John P. McDonagh – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu The official news site for Fordham University. Wed, 15 Jan 2025 20:57:55 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://now.fordham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/favicon.png John P. McDonagh – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu 32 32 232360065 Fordham Mourns the Passing of Jimmy Higgins, Facilities Foreman  https://now.fordham.edu/university-news/fordham-mourns-the-passing-of-jimmy-higgins-facilities-forman/ Wed, 15 Jan 2025 20:30:58 +0000 https://now.fordham.edu/?p=199577 James “Jimmy” Higgins, a foreman on the Lincoln Center campus facilities team who joined Fordham in 2016 and quickly made himself an indispensable member of the department, died suddenly on Jan. 13. He was 54 years old.

John McDonagh, director of facilities operations at Lincoln Center, said Higgins was a natural-born leader who possessed a broad, expansive knowledge of the construction trades that he eagerly shared with others. 

“He always took control of a situation—emergencies, anything. If you had an issue, you called him, and he’d get it taken care of,” he said. 

“The guy knew everything from carpentry and plumbing to electrical and welding. His skill set was unrivaled.”

Higgins was born on October 27, 1970, to Tom and Gail Higgins and grew up in the shadow of the Throgs Neck Bridge in the Bronx neighborhood of Silver Beach. He graduated from Monsignor Scanlan High School in Throgs Neck in 1988. 

He trained as a plumber and worked in maintenance and facilities positions for Maritime College and Mill Neck Manor School for the Deaf. He came to Fordham in 2016 after two years working as a plumber mechanic for the Hicksville School District in Long Island.

Just three years later, he was honored with a Sursum Corda award at the University’s annual convocation. He was lauded as one of the most valued members of the Facilities Department “because of his energetic approach to sharing his skills and knowledge with his colleagues.”

“Over the past few years, Jimmy has been at the forefront of several significant and unforeseen plumbing incidents, and it was his problem-solving abilities that were instrumental in helping the department in resolving those events,” his citation read. 

Higgins met his wife, Christine, a teacher at Mill Neck Manor, while supervising the construction of a new building there. She said she was attracted to him because of his troubleshooting skills, his sense of humor, and his “honest, true love of kids and people.” 

“He was a quiet genius when it came to fixing and building anything imaginable,” she said. “He was always kind, always helpful, and went out of his way for others.”

True to his maritime roots, Christine said he enjoyed fishing and relaxing with friends and family on boats, as well as bow hunting. Colleagues might not know that he was also an avid reader, she said.

She said she’d always treasure their time trekking up to a cabin in knee-deep snow in Hancock, New York, listening to Irish music on Sundays on WFUV’s Ceol na nGael, and listening to John Denver.

“He was a mentor to so many people without realizing it,” she said.

McDonagh, who attended high school with Higgins’s older brother Tom, considered him a friend for the past 30 years. He said he will miss the daily morning meetings where they’d discuss how to tackle the pressing project of the day on campus.

“Jimmy was a person who I could walk through campus and bounce technical ideas off of him,” he said.

“In our field, it’s a very precious thing to be able to trust somebody and have these conversations. That is something I’ll miss more than anything. I looked forward to those sessions every day.”

Higgins is survived by his wife, Christine, his first wife Karen, his brother Tom, his sister Ellen, and his children James and Jamie.

A wake will be held on Thursday, Jan. 16, from 3 to 7 p.m. at  Schuyler Hill Funeral Home, 3535 E. Tremont Avenue in the Bronx. A funeral Mass will be held on Friday, Jan. 17, at 10 a.m. at St. Frances de Chantel Church, 90 Hollywood Avenue.

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New Names, Familiar Faces Help to Expand Campus Ministry https://now.fordham.edu/inside-fordham/new-names-familiar-faces-help-to-expand-campus-ministry/ Mon, 12 Sep 2011 21:43:35 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=8379 Fordham has welcomed the Rev. John P. McDonagh as the new director of campus ministry at the Lincoln Center campus. His addition is the latest step by the Office of Mission and Ministry to renew the face of its religious presence on campus.

 The Rev. John P. McDonagh hopes to increase the student-led dimension of campus ministry at Lincoln Center.  Photo by Janet Sassi
The Rev. John P. McDonagh hopes to increase the student-led dimension of campus ministry at Lincoln Center.
Photo by Janet Sassi

Father McDonagh joined Fordham on July 1 with 11 years of experience ministering in higher education, most recently at Duke University, where he was associate director and campus minister of the university’s Catholic Center. Prior to his position at Duke, Father McDonagh was a Catholic religious adviser at Amherst College and director of campus outreach in higher education in the nearby Diocese of Springfield, Mass.

He studied for the priesthood at Rome’s Gregorian University, where he obtained a License in Sacred Theology. He completed studies at Ottawa’s St. Paul University for a License in Canon Law and at Springfield’s Western New England College for a Master’s in Business Administration.

During his time at Duke, Father McDonagh sponsored an arts and sciences course, “Catholic Church: Change and Challenge,” to explore the intersection of the church and society in a post-Vatican II world. He has interests in 19th and 20th century visual art and contemporary American theatre and a strong interest in Ignatian spirituality.

“When St. Ignatius was a young person choosing to study, he chose to be in a big city—Paris,” Father McDonagh said. “I believe that if he were alive today, he’d be at Fordham, right in the middle of it all, which makes me all the more excited to be here.”

Father McDonagh said he hopes to “animate campus ministry” by increasing its student-led dimension and by encouraging members of the Fordham community to explore unknown spiritual territories.

“Discovering the holy in one’s life is an amazing experience,” he said. “I’d like to enable young people to trip over the presence of God in their lives.”

Other new appointments to Fordham’s mission and ministry office include:

• Joan Cavanagh, associate director of campus ministry at Lincoln Center, has been named director of campus ministry at Fordham Westchester, where she will assume new leadership duties;

• Carol Gibney, MSW, associate director of campus ministry at Fordham Westchester, has assumed the positions of associate director of campus ministry at Lincoln Center and director of Ignatian spirituality; and

• Philip A. Florio, S.J., Fordham’s director of campus ministry, will add the position of assistant vice president for campus ministry to his role, in which he will oversee all three of Fordham’s campus ministries.

Also, Damian O’Connell, S.J., who served Fordham’s campus ministry for 13 years, most recently as assistant director of Lincoln Center’s campus ministry, has moved to America House and commenced a sabbatical year.

“We continue to strengthen and revitalize the work of campus ministry in sustaining and advancing the Jesuit and Catholic identity of Fordham,” said Monsignor Joseph G. Quinn, vice president of University mission and ministry.

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