MacRory was born in 1862 in Ballygawley, and she was one of ten children of Francis MacRory,[1] a farmer, and his second wife, Rose (née Montague) MacRory.[2] Her elder brother Joseph MacRory was born in 1861;[3] he joined the priesthood in 1885 and would become a cardinal.[1]
She became a novice of the Society of the Sacred Heart of Jesus in Roehampton in 1881. She was sent briefly to France before she arrived on 4 November 1885 at Sydney.[4] There she was a teacher at the school that was part of the Convent of the Sacred Heart, Rose Bay (now part of Kincoppal School). She was professed in 1890.[2]
She became headmistress of the school in Sydney's Rose Bay.[4]
In 1923, she began her association with the University of Sydney when she opened a house for women students on City Road in Darlington. She was then sent to Rome. She returned from Europe where she had been reunited with her elder brother, Joseph, to lead the construction of a hall that would become Sancta Sophia College at the University of Sydney.[2] The hall was built on land owned by St John's College and some thought it was just an extension. In fact, there is a plaque dedicating the building to St John. She chose the college motto of "Walk in Wisdom" and the college's crest that features "Truth" and "Wisdom".[4] The college opened with her as principal in 1926, and the following year a new wing was added.[2]
^ abcdShanahan, Mary, "Margaret MacRory (1862–1931)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 2024-01-28