Black Dahlia and Patrick Francis Healy: Difference between pages

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it really wasn't clear how she originally died - we just know she was cut up
 
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[[Image:FrancisPatrick.jpg|160px|thumb|Patrick Francis Healy]]
:''This article focuses on the mystery of murder victim Elizabeth Short. For other uses of the term, see [[The Black Dahlia]].''
Father '''Patrick Francis Healy''' ([[February 2]], [[1834]] - [[January 10]], [[1910]]) was born in [[sweaty ass, Georgia]] to [[Irish American]] plantation owner Michael Healy and [[mulatto]] [[slavery|slave]] Mary Eliza. Michael Healy acknowledged his children by Mary Eliza, and since their children were technically slaves he arranged for them to leave Georgia and move to the North, where they would become free. Healy sent his older sons to a [[Quaker]] school in [[Flushing, New York]], when he heard of a new [[Jesuit]] College, the [[College of the Holy Cross]] in [[Worcester, Massachusetts]], he sent his three oldest sons and Patrick to study there in 1844.
{{Infobox Person
| name = Elizabeth Short
| image = Black Dahlia Mugshot.jpg
| image_size =
| caption = 1943 mugshot
| birth_date = {{birth date|1924|7|29|df=y}}
| birth_place = [[Hyde Park, Massachusetts|Hyde Park]], [[Massachusetts]], [[United States|U.S.]]
| death_date = ca. {{death date and age|1947|1|15|1924|7|29|df=y}}
| death_place = [[Los Angeles, California]], [[United States|U.S.]]
| occupation = [[Waitress]]
| spouse =
| parents = Cleo Short and Phoebe Mae Sawyer
| children =
}}
'''Elizabeth Ann Short''' ([[July 29]], [[1924]] – ca. [[January 15]], [[1947]]) was an [[United States|American]] woman who was the victim of a gruesome and much-publicized murder. Nicknamed the '''Black Dahlia''', Short was found severely mutilated, with her body severed, on [[January 15]], [[1947]] in [[Leimert Park, Los Angeles, California]]. The murder, which remains unsolved, has been the source of widespread speculation as well as several books and film adaptations.


Following Patrick's graduation in 1850, he entered a [[Jesuit]] order and continued his studies. He was sent to [[Europe]] to study in 1858, as his "[[Race (classification of human beings)|race]]" had become an issue in the United States. He attended [[University of Leuven]] in [[Belgium]], earning his [[PhD|doctorate]], becoming the first American of openly acknowledged part-African descent to do so. During this period he was also ordained to the priesthood on [[September 3]] [[1864]]. In 1866 he returned to the [[United States]] and taught [[philosophy]] at Georgetown University. Eight years later, in 1874, he became its twenty-ninth president.
==Biography==
Elizabeth Ann Short was the third of five girls. She was born in [[Hyde Park, Massachusetts]] and her father built [[miniature golf]] courses until the [[1929 stock market crash]]. In 1930, he parked his car on a bridge and vanished.<ref name="mystery">Harnisch, Larry. "A Slaying Cloaked in Mystery and Myths." ''Los Angeles Times''. January 6, 1997.</ref>
Elizabeth Short was raised in [[Medford, Massachusetts|Medford]], by her mother, Phoebe Mae, who moved the family to a small apartment and found work as a bookkeeper.
Troubled by [[asthma]] and [[bronchitis]], Elizabeth was sent to [[Florida]] at 16 for the winter, and spent the next three years living there during the cold months and in Medford the rest of the year, while working as a waitress. She was 5'5" and 115 pounds, with bad teeth, light blue eyes and brown hair. At the age of 19, she went to [[Vallejo, California]], to live with her father, who was working at [[Mare Island Naval Shipyard]]. The two moved to [[Los Angeles, California|Los Angeles]] in early 1943, but after an argument, she left and got a job at one of the post exchanges at [[Camp Cooke]] (now [[Vandenberg Air Force Base]]), near [[Lompoc, California|Lompoc]]. She then moved to [[Santa Barbara, California|Santa Barbara]], where she was arrested on [[September 23]] [[1943]] for [[underage drinking]] and was sent back to Medford by juvenile authorities. In the few years that followed, she lived in Florida, with occasional trips back to Massachusetts, earning money mostly as a waitress.


