Father Malcolm Carron, S.J., 1917-2005

Father Malcolm Carron, S.J., served as President of the University of Detroit for 13 years and initiated the Office of Special Projects and Project 100 Program through a Presidential Task Force that formed in February 1968.


carronBirth: May 15, 1917, USA
Death: April 19, 2005, Clarkston, Oakland County, Michigan, USA

Malcolm Carron, S.J. served at the University of Detroit for more than 23 years. During his tenure, he wore a variety of hats as a Jesuit priest, teacher, administrator, civil rights leader and as the school's President for 13 years.

Following his tenure at the University, he helped raise enrollment and funds for University of Detroit Jesuit High School as president for 11 years and was instrumental in opening Loyola High School in Detroit in 1993 as its first president.

carron
Woodruff, Rayburn, and Fr. Carron
An exceptionally modest man, Fr. Carron worked hard to break down the barriers that separated people on the basis of faith and cultural heritage and worked tirelessly to keep the University ecumenical as well as urban.

Fr. Carron contributed a great deal to the community outside the academic realm. A founding member of New Detroit, Inc. and the Michigan Biotechnology Institute, he served on more than 50 civic committees and boards, including Boys Hope of Detroit, Vista Maria, and the United Way for Southeastern Michigan, the Economic Club of Detroit and the Race Relations Council of Detroit.

During his final years, Fr Carron resided at the Jesuits' Colombiere Center in Clarkston, Michigan. He passed away on April 19, 2005 at the age of 87.

Remarks from Joe Koczera, S.J.

Father Mal Carron, whose years of dedicated service to his home city earned him the title “Mr. Detroit,” died two days ago at Colombiere, a month shy of his 88th birthday. Mal had what I suspect is the unique distinction of serving as president of all three Jesuit schools in Detroit, playing a pivotal role in the history of each institution. Mal led the University of Detroit through exceptionally tough times, weathering student rebellion, civil unrest, economic decay and urban decay. At a time when many Detroit institutions were following a tide of migration to the suburbs, Mal Carron kept U of D in the city and worked hard to make the university responsive to the needs of a struggling urban community. After thirteen years as a university president, Mal moved from higher to secondary education, spending over a decade at the helm of U of D Jesuit High School. Foregoing a well-deserved retirement, in his late-seventies Mal served as founding president of Loyola High School, bringing Jesuit education to at-risk students in innercity Detroit. Mal Carron spent the last several years of his life at Colombiere, which is where I got to know him. At our first meeting, after I'd been introduced as a novice, Mal replied with a wink and a smile: "I was a novice myself once - about fifteen years ago!" On good days, Mal Carron could crack a joke and carry a conversation. On bad days, he spoke only in monosyllables ("oh boy" was his all-purpose response to any kind of situation, good or bad) but remained very alert; no matter how incommunicative he appeared, Mal consistently did quite well in the Colombiere football pool. Though I didn't meet Mal Carron until the twilight of his life, I'm glad to have known him. Mal may have passed from the scene, but his edifying example will continue to inspire Jesuits in Detroit and beyond. AMDG.

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