Anthony F. Ciampi

Anthony F. Ciampi
Black and white photograph of Anthony F. Ciampi
Portrait of Anthony Ciampi
4th, 6th & 8th President of the College of the Holy Cross
In office
1869–1873
Preceded byRobert W. Brady
Succeeded byJoseph B. O'Hagan
In office
1857–1861
Preceded byPeter J. Blenkinsop
Succeeded byJames Clark
In office
1851–1854
Preceded byJohn Early
Succeeded byPeter J. Blenkinsop
4th President of Loyola College in Maryland
In office
1863–1866
Preceded byJoseph O'Callaghan
Succeeded byJohn Early
Personal details
Born
Antonio Francesco Ciampi

(1816-01-29)January 29, 1816
Rome, Papal States
DiedNovember 24, 1893(1893-11-24) (aged 77)
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Resting placeJesuit Community Cemetery
Alma mater
Orders
OrdinationJuly 23, 1848
by Samuel Eccleston

Anthony Francis Ciampi SJ (born Antonio Francesco Ciampi; January 29, 1816 – November 24, 1893)[a] was an Italian Catholic priest and Jesuit missionary to the United States. He was responsible for rebuilding the College of the Holy Cross, of which he was president three times, after it was destroyed by fire and rescuing it from financial ruin and pressure to close it by the Jesuits superiors.

Born in Rome, Ciampi was educated at the Roman College before volunteering in 1840 as a missionary to the United States. He studied and was ordained at Georgetown University before working in various Jesuit institutions. In the 1850s and 1860s, he was twice the president of the College of the Holy Cross in Massachusetts, where he brought the curriculum into conformity with the Ratio Studiorum and reduced its significant debt.

In 1861, Ciampi left to minister to cholera patients in Massachusetts, contracting the disease himself, before becoming a missionary to American Indians and the growing Irish Catholic population in Maine. In 1863, he was made the president of Loyola College in Maryland, and garnered a reputation as a skilled preacher. Ciampi returned the Holy Cross as president in 1869, where he expanded the campus and Fenwick Hall. In his later years, he was the rector of the Jesuit novitiate in Frederick, Maryland, from 1883 to 1887 and the pastor of Holy Trinity and St. Aloysius churches in Washington, D.C.

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