Martin O'Connor was born on May 18, 1900, in Scranton, Pennsylvania, to Martin John and Belinda Catherine (née Caffrey) O'Connor.[1] His parents died when he was young.[2] He received his early education at James Madison Elementary School, but was later transferred to the district's administration building to attend advanced classes.[3] O'Connor entered St. Thomas High School in Scranton at age 12, and enrolled at St. Thomas College three years later.[3] He graduated from St. Thomas with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1918.[1]
Returning to Pennsylvania in 1929, O'Connor was appointed secretary to Bishop Thomas O'Reilly and as chancellor of the diocese.[1] He served as an associate editor of the diocesan newspaper, Catholic Light, from 1929 to 1932.[2]From 1934 to 1943, O'Connor was pastor of St. Peter's Cathedral Parish.[4] He was named a papal chamberlain in 1931, and raised to the rank of domestic prelate in 1936.[1] In addition to his pastoral duties, O'Connor became vicar general of the diocese in 1938.[7]
O'Connor was named rector of the Pontifical North American College in Rome on November 26, 1946, then still closed in the aftermath of World War II.[6] O'Connor reopened the college in 1948,[8] having supervised its construction of new campus on Janiculum Hill in Rome.[9] Supposedly, O'Connor once said that his mission was "to educate others in gracious dining and papal protocol," to which U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom Joseph Kennedy Sr. responded, "Don't be such an ass."[10] O'Connor allegedly disapproved of Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi's appointment as apostolic delegate to the United States.[10]
O'Connor was raised to titular archbishop of Laodicea in Syria on September 5, 1959. O'Connor attended all four sessions of the Second Vatican Council between 1962 and 1965.[6] During the preparatory stages of the Council, he was named to head the press secretariat in June 1960.[12] As head of the secretariat, he drafted a constitution dealing with the press, motion pictures, radio, and television.[13] In September 1963, in response to complaints by journalists about the lack of news sources, he was appointed to head a new press committee for the second session of the Council.[14]
Apostolic Nuncio to Malta
He became the first Nuncio to Malta on December 15, 1965. According to his Los Angeles Times obituary, "the appointment marked the first time a papal ambassador had been sent to a country in the United Kingdom since the Protestant Reformation 400 years earlier"[15] – although technically, Malta was no longer in the United Kingdom after 1964.[16]
Retirement
O'Connor resigned his diplomatic post in May 1969 and his curial post on September 8, 1971. He returned to Pennsylvania in 1980.[2]Martin O'Connor died on December 1, 1986, at Mercy Hospital in Wilkes-Barre at age 86.[2]
References
^ abcdefghijCurtis, Georgina Pell (1961). The American Catholic Who's Who. Vol. XIV. Grosse Pointe, Michigan: Walter Romig.