Patrick Healy's influence on Georgetown was so far-reaching that he is often referred to as the school's "second founder," following Archbishop [[John Carroll (priest)|John Carroll]]. Healy helped transform the small nineteenth century college into a major [[university]] for the twentieth century. He modernized the [[curriculum]] by requiring courses in the sciences, particularly [[chemistry]] and [[physics]]. He expanded and upgraded the schools of [[law]] and [[medicine]]. The most visible result of Healy's presidency was the construction of a large building begun in 1877 and first used in 1881, a building named in his honour as [[Healy Hall]].
In Florida, Elizabeth met Major Matthew M. Gordon Jr., who was part of the 2nd Air Commandos and training for deployment in the [[China Burma India Theater|China Burma India]] theater of operations. Short told friends that Gordon wrote a letter from [[India]] proposing marriage while recovering from an airplane crash he suffered while trying to rescue a downed flier. (He was, according to his obituary in the [[Pueblo, Colorado]] newspaper, awarded a [[Silver Star]], [[Distinguished Flying Cross (United States)|Distinguished Flying Cross]], [[Bronze Star Medal|Bronze Star]], the [[Air Medal]] with 15 oak leaf clusters, and [[Purple Heart]]). She accepted his proposal, but he died in a crash on [[August 10]] [[1945]], before he could return to the U.S. She later embellished this story, saying that they were married and had a child who died. Although Gordon's friends in the air commandos confirm that Gordon and Short were engaged, his family subsequently denied any connection after Short's murder.


[[Image:MichaelAHealy.jpg|right|160px|thumb|[[Michael A. Healy]]]]
Elizabeth Short returned to [[Southern California]] in July 1946 to see an old boyfriend she met in Florida during the war, Lt. Gordon Fickling, who was stationed in [[Long Beach, California|Long Beach]]. For the six months prior to her death, she remained in Southern California, mainly in the [[Los Angeles, California|Los Angeles]] area. During this time, she lived in several hotels, apartment buildings, rooming houses, and private homes, never staying anywhere for more than a few weeks.
Healy left the College in 1882 and travelled extensively through the United States and Europe often in the company of his brother [[James Augustine Healy|James]], later returning in 1908 to the campus infirmary where he died. He is buried on the grounds of the University in the Jesuit cemetery.


Patrick Francis Healy and his siblings were among many successful Americans of the early 19th century to openly acknowledge partial African or "Black" ancestry. Patrick Francis was the first known American of acknowledged African ancestry to earn a [[PhD]], the first to become a [[Jesuit]] priest, and the first to become president of a major university in the [[United States]]. His brother [[James Augustine Healy]] became Bishop of Portland, Maine. His brother [[Michael A. Healy]] joined the United States Revenue Cutter Service, becoming a celebrated sea captain, the sole representative of the U.S. government in the vast reaches of Alaska. His brother Alexander Sherwood Healy also became a priest, director of the seminary in Troy, New York, and rector of the Cathedral in Boston. Three of his sisters became nuns, one a Mother Superior.<ref>A summary of the ethnic self-identity of the Healys, taken from various sources, is available in A.D. Powell, ''Passing for Who You Really Are'' (Palm Coast FL, 2005) ISBN 0-939479-22-2.</ref>
==Death==
The body of Elizabeth Short was found on January 15, 1947, in a vacant lot in Leimert Park, Los Angeles, severely mutilated, cut in half, and drained of blood. Her face was [[Glasgow smile|slashed from the corners of her mouth toward her ears]], and she was posed with her hands over her head and her elbows bent at right angles.<ref name="mystery"/>


