Thomas Mulledy
- Name
- Thomas Mulledy
- Given Name
- Thomas
- Family Name
- Mulledy
- Birth Date
- 8 December 1794
- Death Date
- 20 July 1860
- Sex
- Male
- Description
-
Born the son of Irish immigrants in Romney, Virginia (Hampshire County, present-day West Virginia) on August 12, 1795, Thomas F. Mulledy became one of the most significant leaders of the Catholic Church during the antebellum period. Educated at Georgetown College, Mulledy entered the White Marsh novitiate in Maryland on February 5, 1815 and ultimately returned to Georgetown to pursue his scholasticate studies and teach at Georgetown. In 1820, the Jesuit General Luigi Fortis selected Mulledy as one of several American scholasticates to study in Rome and prepare them to lead the consolidation of the Society in the United States.
After he returned in 1828, Mulledy helped Peter Kenney, SJ, the Special Visitor assigned by Jesuit General Jan Roothan and Superior of the Mission of Maryland, to prepare a report that evaluated the operations of Jesuit schools, churches, and plantations. As Rector of Georgetown College (1828-1837) and Consultor (1828-1837), Mulledy strongly advocated that the Society sell the enslaved people who labored on the plantations to help finance the expansion of the newly-formed Maryland Province. Although this proposal divided the order, in 1836 Jesuit General Jan Roothan approved the sale, stipulating that families should not be separated and that their religious needs should be met. Soon after his appointment as Provincial in October 1837, Mulledy began to take steps to execute the plan. In June 1838, Mulledy arranged the sale of 314 men, women, and children to Jesse Batey, whose land holdings included a 2,800-acre estate in Maringouin, Iberville Parish, Louisiana, and Henry Johnson, a member of the U.S. Congress who was a former governor of Louisiana. Mulledy personally went with Johnson and local sheriffs to gather the enslaved men, women, and children from the four plantations and to transport them to the ship in Alexandria that took them to Louisiana. Without authorization from the Society, Mulledy used $24,000, most of the down payment for the sale, to reduce the debts of Georgetown College.
The controversy resulting from spectacle of the sale, the separation of families, and the unauthorized appropriation of money to the college led Mulledy to resign his position as Provincial and to travel to Rome to meet personally with Roothan who in turn assigned Mulledy to work with the English-speaking community in Nice, France.
Nevertheless Mulledy retained his reputation within the Maryland Province as a preacher, educator, and administrator. By November 1843, Mulledy returned to the United States to become the first president of Holy Cross College in Worcester, Mass. Nearly two years later, in September 1845, he returned to Georgetown College and served as its Rector until August 1848. Thereafter, he was stationed in Philadelphia; Frederick, Md.; Worcester, Mass.; Washington, D.C.; and Baltimore. He died at Georgetown on July 20, 1860. - Place of Significance
- Georgetown College (Washington, District of Columbia)
- Same As
- Thomas F. Mulledy (Wikipedia)
- Thomas F. Mulledy, SJ Papers
- Mulledy, Thomas F., 1794-1860 (LCNAF)
- Thomas F. Mulledy (Wikidata)
- Source Resource
- http://onthesegrounds.georgetown.domains/omeka/api/items/58
- Occupation
- Religious
Linked resources
Part of Thomas Mulledy