Sylvester Malone

Rev. Sylvester Malone (1821–1899) was an Irish born American catholic priest.

Life

Malone was born in Trim, County Meath,[1] Ireland on May 8, 1821, the son of Laurence and Marcella Malone. His father was a civil engineer and surveyor.

Receiving a classical education, in 1838 he was recruited to go to America by the Rev. James Byrne, then pastor of St. James' Church in New York. In the spring of 1839, Byrne and Malone left from Kingstown for Liverpool where on April 10 they sailed to Philadelphia, arriving on May 12, 1839. After calling on Bishop Francis Kenrick they made their way to New York, were Bishop Hughes advised him to enter St. Joseph's Seminary in LaFargeville, Jefferson County, New York. The following year the seminary moved to Rose Hill in Fordham, where Malone continued his studies. As a seminarian, on March 10, 1844 he participated in the ceremonies when Bishop Hughes consecrated James Byrne as first bishop of Little Rock, Arkansas and John McCloskey coadjutor bishop of New York.[1]

Fr. Malone was ordained by Bishop McCloskey on August 15, 1844. Shortly afterward, Malone was visiting Father Joseph P. Burke, pastor of St. Peter's Church in Poughkeepsie, and ask him to attend a small mission a few miles away. Malone said his first Mass in the village of Wappingers Falls, an up-river mill town.[1]

Bishop Hughes soon sent Father Malone to Williamsburg, Brooklyn. He befriended the Irish born Architect Patrick Keely and together they were responsible for a number of church buildings. In 1861 he founded the Irish-American fraternal organization The Friendly Sons of St. Patrick in Brooklyn.[2] A man noted for his tolerance he was friendly with clerics from other Christian churches and local rabbis. Politically he was a Republican Abolitionist, and supported Lincoln, he was also a supporter of the Land League in Ireland, and for Home Rule for Ireland. He died on December 29, 1899.[3]

His nephews Lawrence and Sylvester Malone became lawyers, as did his niece Marcella Malone. Their sister, Maud Malone, was a suffragette and labor leader in New York City.[4]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Malone, Sylvester. Memorial of the Golden Jubilee of the Reverend Sylvester Malone, J.J. Little & Co., New York, 1895
  2. Malone, Sylvester, Friendly Sons of St. Patrick Speech
  3. Fr. Sylvester Malone influential Catholic Priest.
  4. "Praise for Dr. Malone" The World (October 6, 1890): 3. via Newspapers.com
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