Father Francis Patrick Duffy - U.S. Army chaplain

Discussion in 'Non-Military Biographies' started by liverpool annie, Jun 14, 2009.

  1. liverpool annie

    liverpool annie New Member

    Times Square, the massive statue of Father Francis Patrick Duffy (1871-1932) by Charles Keck (1875-1951) has stood sentinel since it was unveiled May 2, 1937.

    The most celebrated U.S. Army chaplain in the Great War, Father Francis Patrick Duffy, a Roman Catholic priest, was born in Cobourg, Canada, and was ordained in 1896. He attended the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., and then was appointed professor of psychology and ethics at St. Joseph's Seminary in New York. Father Duffy's career as an Army chaplain began with a brief tour of duty during the Spanish-American War when he was stationed at Montauk Point, Long Island. In 1914 he was appointed chaplain of the 69th Infantry Regiment of the New York National Guard. The "Fighting Sixty-Ninth," a basically Irish regiment, although containing members of other ethnic groups, had served with distinction during the Civil War. It was called up briefly during the Spanish-American War, and also in 1916, when it served on the Mexican border. When the United States entered World War I, the regiment was renumbered the 165th Infantry and assembled at Camp Mills, New York. Assigned to be part of the new Rainbow (42nd) Division, its members continued to refer to the regiment by its traditional sobriquet.

    Father Duffy was most often found along the front lines hearing confessions and saying Mass, as well as visiting and counseling the soldiers. It was by his presence that he had his greatest influence and became an almost a legendary figure. Once the fighting began, he often traveled with a unit first-aid station, providing physical and spiritual care to the wounded and the dying. His presence on the battlefield was inspirational. Duffy was always near the heaviest fighting, exposing himself to constant danger as he moved from unit to unit. His decorations included the Distinguished Service Cross and the Distinguished Service Medal.
    After the war, Father Duffy returned to a new parish in New York City as pastor of the Holy Cross Church on 42nd Street. In 1919, he published a best selling book, Father Duffy's Story, chronicling his experience in the Great War. He died on 26 June 1932.

    http://www.sixtyninth.net/duffy.html

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eeyp2Wt8_oY
     

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  2. liverpool annie

    liverpool annie New Member

    * Snippet

    Fr. Francis Patrick Duffy (1871-1932) was born to parents who fled the Great Famine in Ireland. The third of eleven children, he studied for the priesthood at St. Joseph's Provincial Seminary at Troy, NY, and was ordained in 1896. During World War I, Duffy served as a military chaplain to the "Fighting Sixty-Ninth" Regiment of the New York National Guard. He was decorated in France and America, and became a national hero.
     

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