|
Introduction
On the morning
of September 15, 1851, according to tradition, some
three dozen boys trooped down the narrow Willings
Alley in Philadelphia, just a few blocks from Independence
Hall, for the opening day of Saint Josephs College.
The college took its name from the parish church of
Saint Josephs, a structure that stood at right
angles to the college building, in the rear of a small
courtyard. Opening day began with a Mass of the Holy
Ghost (later known as the Mass of the Holy Spirit),
already a tradition in Jesuit schools, where the boys
recited the Veni Creator. At 2:00 that afternoon they
reported to class.
This first
day was the fulfillment of many years of sincere hopes
and thwarted plans to open a Jesuit college in the City
of Brotherly Love. It was also the beginning of a long
struggle to keep the tiny school alive, until more fortunate
circumstances allowed Saint Josephs to flourish
and eventually to become a university with thousands
of students, hundreds of faculty, and scores of programs.
Whether
struggling just to maintain itself or thriving during
better times, five intertwined and shifting forces have
shaped the contours of Saint Josephs College and
then of Saint Josephs University. These have been
the fortunes of Philadelphia and its surrounding suburbs,
the Society of Jesus, the Roman Catholic Church, the
overall development of American higher education, and
a welter of external events during fifteen decades of
national and world history....
Order
book
Back to Saint Josephs
University Press
|