Education
Born in Baltimore, Father Bunn graduated from Loyola College in 1917.
Born in Baltimore, Father Bunn graduated from Loyola College in 1917.
A leader in Roman Catholic education, he was the longest tenured president of the university at the time of his death. From 1938 to 1947, Edward Bunn was president of Loyola College in Baltimore, Maryland. He was director of the University of Scranton’s labor school for less than a year before going to Georgetown.
Previous to his work at Loyola, he taught drama at Fordham University and psychology at Canisius College in Buffalo, New New York
He wore the key of Phi Beta Kappa. Bunn then took his master"s degree in English from Saint Andrew-on-Hudson in New York City and his doctorate in philosophy from the Gregorian University in Rome, Italy.
He held several honorary degrees, and honors from the governments of West Germany, Austria and Peru. Father Bunn is remembered for his leadership during a time of post-Second World War expansion.
Through his leadership, Georgetown renamed its foreign service program the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service in 1956, in honor of French
Edmund A. Walsh, Society of Jesus (Jesuit) After serving as president, he devoted much of his time to Georgetown fundraising. Bunn came to Georgetown from the University of Scranton in 1948 to serve as regent of the school’s dental and nursing schools. To take courses in several schools and allow credits to accumulate toward a degree in any school.
He was a member of the Washington Institute of Foreign Affairs and a trustee for the Washington Center for Metropolitan Studies.