Monsignor Ambrose J. Burke was an English professor and Catholic priest who served as the eighth president of Saint Ambrose University from 1940 through 1956.
Education
A native of Iowa, he attended the college"s high school program, and then the college itself, but was expelled from the seminary for a year and a half by the school"s administrator for planning an evening of carousing. At the age of 14 he attended Saint Ambrose Academy in Davenport, Iowa, which was then the high school program for Saint Ambrose University (then known as Saint Ambrose College) and has now been merged into Assumption High School.
Career
He eventually acquired a master"s degree and a doctorate in English from Yale University and returned to Saint Ambrose in 1921 as an instructor. He was appointed the school"s president in 1940 and served for sixteen years, then the longest tenure of any Saint Ambrose president He worked as a pastor and a chaplain for many decades after and remained active until shortly before his death in October 1998, at the age of 102.
Burke was born November 27, 1895 in Sigourney, Iowa.
He then moved on to Saint Ambrose College, but was expelled in his second year when his plans to go carousing were discovered by the school authorities. He was not permitted to return to the seminary for a year and a half.
Burke had also obtained his master"s degree and doctorate in English studies from Yale University and returned to Saint Ambrose in 1921 as an English instructor, eventually becoming the head of the department. In 1940 he was appointed to the presidency of the college by Henry Rohlman, then Bishop of the Diocese of Davenport, replacing Carl Meinberg after the latter"s retirement.
Although he claimed original that he did not want the job, as he would have preferred to continue teaching instead, he served in this capacity for sixteen years, the longest tenure in the post until Edward Rogalski"son
During his presidency a library, an administrative building (McMullen Hall), and the Christ the King Chapel were constructed and enrollment reached a then-peak of over 1500 students. During this time he also hosted a three-part series on National Broadcasting Company"s Catholic Hour entitled Sainthood, the Universal Vocation. Burke remained at Saint Mary"s until 1973, when he reached his mandatory retirement, and then served for over a decade as chaplain at the city"s Mercy Hospital.
Foreign his 100th birthday he celebrated a public mass in Clinton and attended a party the following day at Saint Ambrose.
He died on October 6, 1998, at the age of 102, in Clinton and was buried in Mount Calvary Cemetery in Davenport.