William McSherry
William McSherry (July 19, 1799December 18, 1839) was an American
Catholic priest and
Jesuit who became the
president of Georgetown College and a Jesuit
provincial superior. The son of Irish immigrants, McSherry was educated at
Georgetown College, where he entered the Society of Jesus. As one of the first Americans to complete the traditional Jesuit course of training, he was sent to
Rome to be educated for the priesthood. There, he made several discoveries of significant, forgotten holdings in the Jesuit archives, which improved historians' knowledge of the early European settling of
Maryland and of the language of
Indian tribes there.
McSherry became the first provincial superior of the Jesuits'
Maryland Province from 1833 to 1837, and laid the groundwork for the
sale of the province's slaves in 1838. He then briefly became the president of Georgetown College in 1837, and was simultaneously made provincial superior for a second time in 1839, despite suffering illness to which he would succumb several months later.
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