Despite their partial African ancestry, all of the Healys were accepted into U.S. society as "White" Irish Americans. According to James M. O'Toole, the biographer of Coast Guard Captain Michael Healy:
==Aftermath==
<blockquote>He repeatedly referred to white settlers [in Alaska] as "our people," and was even able to pass this racial identity on to a subsequent generation. His teenage son Fred, who accompanied his father on a voyage in 1883, scratched his name into a rock on a remote island above the Arctic Circle, proudly telling his diary that he was the first "white boy" to do so.</blockquote>
Because she loved California, she was buried at the [[Mountain View Cemetery]] in [[Oakland]], [[California]].
After Elizabeth Short's other sisters had grown and married, her mother moved to Oakland to be near her daughter's grave. Her mother finally returned back East in the 1970s, and lived into her 90s.<ref name="mystery"/>


==Footnotes==
==Rumors and popular misconceptions==
{{Reflist}}
According to newspaper reports shortly after the murder, Elizabeth Short received the nickname "Black Dahlia" at a Long Beach drugstore in the summer of 1946, as a play on the then-current movie ''[[The Blue Dahlia]].'' However, [[Los Angeles County]] district attorney investigators' reports state the nickname was invented by newspaper reporters covering the murder. In either case, Short was not generally known as the "Black Dahlia" during her lifetime.

A number of people, none of whom knew Short in life, contacted police and the newspapers, claiming to have seen her during her so-called "missing week" between the time of her disappearance January 9 and the time her body was found on January 15. Police and district attorney investigators ruled out each of these alleged sightings, sometimes identifying other women that witnesses had mistaken for Short.<ref>[http://blackdahlia.info/modules/news2/article.php?storyid=2 Excerpts From Grand Jury Summary] BlackDahlia.info. Access date: 4 November 2007.</ref>

Many "[[true crime (genre)|true crime]]" books claim that Short lived in or visited Los Angeles at various times in the mid-1940s; these claims have never been substantiated, and are refuted by the findings of law enforcement officers who investigated the case. A document in the Los Angeles County district attorney's files titled "Movements of Elizabeth Short Prior to [[June 1]] [[1946]]" states that Short was in Florida and Massachusetts from September 1943 through the early months of 1946, and gives a detailed account of her living and working arrangements during this period.

Although popular belief as well as many "true" crime books portrayed Short as a [[call girl]], a report by the district attorney's [[grand jury]] states that she was not a prostitute.

Another widely circulated rumor holds that Short was unable to have sexual intercourse because of some genetic defect that left her with "infantile genitalia." Los Angeles County district attorney's files state the investigators had questioned three men with whom Short had sex,<ref name="fact">[http://blackdahlia.info/modules/news/article.php?storyid=21 Fact Versus Fiction] BlackDahlia.info.</ref> including a [[Chicago]] police officer who was a suspect in the case.<ref>[http://blackdahlia.info/modules/news2/article.php?storyid=4 District Attorney Suspects] BlackDahlia.info.</ref> The [[FBI]] files on the case also contain a statement from one of Short's alleged lovers. According to the [[Los Angeles Police Department]]'s summary of the case, in the district attorney's files, the autopsy describes Short's reproductive organs as anatomically normal. The autopsy also states that Short was not and had never been pregnant, contrary to what is sometimes claimed.<ref name="fact"/>

The D.A.'s files contain the following:—

<blockquote>Doctor Schwartz last stated that he studied surgery and that victim was on the make for him but that she was the patient of Doctor Arthur McGinnis Faught who was treating victim for trouble with her [[Bartholin's glands|bartholin gland]] and that he wanted nothing to do with her. He stated that the bartholin gland was the lubricating gland in the vagina and that Doctor Faught had lanced it on several occasions and it could account for the fact that she had not been having intercourse with men.<ref>[http://blackdahlia.info/modules/news2/article.php?storyid=4 Black Dahlia - News 2<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref></blockquote>

==Suspects==
{{main|Black Dahlia suspects}}
The Black Dahlia murder investigation by the LAPD was the largest since the murder of [[Marion Parker]] in 1927, and involved hundreds of officers borrowed from other [[law enforcement agency|law enforcement agencies]]. Because of the complexity of the case, the original investigators treated every person who knew Short as a suspect who had to be eliminated. Hundreds of people were considered suspects and thousands were interviewed by police. Sensational and sometimes inaccurate press coverage, as well as the nature of the crime, focused intense public attention on the case. About 60 people confessed to the murder, mostly men, as well as a few women. As the case continues to command public attention, many more people have been proposed as Short's killer.

