Aloysius Masnata Explained

Aloysius Masnata S.J.
Order:5th
President of
Santa Clara University
Term Start:1865
Term End:1868
Predecessor:Burchard Villiger, S.J.
Successor:Aloysius Varsi, S.J.
Birth Date:May 2, 1823
Birth Place:Rivarolo, Genoa, Italy
Death Place:Los Gatos, California
Alma Mater:Georgetown College
Profession:Jesuit priest

Aloysius Masnata, (S.J.) (May 2, 1823 – November 18, 1886) was the 5th president of Santa Clara University, California, United States. He was a Genoese priest. At the age of seventeen he was admitted into the novitiate of the Society of Jesus. After studying philosophy and rhetoric and teaching for a year, he was sent to Vals, France, for the study of theology. After his study in France, he immigrated to the United States with other Jesuits after ordination and completed his fourth year of theology at Georgetown College along with Rev. Salvator Canio and Rev. Joseph Bixio. After his study he spent four years teaching rhetoric at Frederick, Maryland, where he was minister and socius to the master of novices. In 1854 Masnata S.J. sailed to California through Panama and arrived in San Francisco, United States, along with Fr. Charles Messea S.J. and Fr. Anthony Maraschi S.J.[1] In 1865 he was appointed Santa Clara University's fifth president successor of the presidency of Burchard Villiger. In 1868, shy and lacking in proper English, Masnata was replaced by Aloysius Varsi. In 1873 Fr. Aloysius Masnata, S.J. served as the 6th president of San Francisco's St. Ignatius College.[2] On November 18, 1886, Aloysius Masnata died in Los Gatos, California.

External sources

. Gerald Mckevitt. The University of Santa Clara: A History, 1851-1977. Stanford University Press. illustrated. 1979. Santa Clara University. 47, 93, 329, 331, 380. 9780804710244.

. Joseph W. Riordan. The first half century of St. Ignatius Church and College. H.S. Crocker Co.. 1905. The University of California. 284.

. Salvatore John LaGumina. The Italian American experience: an encyclopedia. Taylor & Francis. Garland reference Library of the humanities Special - Reference Series. 1535. illustrated. 2000. Santa Clara University. 285, 725. 9780815307136.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Today in History November 1.
  2. Web site: Timeline - Education .