James A. Ryder, S.J. was an American Catholic priest and Jesuit. He founded the Philodemic Society, of which he was the first president. In 1840, Ryder became the president of Georgetown College, and oversaw the construction of the university’s Astronomical Observatory. In his later years, Ryder went to Philadelphia, where he assisted with the founding of Saint Joseph’s College and became its second president in 1856.
About James A. Ryder in brief

Ryder is buried next to his son, John Ryder, who was also a Catholic priest, and is buried at Mt. Saint Mary’s Church in Maryland. He also leaves behind a daughter, Mary Ryder, and a son, Joseph Ryder, a priest, also of the Jesuits. Ryder died on October 8, 1800, in Dublin, in. the Kingdom of Ireland. He began his novitiate in White Marsh, Maryland,. He was sent to Rome in the summer of 1820 by Peter Kenney, the apostolic visitor to the Society’s Maryland mission. He then went to teach theology and sacred scripture at the University of Spoleto. He became a good friend of Archbishop Giovanni Mastai-Ferretti, who appointed him the chair of philosophy. Ryder also spent part of 1828 teaching in Orvieto. He took up a professorship in philosophy and theology at Georgetown, to teach Jesuit scholastics. He implemented an overhaul of the curriculum under the direction of President Thomas F. Mulledy; he was simultaneously made vice president of the school. In an 1835 speech to Catholics, he called upon Catholics to defend national unity, which included opposing the efforts of Northern abolitionists to abolish slavery in the South. Although he had support of the leadership of the Jesuit leadership, he had concerns that he was more interested in giving the institution financially stable than ensuring the institution was financially stable. His selection was announced on May 1, 1840.
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