Cambridge Encyclopedia :: Cambridge Encyclopedia Vol. 57

Patrick F(rancis) Healy

Catholic priest and educator, born in Jones Co, Georgia, USA. A former slave, he was a brother of Bishop James Augustine Healy and, like him, was sent north to be educated in freedom. He was ordained a Jesuit (1864) after studying abroad. Besides teaching philosophy at Georgetown College (1866–9), he served (1873–82) as its president, greatly expanding the college through fund-raising. He largely concealed his background from contemporaries.

Father Patrick Francis Healy (February 2, 1834 - January 10, 1910) was born in Macon, Georgia to Irish-American plantation owner Michael Healy and mulatto slave Mary Eliza. Michael Healy acknowledged his children by Mary Eliza, and since their children were technically slaves he arranged for them to leave Georgia and move to the North, where they would become free. Healy sent his older sons to a Quaker school in Flushing, New York, when he heard of a new Jesuit College, the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts, he sent his three oldest sons and Patrick to study there in 1844.

Following Patrick's graduation in 1850, he entered a Jesuit order and continued his studies.

Patrick Healy's influence on Georgetown was so far-reaching that he is often referred to as the school's "second founder," following Archbishop John Carroll. Healy helped transform the small nineteenth century college into a major university for the twentieth century. The most visible result of Healy's presidency was the construction of a large building begun in 1877 and first used in 1881, a building named in his honour as Healy Hall.

Healy left the College in 1882 and travelled extensively through the United States and Europe often in the company of his brother James, later returning in 1908 to the campus infirmary where he died.

Patrick Francis Healy and his siblings were among many successful Americans of the early 19th century to openly acknowledge partial African or "Black" ancestry. Patrick Francis was the first known American of acknowledged African ancestry to earn a PhD, the first to become a Jesuit priest, and the first to become president of a major university in the United States. His brother James Augustine Healy became Bishop of Portland, Maine. His brother Michael Morris Healy, Jr. His brother Alexander Sherwood Healy also became a priest, director of the seminary in Troy, New York, and rector of the Cathedral in Boston.

Despite their partial African ancestry, all of the Healys were accepted into U.S. society as "White" Irish Americans. O'Toole, the biographer of Coast Guard Captain Michael Healy:

He repeatedly referred to white settlers [in Alaska] as "our people," and was even able to pass this racial identity on to a subsequent generation.

In the society of the times, it is unlikely that the Healys would have enjoyed such success had they been of African appearance, or had they publicly self-identified as members of the African-American community, rather than as "White" Irish Americans with some African ancestry. Healy, Patrick Francis. John Early, S.J.
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President of Georgetown University
1873-1882
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Succeeded by:
Rev.

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