Background
Thomas Joseph Campbell was born on April 29, 1848 on Manhattan Island, New York, United States.
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clergyman editor educator author
Thomas Joseph Campbell was born on April 29, 1848 on Manhattan Island, New York, United States.
Thomas was educated at the College of St. Francis Xavier, New York City, where he was graduated in 1866. The following year after further studies in philosophy he received the degree of M. A. In the summer of 1867 he entered the Society of Jesus at Sault-au-Recollet, Canada, and in 1870 was assigned to teach the freshman class at St. John's College, Fordham (now Fordham University). From 1873 to 1876 he studied philosophy and science at Woodstock College, Maryland. After two more years of teaching at St. Francis Xavier's, he went to Louvain, Belgium, where he devoted himself to theological branches for four years, being ordained priest in 1880.
In 1885 Campbell was appointed president of St. John's College, Fordham, and three years later provincial of the Maryland-New York Province of the Society of Jesus. This office he held until 1893, when he became vice-rector of St. Francis Xavier's for ten months. Two years were spent in missionary preaching in the eastern states, after which he was appointed a second time president of St. John's College, Fordham. In August 1900 he joined the staff of the Apostleship of Prayer in New York, as preacher, writer, and editor. Master of a clear, attractive English style, he contributed many impressive articles to the Messenger of the Sacred Heart and to the Pilgrim of Our Lady of Martyrs, the organ of the Shrine erected at Auriesville, New York. His interest in the mission work of New France resulted in the publication in the pages of the Messenger of many biographical sketches of the missionaries. These were published later on in book-form under the title Pioneer Priests of North America. Two further volumes were devoted to Pioneer Laymen of North America (1915). Two years were spent by Father Campbell in Montreal as English preacher in the Jesuit church and as research worker in the Jesuit archives, after which in 1910 he was chosen editor of the weekly Catholic review, America, published by the Jesuit Fathers in New York. He conducted the review with vigor and success for four years, writing especially on historical, educational, and social subjects. During this time he translated and published The Names of God and Meditative Summaries of the Divine Perfections (1912), by Father Leonard Lessius, S. J. After a sojourn of two more years in Canada, he again returned to New York and among other occupations lectured on American history in the Graduate School of Fordham University. Under the title Various Discourses (1917) he gathered into a volume the outstanding sermons and addresses of his life. In 1921 he published The Jesuits, 1534-1921: A History of the Society of Jesus from its Foundation to the Present Time. It was the first attempt at a full, but popular, historical account in English, written by a member of the Society. During the latter years of his life he translated the Psalms into verse, as well as the hymns of the Roman Breviary, compiled a series of sketches of distinguished members of the Society of Jesus, and prepared a sketch of the Archdiocese of New York. The last work from his pen was a revision of his monograph on Blessed Isaac Jogues and his companion martyrs, published posthumously under the title The Martyrs of the Mohawk (Apostleship of Prayer, 1926). After a life of labor and merit Father Campbell retired to the Jesuit Rest House at Monroe, New York, where he died on December 14, 1925.
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