under the Nazi regime and its worsening anti-semitic agenda.1
Born in Munich on Feb. 6, 1910, Luitpold Wallach grew up in the schwabian village of Laupheim (studying latin, Greek, and Hebrew from age six until he left to attend the Gymnasium in Ulm on the Danube). He was a student at the university of Berlin and at the Hochschule der Wissenschaft des Judentums during 1929–30 and then at the University of Tübingen from 1931–33, receiving his D. Phil. in november 1932, with a dissertation titled Studien zur Chronik Bertholds von Zwiefalten, directed by Prof. Dr. eric König.2 With no academic appointment open to him because he was Jewish, he undertook (1933–38) a two-fold pattern of research and publication that would define his career, i.e., dividing his time between medieval history and the history of Judaism. He also turned to the other profession for which he was trained and served as rabbi in ulm/laupheim (september 1933–March 1937) and then (1937–39) as the last Bezirksrabbiner (district rabbi) of Göppingen (Württemberg), until he was imprisoned there by the Nazis and sent to dachau concentration Camp (1938–39). Strenuous efforts by friends and his sister Sally, who was residing in New York, procured his release from Dachau, and he left Germany and crossed into France with little more than three papers that he was ready to publish. After the war, he would learn that his father, whom he had last seen in Dachau, had been killed at KZ Auschwitz, his younger sister Betti had died at KZ Stutthoff, but his mother had died in Laupheim, despite the efforts of neighbors who took the risk of trying to help her, and was buried there. [End Page 269]
Before leaving Germany (in August 1939), since publication by him in Germany was no longer an option with the nazis in power, Wallach had left his first reconstruction of the Zweifalten chronicles of Berthold and Ortlieb with König to be published when the times allowed. König died in 1940, however, and, in 1941, the chronicles appeared in Germany with the names of König and Karl otto Müller as editors. Subsequently, in 1957, Wallach published his own revised and enlarged edition of the Berthold chronicle with a statement from his former teacher Prof. Dr. Heinrich Dannenbauer (medievalist at tübingen) and d. dr. max miller (Director of the Württemberg state Archives) acknowledging his position as the original author.3
After arriving in the United States in 1939, Wallach served as a rabbi first, ironically enough, in the segregated south, first in Florence, AL, and then in Knoxville, TN, where he became a citizen of the United States (1947). He wanted to leave the rabbinate and pursue an academic career, but his German doctorate was in a sense a liability so soon after the war. His command of English was superb, but the slight German accent was still there. Further, academia was not free from the taint of anti-Semitism.4 Hence, between 1940–48, he served as a rabbi, first in Ithaca, NY, then in the Syracuse University Chapel, and finally in Hamilton, ON, until he earned his second doctorate, a PhD in classics from Cornell University in 1947, with Harry Caplan as his dissertation director. Finding a permanent academic position was still not an easy task. His appointments as an assistant professor between 1951–1962 took him as far afield as the University of Oregon, the University of Oklahoma, and then Harpur College (SUNY Endicott in Binghamton, NY). Through all of those years, he kept up his research, publishing two books, fourteen articles, and twenty-three book reviews, with most of his writing done at Cornell's libraries in the summers. He also was always finding time to work on what was intended to be the major achievement...
29Winter wrote Ziegler on April 13, 1949, asking for a position at CUA. He was assistant Prof. at University of Kansas, Lawrence at the time. He wrote his PhD at UCLA (1945) on the Hanseatic league and was specialized in the history of the Baltic. He later taught at Central Connecticut State College, New Britain, Conn.