LeRoy Obituary

Obituary_LeRoy.JPG

Dublin Core

Title

LeRoy Obituary

Description

This is Reverend A.E. LeRoy's obituary from April 5, 1960, published by the Office of Communications at the United Church of Christ, 14 Beacon Street Boston, MA. It was written the day after he died and provides information about his time spent as the principal at Amanzimtoti Institute in Natal, South Africa. It goes on to discuss LeRoy's work upon returning to the United States and provides information about his surviving family members.

Source

Oberlin College Archives

Publisher

Office of Communications at the United Church of Christ,
14 Beacon Street Boston, MA USA

Date

April 5, 1960

Rights

The photographs and documents in Contextualizing Objects in the Oberlin College Ethnographic Collection in OMEKA are provided courtesy of the Oberlin College Archives for research and educational use only. For all other uses of photographs and documents--including downloading of images or reproduction in any media--please seek permission from: Oberlin College Archives http://www.oberlin.edu/archive/contact/form/index.html

Format

jpg

Bibliographic Citation

Oberlin College. Archives. RG 28/2. Alumni and Development Records. Series: Graduates and Former Students. Folder: LeRoy, Albert Emile. Box # 618

Document Item Type Metadata

Text

Office of Communication
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
(Congregational Christian Churches-
Evangelical and Reformed Church)
14 Beacon Street (Capitol 7-1750)
Boston 8, Massachusetts

Boardman Getsinger, Manager


The Rev. Dr Albert E. LeRoy, Congregational Christian educational missionary in South Africa for a quarter of a century, and head of the Walker Missionary Home, Auburndale, Massachusetts, for 10 years, died last night (Monday, April 4) at the River Terrace Guest House, Bradenton, Florida. He would have been 87 on April 28.

Dr. LeRoy gave distinguished service as an educator in South Africa where he was for almost 25 years principal of Amanzimtoti Institute, later Adams College, in Natal.

Appointed career missionaries in 1901 by the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Mr. LeRoy and his bride, the former Rhoda A. Clarke, sailed for Africa in August 1901 and began their work at Unzumbe. The following year Dr. LeRoy was appointed head of Amanzimtoti Institute and continued in that post until 1926 when he and Mrs. LeRoy returned to this country.

From 1926 to 1936 he was superintended of the American Board's Walker Missionary Homes, Auburndale, Massachusetts. After their retirement the LeRoys lived in Bradenton. Mrs. LeRoy died there in 1959.

Born April 28, 1873, at Petrolia, Pennsylvania, Albert Emile LeRoy was educated at Wabash College, Indiana; and at Western, Auburn and Oberlin Theological Seminaries.

In 1932 Wabash College conferred on him the degree of Doctor of HUmane Letters. Said the citation in part: "You joined to missionary zeal the wisdom of a student of human nature and great practical sagacity as an administrator." It spoke of him as a "friend of many tribes and nations, counsellor of many men in times of great perplexity."

Dr. LeRoy is survived by a son, Gaylord C. LeRoy, a member of the faculty of Temple University, Philadelphia; and two daughters, Anna, Mrs. Allyn J. Waterman, (5 Chapin Court) Williamstown, Massachusetts; and Mary, Mrs. Frederick A. Funkhouser, Jr., (4046 Silaby Road), Cleveland, Ohio.

Funeral services will be held at the Griffith-Cline Funeral Chapel, Bradenton, Thursday, April 7. Interment will be in Manasota Cemetry, Bradenton.

Tags

Citation

“LeRoy Obituary,” The Five Colleges of Ohio Digital Exhibitions, accessed March 28, 2024, https://omeka.ohio5.org/items/show/850.