Background
Mulloy, William Theodore was born on November 9, 1892 in Ardock, North Dakota, United States. Son of William James and Margaret Ann (Doyle) Mulloy.
Mulloy, William Theodore was born on November 9, 1892 in Ardock, North Dakota, United States. Son of William James and Margaret Ann (Doyle) Mulloy.
He attended Saint Boniface College in Winnipeg, Canada, before returning to the United States and studying at Saint Paul Seminary and Saint Thomas College in Saint Paul, Minnesota.
He served as Bishop of Covington from 1945 until his death in 1959. He was ordained to the priesthood by Bishop James O"Reilly on June 7, 1916. Returning to North Dakota, Mulloy then served as a curate at Saint Michael Church in Grand Forks until 1920, when he became pastor of Saint Boniface Church in Wimbledon.
He was pastor of Sacred Heart Church in Cando from (1921-1925) and of Saint Alphonsus Church in Langdon and dean of the Langdon Deanery (1925-1933).
From 1933 to 1938, he served as pastor of his home parish of Saint John the Evangelist Church in Grafton and dean of the Grafton Deanery. He became president of the National Catholic Rural Life Conference in 1935, and rector of Saint Mary"s Cathedral in 1938.
He was raised to the rank of Domestic Prelate in 1941. On November 18, 1944, Mulloy was appointed the sixth Bishop of Covington, Kentucky, by Pope Pius XII. He received his episcopal consecration on January 10, 1945 from Bishop Aloisius Joseph Muench, with Bishops Vincent James Ryan and Peter William Bartholome serving as co-consecrators, at Saint Mary"s Cathedral.
In addition to rural issues, Mulloy was also dedicated to civil rights.
Speaking to the Catholic Committee of the South in 1951, he declared that "racial justice is a moral question" and that Catholic leaders in the Southern United States "cannot remain silent," even at the expense of being labeled with "the opprobrious accusation of being "anti-Southern.""
After fifteen years as bishop, Mulloy died in Covington at age 66. He is buried at Saint Mary Cemetery in Fort Mitchell.
Member Catholic Biblical Association of America, American Catholic History Association, Medieval Academy of America Knights of Columbus.