The department welcomes contributions to any of these funds and endowments, or to its Annual Fund.

  • The McGuire-Peebles Scholarship Endowment

    The McGuire-Peebles Scholarship Endowment, named for former departmental chairs Dr. Martin R. P. McGuire and Dr. Bernard M. Peebles, is used to generate competitive fellowship stipends for graduate students in Greek and Latin.

    Dr. Martin McGuire (1897-1969) first taught in the Department of Greek and Latin in 1924 as a graduate assistant pursuing his MA; after earning his Ph.D. in 1927, he joined the departmental faculty as an instructor, beginning a Catholic University career that lasted over 40 years and saw him promoted to ordinary professor, graduate dean, and (from 1949 to 1962) department chair. Dr. McGuire was primarily a Latinist (his dissertation was on St. Ambrose), but his interests were wide-ranging, as witnessed in significant part by his work on The New Catholic Encyclopedia, for which he served as the senior editor (source: Ward W. Briggs, Jr., ed., Biographical Dictionary of North American Classicists (Greenwood, CT and London, Greenwood Press, 1994), 387-89, with additional references).

    Dr. Bernard Peebles (1906-1976) earned his Ph.D. from Harvard in 1940, following a period as a fellow of the American Academy in Rome (1932-34). He held faculty positions at Fordham University and at St. John's College in Annapolis, MD, before joining the faculty at the rank of associate professor in 1948. During his time in the Department of Greek and Latin he was promoted to ordinary professor and succeeded Dr. Martin McGuire as department chair in 1962, a position he held until 1970. Dr. Peebles' primary interests lay in Latin textual criticism, but he was deeply engaged in literary analysis as well (source: Ward W. Briggs, Jr., ed., Biographical Dictionary of North American Classicists (Greenwood, CT and London, Greenwood Press, 1994), 489-91, with additional references).

  • The Dr. Bernard M. Peebles Memorial Fund

    The Dr. Bernard M. Peebles Memorial Fund provides ongoing support for the purchase of books for the Greek and Latin library that bears Dr. Peebles' name. The library enjoys a separately demarcated space within the department's suite of offices, as well as the services of a student bibliographer and an annual review by the faculty for the consideration of new book purchases. It receives daily use as both a reference room and a study space.

    The department is also delighted to consider gifts of textual editions, commentaries, and scholarly books for the library to supplement the purchases made through the Peebles Fund. Such gifts, upon request, can be commemorated with bookplates to serve as lasting memorials as well as research tools.

  • The Virgil S. Crisafulli Memorial Scholarship Fund

    The Virgil S. Crisafulli Memorial Scholarship Fund is used to offset tuition expenses for graduate students in Greek and Latin.

  • The Margaret H. Gardiner Endowment

    The Margaret H. Gardiner Endowment was established in 1905 "as an endowed Professorship, to be known as the Margaret H. Gardiner Chair of Greek and Sanskrit" (The Catholic University of America, Year-Book 1913-14, p. 51). Its first incumbent was Prof. George Melville Bolling, who occupied the Chair from 1906-1913. Learn more.

  • The Lorraine Elisabeth Cella Memorial Scholarship Fund

    The Lorraine Elisabeth Cella Memorial Scholarship Fund was established in 1983 in memory of a former student of the Center for Medieval and Byzantine Studies, Ms. Lorraine Elisabeth Cella. Its purpose is to provide financial assistance in the form of research support, conference and travel grants, tuition payments, or supplemental stipends for living expenses to students pursuing a graduate degree in the field of Medieval and Byzantine Studies.

    To make a contribution to the Lorraine Elisabeth Cella Memorial Scholarship Fund, please contact the department.

  • The Dr. George J. Siefert Fund

    Dr. George Siefert (1910-1984) first taught as an instructor in 1936, immediately upon returning from a two-year fellowship at the American Academy in Rome. He was promoted to assistant professor in 1947, shortly before receiving his Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania (1948); his dissertation was Meter and Case in the Latin Elegiac Pentameter, a topic that reflects the devotion to precise and elegant Latinity that was a hallmark of his classroom teaching. In 1963, he was promoted to associate professor, and in 1965, he was awarded the Benemerenti Medal for service to CUA by Pope John VI (sources: obituary letter from Frederick R. McManus, Academic Vice President, CUA, October 19, 1984; Cynthia Kahn, "A Memorial of George J. Siefert, Jr.," American Academy in Rome, October 17, 1988). Learn more.