No theory is universally accepted, and none have been proven.{{Fact|date=September 2008}}

==Possible related murders==
Some crime authors have speculated on a link between the Short murder and the [[Cleveland Torso Murderer|Cleveland Torso Murders]], also known as the Kingsbury Run Murders, which took place in [[Cleveland]] between 1934 and 1938.<ref>[http://www.crimelibrary.com/serial_killers/unsolved/kingsbury/index_1.html The Cleveland Torso Murders aka Kingsbury Run Murders - Eliot Ness Case - Crime Library on truTV.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The original LAPD investigators examined this case in 1947 and discounted any relationship between the two, as they did with a large number of killings that occurred before and afterward, well into the 1950s.

Other crime authors (blackdahliasolution.org and Steve Hodel) have suggested a link between the Short murder and the 1945 murder and dismemberment of six-year-old Suzanne Degnan in Chicago. These authors cite the fact that Elizabeth Short's body was found on Norton Avenue, three blocks west of Degnan Boulevard, the last name of the girl from Chicago.

The man who is serving time for the murder of Suzanne Degnan is William Heirens. He was 17 when police arrested him for breaking into a residence close to that of Suzanne Degnan. However, he claims he was tortured by police, forced to confess, and has been merely blamed for the murder of Suzanne Degnan.

Steve Hodel, who joined the LAPD in 1963, claims his father, George Hodel, committed the Black Dahlia murder. Shortly after his father's death in 1991, Steve Hodel found two pictures in his father's belongings that he said were Elizabeth Short. Subsequent investigation showed that one of them was Marya Marco, a character actress of the 1940s.

==Books, films, and other media==
===Adaptations===
*A 1975 [[TV movie]] about the case, [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0073897/ ''Who Is the Black Dahlia''] by Robert Lenski and starring [[Lucie Arnaz]], is a highly fictionalized version of the murder. Many details were changed because several people, including Short's mother and Red Manley, who brought Short from [[San Diego, California|San Diego]] to Los Angeles, refused to sign releases for the studio.
*[[Neo-noir]] author [[James Ellroy]] based his 1987 book, ''[[The Black Dahlia (novel)|The Black Dahlia]]'' on the crime.
*[[Take 2 Interactive]] published the [[Video game|computer game]], ''[[Black Dahlia (computer game)|Black Dahlia]]'', in 1998. The puzzle-based adventure game tied Elizabeth Short's murder to [[Nazism|Nazis]] and [[occult]] rituals which the player had to investigate. The game features [[Dennis Hopper]], whose son-in-law was one of the company's owners, and [[Teri Garr]]. It also ties the murder to the infamous [[Cleveland Torso Murderer]], though the torso murders' case was altered to fit into the storyline.
*A film by [[Brian De Palma]], ''[[The Black Dahlia (film)|The Black Dahlia]]'', based on the Ellroy novel, stars [[Josh Hartnett]], [[Aaron Eckhart]], [[Scarlett Johansson]], [[Hilary Swank]], and [[Mia Kirshner]] as Elizabeth Short, and was released in September 2006.

