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Edward Francis Murphy

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Edward Francis Murphy was an American playwright, novelist, educator, and Catholic priest known for creating the "first Catholic best-seller", the novel The Scarlet Lily.[1]

History

Murphy was born in 1892 in South Salem, New York, in the upstate region of the state. His family was Irish Catholic, he grew up in Derby Street, and attended St Mary's parish and school.

As a teenager, he was groomed by the philanthropist Caroline Emmerton, who had founded who had founded The House of the Seven Gables Settlement Association, and sought to bring Murphy under her artistic patronage.

Instead, Murphy followed his brother Will's footsteps to become a Catholic priest, enrolling at Baltimore's Epiphany Apostolic College, the minor seminary of the Society of St Joseph of the Sacred Heart (aka the Josephites). The society, founded in 1893, dedicates itself to serving African Americans.

Murphy was ordained in 1918, and celebrated his first mass at St James Catholic Church in his hometown, before returning to the DC metro to attend Catholic University of America, where he attained a doctorate in philosophy.

After ordination, Murphy served near New York City, where he ran into a childhood friend who who had by then become known as Eddie Dowling. They would maintain their friendship thereafter.

In 1932, Murphy was reassigned to New Orleans, where he served at a Josephite parish and also at Xavier University of Louisiana, an HBCU founded by Katharine Drexel less than a decade before.

During his time at the school, Murphy continued to cultivate his artistic ventures via the students, helping them to stage plays and other works to raise the profile of the university. The Black Press took interest in their work, and prominent African Americans in the city also supported, helping them to gain more prominent venues for their productions.

Soon after, Dowling gave Murphy the rights to his hit play Shadow and Substance, free of charge, which Murphy eventually passed on to a local company in the Crescent City. The latter operation would stage an adaptation starring Sinclair Lewis, who would become a lifelong friend to Murphy.

References

  1. ^ McAllister, Jim. "Essex County Chronicles: Late Salem priest had a remarkable life". Salem News. Retrieved 2021-08-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)