TS-CAGB-0342

Record Date: 
26 July 2012
Exact wording of epitaph: 

Erected by
JOHN MALONEY
Scranton, Pennsylvania
U.S.A
In memory of his Father
PATRICK MALONEY
Died 5th April 1863 Aged 70 years
Also his mother
CATHERINE MALONEY nee Brophy
Died 18th April 1873 Aged 82 years
And his son
PATRICK MALONEY
Died 3rd May 1859 Aged 18 years
Also his brother
MICHAEL MALONEY
Died 9th April 1873 Aged 62 years
And his nephew
JOHN MALONEY
Died 17th March 1894 Aged 32 years

MAY THEIR SOULS REST IN PEACE

Memorial Type: 
Headstone
Grave location
County: 
Latitude: 
52.587304722222
Longitude: 
-7.5399913888889
Number of people commemorated: 
6
People commemorated: 
Name: 
John
Surname: 
Maloney
Address: 
Scranton ,Pennsylvania , U.S.A
Name: 
Patrick
Surname: 
Maloney
Date of death - day: 
5
Date of death - month: 
April
Date of death - year: 
1863
Age: 
70
Relationship with first person: 
Father
Name: 
Catherine
Surname: 
Maloney nee Brophy
Date of death - day: 
18
Date of death - month: 
April
Date of death - year: 
1873
Age: 
82
Relationship with first person: 
Mother
Name: 
Patrick
Surname: 
Maloney
Date of death - day: 
3
Date of death - month: 
May
Date of death - year: 
1859
Age: 
18
Relationship with first person: 
Son
Name: 
Michael
Surname: 
Maloney
Date of death - day: 
9
Date of death - month: 
April
Date of death - year: 
1873
Age: 
62
Relationship with first person: 
Brother
Name: 
John
Surname: 
Maloney
Date of death - day: 
17
Date of death - month: 
March
Date of death - year: 
1894
Age: 
32
Relationship with first person: 
Nephew
Notes: 

HISTORICAL PEOPLE OF BALLINGARRY

Martin Maloney ( see www.ballingarry.net and search Historical People of Ballingarry )

Ballingarry Emigrant Paid For Repairs To Roman Basilica
Extraordinary Story Of a Famine Refugee
Who Became a Papal Marquis

There died on May 8th, 1929 at the age of 82 years, a man who in his early boyhood was a refugee from the famine in Ireland but who through hard work and ability got on well in the United States and devoted huge sums for church building and repairs all over the world.

Born in Lisnamrock, Ballingarry, Thurles, in “black 1847” Martin Maloney was brought by his parents to Scranton, Pennyslvania, in 1854. He was named a Papal Marquis by Leo XIII and a Papal Chamberlain by St. Pius X (1904)
As a result of anti-clerical legislation in France in 1901, most religious orders and congregations saw their property confiscated. But behind the scenes a whisper, a rumour began to grow. A wealthy American was buying up much of the religious orders property to preserve it for a time when Catholic France, the ‘eldest Daughter of the Church” would return to reason. The name of the American was Martin Maloney and he took title to a number of convent and religious institutions in order to preserve them from confiscation.

Born During The Famine
Born in Ballingarry, Thurles, on December 11, 1847, Martin was brought by his parents, famine refugees, to Scranton, Pennsylvania, in 1854. His parents had arrived in 1848 but were not able financially to bring their son to the U.S. until then.

Gasoline Burner Invention
Young Martin worked in the mines, as a clerk in a grocery store and as an apprentice to a metal worker. With little schooling, but much experience, he established a grocery store that failed and later a plumbing business.
In the plumbing trade he obtained some patents from which he improved a gasoline burner which became widely used in street lighting.

Contractor For Public Lighting
When he moved to Philadelphia at the age of 26, Martin was already on the way to success. He obtained contracts for lighting the grounds of the Centennial Exposition and for the street lighting of Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Camden and Jersey City. In 1880 he organised the Pennsylvania Globe Gas Light Company. He later became associated as an organiser and owner of several public utility firms which culminated in the Electric Company of America.

Built Many Chapels
Martin fervently supported the Catholic Church Extension Society. Through this mission headquarters he constructed chapels in Rock Hill and Florence. South Carolina and Rome, Georgia. Many hospitals and charities received donations that were never recorded. He provided for St. Martin’s chapel at the seminary of St. Charles vorremeo, Ovedbrook Pa, for the beautiful Italian Renaissance St, Catherine’s Church at his summer home in Springlake, N.J., as a memorial to a daughter who died at sea; The Martin Maloney Home for the aged in Scranton and the elaborate Maloney Chemical Laboratory at the Catholic University of America in Washington D.C.

Named Papal Marquis
In Rome he paid for repairing the ancient Basilica of St. John Lateran, the Pope’s Cathedral. Named a Papal Marquis by Leo XIII and a Papal Chamberlain by Pius X (1904) he was interred after his death (May 8, 1929) in the crypt of the memorial church at Spring Lake.

The Old Home - And The New
The old home where Martin Maloney was born still stands in Lisnamrock. Until recent years it was occupied by his first cousins, Mrs Mike Hogan, Johanna and Mike Maloney, now deceased.

The Phelan family, Gortnahoe village and the Brophy family, The Commons are amongst his relatives in Co. Tipperary.

His summer residence at Spring Lake, New Jersey is a beautiful white mansion, patterned on the White House at Washington D.C. On the entrance gates to his home in Scranton, Pennsylvania, is inscribed the name “Ballingarry.”

(adapted from "the Acres" re-visited 1992)