===Selected references in other media===
<!--"Selected" is meant to prevent an exhaustive listing of mention in popular culture. Please do not continue adding to this section unless the reference is major. Don't add without proper citation. Thank you. Do not add the Hollywood Undead song to this section. It WILL be removed.-->
====Literature====
<!--"Selected" is meant to prevent an exhaustive listing of mention in popular culture. Please do not continue adding to this section unless the reference is major. Don't add without proper citation. Thank you.-->
*The [[Joyce Carol Oates]] novel ''[[Blonde (novel)|Blonde]]'', a fictional biography of [[Marilyn Monroe]], has a recurring character named Elizabeth Short. In the book it is implied that a studio mogul [[rape]]d Short, and later there is a small reference to Short being killed.
*[[John Gregory Dunne]] used the murder as a point of departure in his 1977 novel ''True Confessions'', which was made into the 1981 [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0083232/ film] of the same name starring [[Robert Duvall]] and [[Robert De Niro]] with a screenplay by Dunne and his wife, [[Joan Didion]].
*[[Max Allan Collins]] combined the Black Dahlia and Cleveland Torso Murder in his [[Shamus Award]]-winning 2002 novel, ''Angel in Black'', featuring his character, private investigator Nathan Heller.
*William Randolph Fowler, a reporter at the scene of the crime, included the Black Dahlia case in his 1991 autobiography, ''Reporters: Memoirs of a Young Newspaperman''.
*The book ''Exquisite Corpse: Surrealism And The Black Dahlia Murder'' compares the Black Dahlia murder to [[surrealist art]].
* Lynda La Plante's novel ''The Red Dahlia'' details a fictional story about a modern-day killer who is copying the Black Dahlia case.

====Television and film====
<!--"Selected" is meant to prevent an exhaustive listing of mention in popular culture. Please do not continue adding to this section unless the reference is major. Don't add without proper citation. Thank you.-->
*The case inspired the 1953 [[film noir|noir]] film ''[[The Blue Gardenia (1953 film)|The Blue Gardenia]]'', including a title song sung by [[Nat King Cole]].
*In the thirteenth episode of season 4 of the television series [[Hunter (TV series)|''Hunter'']], Sgt. Rick Hunter ([[Fred Dryer]]) investigates the case of The Black Dahlia.
*The 2006 film ''[[The Black Dahlia (film)|The Black Dahlia]]'', directed by [[Brian De Palma]], featured [[Mia Kirschner]] as Elizabeth Short.

====Music====
<!--"Selected" is meant to prevent an exhaustive listing of mention in popular culture. Please do not continue adding to this section unless the reference is major. Don't add without proper citation. Do not continue to add Youtube band Hollywood Undead. It WILL be removed. Thank you.-->
*Bob Belden's 2001 [[CD]] ''Black Dahlia'' draws inspiration from the case for a moody, noir [[film score|score]] divided into 12 sections depicting her life.
*In 2002, rock star and artist [[Marilyn Manson (person)|Marilyn Manson]] created a series of watercolor paintings based upon the murder.
*American [[melodic death metal]]/[[metalcore]] band [[The Black Dahlia Murder]] is named after the killing.
<!--"Selected" is meant to prevent an exhaustive listing of mention in popular culture. Please do not continue adding to this section unless the reference is major. Don't add without proper citation. Do not continue to add Youtube band Hollywood Undead. It WILL be removed. Thank you.-->


==References==
==References==
*Richard Newman. Healy, Patrick Francis. ''American National Biography Online'' Feb. 2000.
{{Reflist}}


