Name: Rev. Francis E. Grogan CSC
Taking the Charitable View
He served as a sonar expert on a Navy destroyer during
World War II. But the Rev. Francis E. Grogan spent the
rest of his days sowing peace as a chaplain, a teacher and
a parish priest.
He was not the kind of priest who lived to unravel
theological contradictions or who sought power on a higher
plane. He disliked confrontation and tried to take the
charitable view, said the Rev. J. Robert Rioux, who met
him when both were studying for the priesthood in North
Easton, Mass., and remained his friend for the next 50
years. "His approach to life was, 'Don't sweat the
small stuff,' " he said. "You could witness this
tendency in his clothes." More than once, he showed
up for chapel in his bedroom slippers.
Father Grogan, 76, was most recently the head of the Holy
Cross Residence in North Dartmouth, Mass. On Sept. 11, he
was aboard United Airlines Flight 175, planning to visit
his sister in California, when the hijacked plane smashed
into the World Trade Center.
Father Rioux envisioned his friend ministering to others
until the last moment. In the cockpit of the jet,
"evil was personified," Father Rioux said,
"but personified goodness entered the scene, a person
who loved people, a person of great faith."
Profile published in THE NEW YORK TIMES on
December 27, 2001.
Rev. F. Grogan, 76;
Priest, teacher
By Globe Staff, 9/16/2001
The Rev. Francis E. Grogan, superior of the Holy Cross
residence in North Dartmouth, was killed Tuesday in the
crash of United Flight 175 in New York. He was 76.
He was born and raised in Pittsfield, and earned degrees
at the University of Notre Dame and Fordham University.
For six years after his ordination, he served as director
of admissions and registrar at Stonehill College in
Easton. He spent the next four years with the Family
Theatre and Family Rosary Crusades in Madrid, where he
helped produce Christian movies.
He also taught high school and served at churches in New
York, Connecticut, Vermont, Texas, and Massachusetts - as
chaplain and teacher at Holy Cross High School in
Waterbury, Conn.; assistant pastor of Sacred Heart Parish
in Bennington, Vt.; assistant pastor of San Jose Parish in
Austin, Texas, and assistant pastor of Holy Cross Church
in Easton.
In the 1960 Stonehill College yearbook, which was
dedicated to him, he was remembered for his smile, his
friendliness, and his patience, and he was called a model
and a guide.
Father Grogan was traveling to see his sister, Anne
Browne, in Ramona, Calif., when he died.
Along with his sister, he leaves two nephews, and his
brothers in the Holy Cross community.
A Mass of the Resurrection will be celebrated at 7 p.m.
Wednesday in the Holy Cross Church in Easton.
Editorial Obituary published in THE BOSTON GLOBE on 9/16/2001.