Patrick Roger Cleary
Patrick Roger Cleary (1858-1948) (known locally as P.R. Cleary) was the founder and namesake of Cleary University in Howell, Michigan.[1]
Patrick Roger Cleary was born in Nenagh in Ireland in 1858.[2] After his parents' death when he was eight years old, the Tuthill family, his father's employer, took in Cleary and his younger sister and gave them an English education.[3] The Tuthills eventually sent the children to their older siblings who had earlier moved to the United States because of the poor economy in Ireland.[4]
The children went from New York and to Hubbardston, Michigan and then completed grade school and high school within a total of four years.[5] After he eventually attended Valparaiso University in Indiana studying business and particularly business penmanship which was very important before the invention of the typewriter.[6] After graduating, he travelled around the area teaching penmanship after placing ads in local newspapers.[7]
In 1883 Cleary settled in Ypsilanti planning on teaching students at what is now Eastern Michigan University, and he started his first class in rented space.[8][9]
By 1885 he constructed a new school building and formed a Board of Trustees.[10] At this time he married Helen Clarke Jenks from St. Clair, Michigan and they had four children, Charles, Marjorie, Ruth and Owen, all of whom attended Cleary College and Eastern Michigan University, and all of whom later worked at Cleary College. Helen Cleary also worked at the school and was an active member of the Ladies Literary Club and the local Congregational church.[11]
After his retirement in 1938 Cleary returned to his hometown in Ireland and drove around the nation.[12] He visited Éamon de Valera, Prime Minister of Ireland and the Irish legislature and then travelled around England where he was introduced in the House of Commons. In 1939 his wife, Helen, died.[13]
In 1938 his son Owen Cleary became president of school, but during World War II, his father had to become President again, after the Governor requested that Owen form and lead the “Michigan State Troops” after the Michigan National Guard was called up in 1942.[14] After the War, Owen returned as president and then became a Republican politician in Michigan. Patrick Cleary died in 1948 at age 90.[15][16][17]
References
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-12-29. Retrieved 2013-01-07.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- Ann Cleary Kettles, Ypsilanti Gleanings, Spring 2006, http://ypsigleanings.aadl.org/ypsigleanings/15183
- Ann Cleary Kettles, Ypsilanti Gleanings, Spring 2006, http://ypsigleanings.aadl.org/ypsigleanings/15183
- Ann Cleary Kettles, Ypsilanti Gleanings, Spring 2006, http://ypsigleanings.aadl.org/ypsigleanings/15183
- Ann Cleary Kettles, Ypsilanti Gleanings, Spring 2006, http://ypsigleanings.aadl.org/ypsigleanings/15183
- Ann Cleary Kettles, Ypsilanti Gleanings, Spring 2006, http://ypsigleanings.aadl.org/ypsigleanings/15183
- Ann Cleary Kettles, Ypsilanti Gleanings, Spring 2006, http://ypsigleanings.aadl.org/ypsigleanings/15183
- Ann Cleary Kettles, Ypsilanti Gleanings, Spring 2006, http://ypsigleanings.aadl.org/ypsigleanings/15183
- Laura Bien, Hidden History of Ypsilanti (The History Press, Oct 6, 2011), pg. 119-125 https://books.google.com/books?id=qFbFd-yibP4C&source=gbs_navlinks_s
- Ann Cleary Kettles, Ypsilanti Gleanings, Spring 2006, http://ypsigleanings.aadl.org/ypsigleanings/15183
- Principal women of America - Volume 2 (Mitre Press, 1936) Page 72
- Ann Cleary Kettles, Ypsilanti Gleanings, Spring 2006, http://ypsigleanings.aadl.org/ypsigleanings/15183
- Ann Cleary Kettles, Ypsilanti Gleanings, Spring 2006, http://ypsigleanings.aadl.org/ypsigleanings/15183
- Ann Cleary Kettles, Ypsilanti Gleanings, Spring 2006, http://ypsigleanings.aadl.org/ypsigleanings/15183
- Ann Cleary Kettles, Ypsilanti Gleanings, Spring 2006, http://ypsigleanings.aadl.org/ypsigleanings/15183
- History of Cleary College by Nancy Snyder, available in the Historical Museum Archives.
- Laura Rose Ashlee, Traveling Through Time: A Guide To Michigan's Historical Markers (University of Michigan Press, 2005), pg. 441 https://books.google.com/books?id=Xd-mh9r0zEkC&source=gbs_navlinks_s