{{start box}}
==Further reading==
{{succession box|
*{{cite book
before=Rev. [[John Early]], S.J.<br>#28|
| last = Daniel
title=[[List of Presidents of Georgetown University|President of Georgetown University]]|
| first = Jacque
years=1873-1882<br>'''#29'''|
| title = The Curse of the Black Dahlia
after=Rev. [[James A. Doonan]], S.J.<br> #30|
| location = Los Angeles
| publisher = Digital Data Werks
| year = 2004
| isbn = 0-9651604-2-4
}}
}}
*{{cite book
{{end box}}
| last = Fowler
| first = Will
| title = Reporters: Memoirs of a Young Newspaperman
| location = Minneapolis
| publisher = Roundtable Publishing
| year = 1991
| isbn = 0-915677-61-X
}}
*{{cite book
| authorlink = John Gilmore (writer)
| last = Gilmore
| first = John
| title = Severed: The True Story of the Black Dahlia
| origyear = 1994
| location = Los Angeles
| publisher = Amok Books
| year = 2006
| isbn = 1-878923-17-X
}}
*{{cite book
| last = Hodel
| first = Steve
| title = Black Dahlia Avenger: A Genius for Murder
| location = New York
| publisher = Arcade Publishing
| year = 2003
| isbn = 1-55970-664-3
}}
*{{cite book
| last = Knowlton
| first = Janice
| coauthors = Newton, Michael
| title = Daddy Was the Black Dahlia Killer: The Identity of America's Most Notorious Serial Murderer – Revealed at Last
| location = New York
| publisher = Pocket Books
| year = 1995
| isbn = 0-671-88084-5
}}
*{{cite book
| last = Nelson
| first = Mark
| coauthors = Sarah Hudson Bayliss
| title = Exquisite Corpse: Surrealism and the Black Dahlia Murder
| location = New York
| publisher = Bulfinch Press
| year = 2006
| isbn = ISBN 0-8212-5819-2
}}
*{{cite book
| last = Pacios
| first = Mary
| title = Childhood Shadows: The Hidden Story of the Black Dahlia Murder
| location = Bloomington, IN
| publisher = Authorhouse
| year = 1999
| isbn = 1-58500-484-7
}}
*{{cite book
| last = Rasmussen
| first = William T.
| title = Corroborating Evidence: The Black Dahlia Murder
| location = Santa Fe, NM
| publisher = Sunstone Press
| year = 2005
| isbn = 0-86534-536-8
}}
*{{cite book
| last = Richardson
| first = James
| title = For the Life of Me: Memoirs of a City Editor
| location = New York
| publisher = G.P. Putnam's Sons
| year = 1954
| id = (ISBN unavailable)
}}
*{{cite book
| last = Smith
| first = Jack
| title = Jack Smith's L.A
| location = New York
| publisher = Pinnacle Books
| year = 1981
| isbn = 0-523-41493-5
}}
*{{cite book
| last = Underwood
| first = Agness
| title = Newspaperwoman
| location = New York
| publisher = Harper and Brothers
| year = 1949
| id = (ISBN unavailable)
}}
*{{cite book
| authorlink = Jack Webb
| last = Webb
| first = Jack
| title = The Badge: The Inside Story of One of America's Great Police Departments
| location = Upper Saddle River, NJ
| publisher = Prentice-Hall
| year = 1958
| isbn = 0-09-949973-8
}}
*{{cite book
| last = Wolfe
| first = Donald H.
| title = The Black Dahlia Files: The Mob, the Mogul, and the Murder That Transfixed Los Angeles
| location = New York
| publisher = ReganBooks
| year = 2005
| isbn = 0-06-058249-9
}}

==See also==
*[[Glasgow smile]]
*[[Black Dahlia suspects]]

