To the surprise of many Jesuits, Devitt was appointed the vice rector of Boston College in 1891, becoming the rector and president later that year. He held the position for three years, and spent the remainder of his life teaching and working as a historian of the Catholic Church in the United States and of colonial Maryland. He died at Georgetown University in 1920.
Early life
Edward Ignatius Devitt was born on November 26, 1840, in Saint John, New Brunswick, in modern-day Canada. His parents were Irish Catholics, and Devitt was baptized two days after his birth. While a young boy, he moved with his family to the United States, where they settled in the North End of Boston, Massachusetts. Devitt's father became active in the North End parish of St. Mary's, which was run by the Jesuits, under the pastorship of John McElroy. In this way, Devitt became exposed to religious life, particularly to the Jesuits.[1]
For the next thirty years, Devitt taught philosophy at the College of the Holy Cross, Woodstock College, and Georgetown University.[5] In teaching at Woodstock, he became the first alumnus of the college to be appointed to the faculty,[7] and eventually became the chair of dogmatic theology.[9] He believed that teaching was the preeminent mission of the Society of Jesus. Over the course of his career, he taught such subjects as the classics, mathematics, modern languages, philosophy, and science.[7]
President of Boston College
While Devitt was a professor of philosophy at the College of the Holy Cross, the Jesuit provincial superior, Thomas J. Campbell, paid his annual visit to the college. On January 6, 1891, during his visit, he appointed Devitt as vice rector of Boston College, where he would assume management of the school due to the rector, Robert J. Fulton's, worsening illness. The Jesuits in both Worcester and Boston were surprised by his appointment. Eventually, on September 3, 1891, Devitt's status was changed to rector and president of Boston College by the Jesuit Superior General, Anton Anderledy.[10] He simultaneously served as pastor of the Church of the Immaculate Conception in the South End of Boston.[11] During Devitt's tenure, the holdings of the college library were increased by 25%, and the science department was expanded. Boston College's literary magazine, The Stylus, resumed publication in 1893, having been inactive since 1889. Devitt's tenure as president came to an end on July 16, 1894, and he was succeeded by Timothy Brosnahan.[12]
Devitt died on January 26, 1920, at Georgetown University, and was buried in the Jesuit Community Cemetery.[14] His largest project, a history of the Maryland-New York Province of the Society of Jesus, remained unfinished at the time of his death. For his historical work, Devitt received the posthumous praise of Bishop Thomas Shahan, the rector of the Catholic University of America and a historian.[13]
Masterson, Peter V. (December 1920). "The Rev. Edward Ignatius Devitt, S.J. (1840–1920)". Records of the American Catholic Historical Society of Philadelphia. 31 (4): 261–275. JSTOR44254222.
Mendizàbal, Rufo (1972). Catalogus Defunctorum [Catalogue of the Dead] (in Latin). pp. 245–274. Archived from the original on February 18, 2020. Retrieved February 18, 2020 – via Jesuit Archives.