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  1. June 28, 1916. Edmund Aloysius Walsh SJ (October 10, 1885 – October 31, 1956) [1] was an American Roman Catholic priest of the Society of Jesus and career diplomat from South Boston, Massachusetts. He was also an author, professor of geopolitics and founder of the Georgetown University School of Foreign Service, the first school for ...

  2. 19 de ene. de 2010 · Throughout his career, Fr. Walsh was known as an ardent anticommunist, and he was a leading authority on communism in general and Soviet Russia in particular. This display highlights new materials about Fr. Walsh recently acquired by the Georgetown University Library.

  3. Description. Priest, educator, scholar, and statesman, Father Walsh established Georgetown's School of Foreign Service in 1919, the first of its kind in the U.S. While remaining actively involved in the running of the School, he undertook many international trips and diplomatic missions.

  4. 23 de sept. de 2019 · In 1919, a well-traveled 34-year-old Jesuit priest, Fr. Edmund Walsh, helped Georgetown found a new school. Walsh imagined the School of Foreign Service, the first school of its kind in the United States, would educate students from a global perspective and advance the cause of peace.

  5. Father Edmund A. Walsh, S.J. Edmund A. Walsh, SJ. Born in 1885 in South Boston, Mass., Edmund A. Walsh began his Jesuit novitiate and studied philosophy in Maryland before teaching at the preparatory school run by Georgetown University and studying in Ireland, England and Austria-Hungary.

  6. Rev. Edmund A. Walsh, S.J. (1885-1956), a noted Roman Catholic priest, author, educator, and geopolitician, was born on October 10, 1885, in Boston, Massachusetts. His parents were police officer John Francis Walsh and Catherine Josephine Noonan.

  7. century: Edmund A. Walsh. It was not surprising that after the death of Father Walsh in 1956, the University renamed the School in honor of its founder. Seldom has the cliche—"a legend in his own time"—been truer than it was of Edmund Walsh. Although a number of Jesuits have left their mark on Georgetown University during