Throughout his 65-year career, McNulty acted as the moving force behind the creation of much of the foundation of Paterson, New Jersey's Catholic churches and institutions, including St. John (later in 1937 upon that Diocese's formation renamed Cathedral Church of the Diocese of Paterson), St. Joseph, St. Agnes, St. Mary, Our Lady of Victories, St. Michael and St. Ann's Churches, Holy Sepulcher Cemetery, St. Joseph's Hospital, St. Agnes Institute Girls' School, St. Francis Home for Working Girls, the Home for the Indigent Poor and Aged, Mt. St. Joseph's Home for Boys and convents for Dominican and orders of teaching sisters.[2]
1880 Garret Rock May Day riot
McNulty was so revered by the Irish and German Catholic communities of Paterson that his appearance at the 1880 Garret Rock May Day rioting – at request of then Paterson Mayor Graham and Sheriff Van Voorhies – was enough to diffuse the mob to the point where the constabulary could act to end the rioting.[3][4]
Later life
In 1908, McNulty was presented a purse of $24,000 for his personal use on the occasion of his golden jubilee in the priesthood. He used the funds to build the Mount St. Joseph Home for Boys. Throughout his service as a parish priest, he would often use his stipend to help feed hungry families within his parish or help pay the college tuition of poor parish youth. He was also known for maintaining the church's food and housing funds by wresting pay envelopes from reprobate parishioners before they could spend them in Paterson's bars. It is said that Paterson's barkeeps came to fear the Reverend Father more than they did the police or mob.[2]
Ku Klux Klan funeral protest
When McNulty died in 1922 at the age of 93, Paterson Mayor Frank J. Van Noort declared the day of his funeral a holiday, closing both parochial and secular schools and ordering flags to be flown at half mast. This was met with protests from the Ku Klux Klan on the grounds that such honors violated separation of church and state.[5]
^Maxine Lurie and Marc Mappen, eds., Encyclopedia of New Jersey (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2004), 495. ISBN0813533252, 9780813533254
^ abCappio, Alfred. "Dean William McNulty". The Passaic County Historical Society. Archived from the original on 20 August 2003. Retrieved 9 August 2022.
^J. Bilby, H. Ziegler and J. Madden, Hidden History of New Jersey The History Press (2011) ISBN1609494636, 9781609494636 "Trouble On Garret Mountain" p 70–76.
^The National Police Gazette: New York, 15 May 1880.
^"Ku Klux Protest Honor to Late Dean", New York Times, 22 June 1922.