==External links==
*[http://www.amw.com/fugitives/brief.cfm?id=40390 Black Dahlia Killer Profile] on America's Most Wanted
*[http://www.bethshort.com/ The Black Dahlia Web Site] by Pamela Hazelton.
*[http://www.blackdahlia.info/ Black Dahlia Information Website] by Mary Pacios.
*[http://webapp1.latimes.com/theblackdahlia/ Black Dahlia] in The Los Angeles Times.
*[http://www.crimelibrary.com/notorious_murders/famous/dahlia/index_1.html CrimeLibrary] entry for Black Dahlia.
*[http://foia.fbi.gov/foiaindex/short_e.htm The FBI's Black Dahlia files] from the FBI's Freedom of Information Act site.
**[http://foia.fbi.gov/short_e/short_e_part01.pdf FBI file Part 1]
**[http://foia.fbi.gov/short_e/short_e_part02.pdf FBI file Part 2]
**[http://foia.fbi.gov/short_e/short_e_part03.pdf FBI file Part 3]
**[http://foia.fbi.gov/short_e/short_e_part04.pdf FBI file Part 4]
''Note that the FBI file incorrectly lists her as Elizabeth Ann Short. In reality, she had no middle name.''
*[http://www.lmharnisch.com/ Heaven Is Here!] by Larry Harnisch.
*[http://www.johngilmore.com/ John Gilmore Web Site] Author John Gilmore
*[http://www.blackdahliaavenger.com/faq.html Black Dahlia Avenger] by Steve Hodel.
*[http://blackdahliasolution.org/ Black Dahlia Solutions] an extensive and longstanding website by an anonymous author, claiming to have solved the case.
* [http://www.mapquest.com/directions/main.adp?do=nw&long=%2d118294429&2n=LOS%20ANGELES%20COUNTY&1ct=NA&height=493&q=wiltshire%20millennium%20hotel&1y=US&r=f&1z=90071&2a=3800%20S%20Norton%20Ave&mo=ma&2s=CA&2c=Los%20Angeles&dtype=s&cl=EN&width=1024&2v=ADDRESS&1qn=wiltshire%20millennium%20hotel&lat=34034335&did=1185632810&qq=1ADqpk24ofBjOvyL2FGh5S25b4kuqibrvweljr%252fzVOqhwJKDWPGMJ0RGbftbvcsfKqhonlf0sb0gVAqrEoDwZxY3MMq3bjqrswbS4d2aL%252bv8k5tuxjCdcXUhUncvWTYFOsdc%252foX6oXDaXi%252bEBTeX5nSXKuJTeXrx57mrJTbNSjexHI1vCSfIg1UdGkrpRgDnYt5hNuetv81f%252fSURUR977gHKE4svScAbP6GpFnTKfqnOHicpEp5DsskTaFiiStmNhykbyAJLcQDdTAtRNi01z7EEMOTScg8lrR4yKw%252b5vd6Ywvn12SqfBIU4MFTUpLXB9AgAWeXkGdwblWwIW%252bxGu6CYk6hGDp7W%252bmhcUEgL42QAsYKnQbbCayhuxkfgirvdUgLRSuchhyDDprojA0m%252fTJt5MyBHporhzEqRCCAwbmSBVRRXtLe6VCxzYVVfKvimYJVAee98%252bvwzq5qIPXMomh3Wlc97NS49oYifJd45usLS%252bF%252biTuO4td19RrncYKnyGjZM0kxSFO%252fNEbqMP2sorynTdcgyHmY4xwGjsFk1pi41X%252bwON3OISxbvfcOADsXD%252f9RUgWmUt6JCsiVKnOfs%252flsM8b4q5yq8NU8ahfnggg1e2Leq3%252bKZnSKNRKcKcr76s5Kifz4%252fhr8NfeicxmPPYrV9xMDWGncGXFMde3vFyO09CNeH7PcWCA%253d%253d&1a=506%20S%20Grand%20Ave&2y=US&un=m&2z=90008%2d1943&1s=CA&1c=Los%20Angeles&zoom=9&1pl=213%2d624%2d1011&1qc=Hotels%20%26%20Motels&1ffi=1&go=1&rsres=1&1v=ADDRESS&ct=NA&1pn=Millennmium%20Biltmore%20Hotel&1l=Qu7YH6+zoI29Gv/kBk9Mrw==&1g=/oqkLk1ShoJim+KIVf52kg==&2l=5u/yyKFRi7n7onZQof3hwg==&2g=qbM30n60M08CZhrKnnhGSg==One route] from the Biltmore Hotel (Short's last known location) to the crime scene, although it uses freeways that didn't exist in 1947.
* [http://ia360928.us.archive.org/2/items/Singles_And_Doubles_Singles_O-S/50-08-24epxxxxSomebodyKnows-UnsolvedMurderOfElizabethShort.mp3 "Somebody Knows" episode] a 1950 radio program on the case.


