This collection contains papers related to Fr. John J. Toohey's personal and spiritual life; his work at Georgetown University; and written works both published and unpublished.
The John J. Toohey, SJ Papers are on deposit at Georgetown University and are the property of the USA East Province of the Society of Jesus. As stewards of the Archives, the Georgetown University Library’s Booth Family Center for Special Collections is responsible for managing access to the material based on policies set forth by the USA East Province. Researchers may view these materials in the Reading Room of the Booth Family Center for Special Collections. General policies for using Special Collections can be found here.
Access to the Archives is governed by the USA East Province and is subject to all Library and Special Collections policies and procedures in addition to the specific guidelines below. These guidelines are a summary of access policies; the Archives may include materials that fall outside the scope of these general guidelines. For information on access to specific materials, please contact the Special Collections staff.
Guidelines:
1. All Archives materials dated or bearing solely on events occurring before January 1, 1940, shall be open for review unless otherwise restricted, subject to Library policies and procedures.
2. All unpublished Archives materials dated or bearing solely on events occurring on or after January 1, 1940, shall be open for review upon request subject to a decision by the Provincial or someone designated by the Provincial.
3. Researchers may quote from the materials.
4. Researchers may take their own photographs of the material for scholarly and research purposes. Allowing photographs is not an authorization to publish or to deposit the material in another library or archive.
5. Written permission from the USA East Province is required for the publication of substantive portions of any material or publication-quality reproductions of any material.
6. Material not yet processed is not available to researchers; permission will not be granted to access any unprocessed material.
7. Audiovisual, microfilm and other material in the Archives, the original of which is held in another archive, may be consulted and transcribed only. Written permission from the archive holding the original material is required for any duplication, reproduction, or publication of that material.
8. Use the Permission Request Form to request permission (i) to access any restricted processed material or (ii) to publish reproductions or quote substantive portions of the material. Send the completed form by email to the Booth Family Center for Special Collections (speccoll@georgetown.edu).
Researchers are solely responsible for determining the copyright status of the materials being used, establishing who the copyright owner is, locating the copyright owner, and obtaining permission for intended use.
John J. Toohey, SJ (1873-1955) was born in Kearney, New Jersey, to Joanna/Johanna Kavanagh (1841-1926) and Patrick Toohey (1840-1899) and was the brother of Martin A. (1869-1940), William I. (1871-1954), Mary (1877-?; later Sister Anna de Paul of the Sisters of Charity of St. Elizabeth in Convent Station, New Jersey), and Anna G. (1882-?). Fr. Toohey first attended Holy Cross School (Harrison, New Jersey) as well as St. Patrick’s and St. Benedict’s (Newark) before entering the College of St. Francis Xavier (New York) in 1891, where he received a BA (1895).
He entered the Society of Jesus in 1895 and was stationed at Frederick (1895-1896, 1898-1899), St. John’s College (Fordham, 1897), Woodstock (1900-1902), and Loyola (Baltimore, 1903-1906). He then completed his theological studies in Innsbruck (Austria, 1907-1910), during which he was ordained in 1909. From there he was stationed at Woodstock (1911), Georgetown (1912), St. Andrew-on-Hudson (Poughkeepsie, 1913), and took his final vows in 1914. He was next professor of philosophy at Georgetown (1914-1954, department head 1936-1940s) and simultaneously faculty moderator of the Philodemic Society (1914-1947). During his time at Georgetown, he received a doctorate of philosophy (1933) and an honorary doctorate of laws (1935). He was also chaplain at the nearby Visitation Convent from 1919 to the 1940s and president of the American Catholic Philosophical Association (1936).
1 Cubic Feet (1 box)
English
Latin
French
German
Likely transferred from the Georgetown University Jesuit residence to Special Collections in 2001.
Part of the Georgetown University Manuscripts Repository