In office, he began a revitalization of the nationwide alumni network from the disparate, regional chapters, re-established the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences as a standalone school within the university, and significantly expanded Georgetown's athletic programs. After, he became the pastor of Holy Trinity Church in Georgetown, and then pastor of St. Andrew-on-Hudson. Towards the end of his life, he returned to Georgetown, where he died.
In 1923, O'Leary became the chief librarian of Georgetown. He made significant improvements to the library, including expanding access to the library to alumni, creating a reference desk, and establishing a system for interlibrary loans.[7] He began in 1935 to comprehensively catalogue all of the university's 177,000 volumes of books according to the Library of Congress Control Number. This signified the first time that the library's holdings in various subjects had all been organized together.[8]
President of Georgetown University
The end of Coleman Nevils' second term as president of Georgetown University was due in 1934. However, the faculty and alumni of Georgetown petitioned the Jesuit Superior General in Rome to allow Nevils to remain for an additional year in order to prepare a suitable successor. With the general's approval of the petition, in October 1935, when Nevils was sent to Japan for three months to represent the American Red Cross at an international conference, he appointed O'Leary as acting president in his stead.[9] In July of that year, O'Leary was officially appointed president of the university,[4] becoming the first native of Washington, D.C. to hold the office.[10] The inauguration ceremony on November 23 was attended by several justices of the U.S. Supreme Court, government officials, many foreign diplomats, delegates of several hundred educational institutions and learned societies, and the Apostolic Delegate to the United States, Amleto Giovanni Cicognani.[3] His presidency was largely shaped by the ongoing Great Depression.[6]
By the 1930s, Georgetown's alumni association had become largely defunct. In the latter half of the decade, several alumni chapters around the country, especially driven by alumni of Georgetown Law School, had begun to reconstitute. In O'Leary's first month of office, he announced that he would establish an office for organizing alumni nationally, not just in regional chapters. This goal did not immediately materialize, and in 1937,[11]Edmund A. Walsh, the founder of the School of Foreign Service,[12] urged O'Leary to revitalize the alumni association. In response, O'Leary traveled around the country in the spring of 1938 to reorganize the regional chapters and appointed one of Georgetown's professors of English as the first secretary of the national association; the board of directors officially approved the national alumni organization in the fall of 1938, which began compiling a national directory and publishing a newsletter.[11]
O'Leary was a proponent of expanding Georgetown's athletic programs, in part due to the recognition that they proved to be profitable for other universities, and greatly expanded scholarships available to athletes.[13] Unlike his predecessor, O'Leary was a rather conservative figure.[4] In 1935, O'Leary warned of the prevalence of communism in the United States. The following year, The Hoya, Georgetown's student newspaper, echoed this sentiment, reporting on the growth of the Communist Party in the United States and the prevalence of communism among faculty across the country.[14] In light of protests at college campuses around the country against involvement in World War II, such as the presence of the Reserve Officers' Training Corps on campuses, and increasing political tension, O'Leary requested that the Jesuit provincial superior appoint a censor in 1937 to review any public speeches that would be given by Jesuits, so as to remove any political overtones.[15] Due to the national mobilization during the War, Georgetown's campus became a testing ground for the Army Specialized Training Center.[16]
During O'Leary's presidency, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences was re-established as an independent school within the university.[a][16] This was part of O'Leary's aim to have Georgetown meet the Association of American Universities' standard for graduate education. He also increased the number of graduate faculty and students and made major significant improvements to the library's holdings. By 1937, the school began awarding doctoral degrees once again in some departments.[18] In the law school, O'Leary decided to condense the two leadership positions of dean and regent (the latter of which was always a Jesuit) into a single position, due to the resignation of the previous dean.[19]
Toward the end of his presidency, O'Leary's health began to deteriorate. He underwent surgery to remove kidney stones in 1937. Soon after the operation, he again became seriously ill and nearly died. As a result, he went to New England and Jamaica for several months to recuperate, returning to the university in October 1937.[8] With his illness progressing, in December 1942, the Jesuit authorities took the unusual step of replacing the president of the university during wartime, naming Lawrence C. Gorman as his successor.[20]
Later years
In 1947, O'Leary replaced James A. McCarl as the pastor of Holy Trinity Church in Georgetown.[21] Obtaining permission from the Metropolitan Police Department, he began the practice of students at the Holy Trinity School using N Street as their playground for recess.[22] He remained pastor until 1953, when he was succeeded by Emory Ross.[21] His final assignment was as pastor of St. Andrew-on-Hudson, which he held until his death.[6] O'Leary died on February 8, 1962, at Georgetown University Hospital.[6] The requiem mass was held at St. Aloysius Church in Washington, D.C.[5]
^ abGillespie, Kevin (December 6, 2015). "From the Pastor's Desk"(PDF). Holy Trinity Catholic Church Bulletin. Washington, D.C.: Holy Trinity Catholic Church. p. 2. Archived(PDF) from the original on December 16, 2018. Retrieved September 17, 2019.
^"Holy Trinity Time Capsule"(PDF). Holy Trinity Catholic Church Bulletin. Washington, D.C.: Holy Trinity Catholic Church. January 27, 2019. p. 5. Archived(PDF) from the original on October 7, 2019. Retrieved October 7, 2019.
Curran, Robert Emmett (2010). A History of Georgetown University: The Quest for Excellence, 1889–1964. Vol. 2. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press. ISBN9781589016903.
Gorman, Vincent J. (Fall 1991). "Georgetown University: The Early Relationship with the Catholic University of America 1884—1907". Records of the American Catholic Historical Society of Philadelphia. 102 (3): 13–31. JSTOR44211137.
Senior Class of Georgetown University (1939). Ye Domesday Booke(PDF). Washington, D.C. Archived(PDF) from the original on September 10, 2019. Retrieved September 28, 2019 – via Georgetown University Library.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Senior Class of Georgetown University (1941). Ye Domesday Booke(PDF). Washington, D.C. Archived(PDF) from the original on September 28, 2019. Retrieved September 28, 2019 – via Georgetown University Library.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)