{{Georgetown University}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Black Dahlia, The}}
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[[Category:1947 deaths]]
[[Category:People from Massachusetts]]
[[Category:Hollywood history and culture]]
[[Category:American murder victims]]
[[Category:Unsolved murders]]
[[Category:1947 crimes]]
[[Category:People murdered in California]]


{{DEFAULTSORT:Healy, Patrick Franics}}
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[[de:Elizabeth Short]]
[[Category:1834 births]]
[[es:Elizabeth Short]]
[[Category:1910 deaths]]
[[Category:Irish-Americans]]
[[fr:Le Dahlia noir]]
[[Category:African Americans]]
[[it:Elizabeth Short]]
[[Category:American Jesuits]]
[[ja:ブラック・ダリア事件]]
[[Category:Georgetown University faculty]]
[[no:Elizabeth Short]]
[[Category:Leuven alumni before 1968]]
[[ru:Шорт, Элизабет]]
[[Category:Presidents of Georgetown University]]
[[fi:Elizabeth Short]]

Revision as of 13:44, 10 October 2008

File:FrancisPatrick.jpg
Patrick Francis Healy

Father Patrick Francis Healy (February 2, 1834 - January 10, 1910) was born in sweaty ass, Georgia to Irish American plantation owner Michael Healy and mulatto slave Mary Eliza. Michael Healy acknowledged his children by Mary Eliza, and since their children were technically slaves he arranged for them to leave Georgia and move to the North, where they would become free. Healy sent his older sons to a Quaker school in Flushing, New York, when he heard of a new Jesuit College, the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts, he sent his three oldest sons and Patrick to study there in 1844.

Following Patrick's graduation in 1850, he entered a Jesuit order and continued his studies. He was sent to Europe to study in 1858, as his "race" had become an issue in the United States. He attended University of Leuven in Belgium, earning his doctorate, becoming the first American of openly acknowledged part-African descent to do so. During this period he was also ordained to the priesthood on September 3 1864. In 1866 he returned to the United States and taught philosophy at Georgetown University. Eight years later, in 1874, he became its twenty-ninth president.

Patrick Healy's influence on Georgetown was so far-reaching that he is often referred to as the school's "second founder," following Archbishop John Carroll. Healy helped transform the small nineteenth century college into a major university for the twentieth century. He modernized the curriculum by requiring courses in the sciences, particularly chemistry and physics. He expanded and upgraded the schools of law and medicine. The most visible result of Healy's presidency was the construction of a large building begun in 1877 and first used in 1881, a building named in his honour as Healy Hall.

File:MichaelAHealy.jpg
Michael A. Healy

Healy left the College in 1882 and travelled extensively through the United States and Europe often in the company of his brother James, later returning in 1908 to the campus infirmary where he died. He is buried on the grounds of the University in the Jesuit cemetery.

Patrick Francis Healy and his siblings were among many successful Americans of the early 19th century to openly acknowledge partial African or "Black" ancestry. Patrick Francis was the first known American of acknowledged African ancestry to earn a PhD, the first to become a Jesuit priest, and the first to become president of a major university in the United States. His brother James Augustine Healy became Bishop of Portland, Maine. His brother Michael A. Healy joined the United States Revenue Cutter Service, becoming a celebrated sea captain, the sole representative of the U.S. government in the vast reaches of Alaska. His brother Alexander Sherwood Healy also became a priest, director of the seminary in Troy, New York, and rector of the Cathedral in Boston. Three of his sisters became nuns, one a Mother Superior.[1]

Despite their partial African ancestry, all of the Healys were accepted into U.S. society as "White" Irish Americans. According to James M. O'Toole, the biographer of Coast Guard Captain Michael Healy:

He repeatedly referred to white settlers [in Alaska] as "our people," and was even able to pass this racial identity on to a subsequent generation. His teenage son Fred, who accompanied his father on a voyage in 1883, scratched his name into a rock on a remote island above the Arctic Circle, proudly telling his diary that he was the first "white boy" to do so.

Footnotes

  1. ^ A summary of the ethnic self-identity of the Healys, taken from various sources, is available in A.D. Powell, Passing for Who You Really Are (Palm Coast FL, 2005) ISBN 0-939479-22-2.

References

  • Richard Newman. Healy, Patrick Francis. American National Biography Online Feb. 2000.
Preceded by
Rev. John Early, S.J.
#28
President of Georgetown University
1873-1882
#29
Succeeded by
Rev. James A. Doonan, S.J.
#30