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To
know him is to know strength - strength of purpose and conviction; to
know him is to be rich - rich with Christian ideals. |
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Flanigan
is a Troy native, born April 25, 1924, to the late William J. and Helen
E. Flanigan. He received his early education at St. Augustine’s and
Catholic Central High School, then graduated from St. Andrew’s
Seminary, Niagara University and Our Lady of the Angels Seminary.
He served as assistant pastor of St. Patrick’s, Watervliet, was
assistant to the principal of Keveny Academy from 1952 to 1964,
assistant pastor of St. Bernard’s Church, Cohoes, and pastor of St.
Ann’s Church in Fort Ann. While at St. Ann’s, he was chaplain of
Great Meadow Correctional Facility at Comstock from 1964-69.
He has served as pastor at St. Peter’s since December 1969.
Flanigan has served the community in various capacities, as president
and chairman of the Board of Directors of the Washington County Economic
Opportunity Council, chairman of the Narcotics Guidance Council and
member of the board of directors of TRIP. He has served on the Board of
Directors of the Troy Boy’s Club, formed and directed St. Peter’s
Band, now known as St. Peters-St. Patrick’s Band, was chaplain of Troy
Council Knights of Columbus, and a member of the board of Catholic
Central High School.
Among his many awards are the National Award for his work in the Rural
Office of Economic Opportunity, the Dismas Award for his work among the
prisoners at Great Meadow, and the Uncle Sam Citizens Award from the
Troy Bi-Centennial Commission.
He received the St. John Newman Award in 1995 and the Dr. Martin Luther
King Drum Major Presidential Award in 1998. Also in July 1998, Flanigan
shared the dais with first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton during the
dedication of the Kate Mullany House, which is located in St. Peter’s
Church parish.
He is a member of the Troy Boys Club Hall of Fame and the Cohoes Hall of
Fame. When dedicating the renovated Standard Furniture building,
businessman John Hedley named the building Flanigan Square in the
priest’s honor.
In 1998, the Thomas K. Flanigan Humanitarian Award, given annually by
St. Peters Parish to individuals who contribute to the betterment of the
city of Troy, and especially in the area of surrounding the parish, was
introduced. Flanigan, along with John Hedley, were the first recipients.
Flanigan, in his 50 years as a priest, has made many friends and has
earned the respect not only of the parishioners of St. Peters but from
members of the community, and the entire Capital District for his faith,
integrity and dedication.
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Troy loses beloved priest
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| By: Robert Cristo,
The Record |
November 25, 2001 |
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Father Flanigan marches with his St. Peter's/St. Patrick's Band
during a 1997 parade. (Record file photo)
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TROY - Collar City residents mourned the death of Rev. Thomas K.
Flanigan, retired pastor of St. Peter's Church.
He led the church for 31 years. |
Flanigan, 77, who only retired in June 2000, was well known in the
city for his spiritual leadership and the enthusiasm he showed leading
his parish's marching band during Flag Day parades and other
festivities around the Capital District.
"His love for children is one of things that really impressed me about
him," said Donna Megan, 57, who was Flanigan's administrative
assistant for seven years before he retired. "The children and that
band were his life. ... He was always concerned about their welfare."
In recent months, Flanigan had been in and out of the hospital with
respiratory problems, although a spokesperson for St. Mary's Hospital
would not specify the cause of his death.
During her time spent working with Father Flanigan, Megan said it
would take an entire book to describe all the "wonderful" moments she
shared with him over the years.
"He took care of so many people who needed clothes and were hungry,
and he really loved St. Peter's," she said. "He was very proud of his
parish and parishioners, and he totally worshipped his family."
Megan, who retired from St. Peter's when she was diagnosed as having
diabetes, also recollects a man who was there to guide her through
some pretty tough times in her own life.
"He helped me get through some hurdles in my life that, without him, I
don't think if I would have made it through. I'm just devastated. ...
I have no words to describe just how much he meant to me and many
other people. After he retired, we always kept in touch. ... He was a
wonderful man."
In addition to his work at St. Peter's Church, Flanigan also served on
the board of the Troy Boys & Girls Club, was chairman of the
Washington County Economic Opportunity Council and was one of Troy's
most popular grand marshals of the Troy Flag Day Parade.
"He loved marching in the parade with the kids, and I'm going to miss
him, because he was a great friend and an inspiration to so many
people," said Kay McCarty, who has been attending services at the
Fifth Avenue church since 1937.
"He was probably the model for what a priest is supposed to be. ...
His accomplishments are well known. He befriended everybody, and
everyone that knew him respected him," she added.
While he may not have known Flanigan well, the current pastor of St.
Peter's Church believes his predecessor had an impact on the church
and the community that will last for generations.
"He was a much beloved priest in Troy and the surrounding areas," said
Rev. James Mcnerney. "He had a big involvement with the kids, the
band, and he really made a difference in Troy."
In June 1983, Flanigan received the opportunity to meet with Pope John
Paul II during a three-month sabbatical and theology study in Rome. It
was an experience, he told The Record when he returned, that was
"difficult" to describe.
"It gave me chills, said Flanigan in a interview with The Record at
the time. "It was a great thrill." He said his two meetings with the
Pope were very impressive.
Calling hours for Father Flanigan will be held Tuesday in St. Peter's
Church at 4 p.m. His funeral will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday at St.
Peter's where the Mass will be celebrated by Most Rev. Howard J.
Hubbard, bishop of the Albany Diocese.
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| ©The
Record 2001 |
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Rev. Thomas K. Flanigan, 77
TROY - Rev. Thomas K. Flanigan 77, retired pastor of St. Peter's
Church in Troy, died at St. Mary's Hospital Saturday, November 24,
2001.
Born on April 25, 1924, in Troy, NY, he was the son of the late
William and Helen E. Hammill Flanigan.
Father Flanigan was a graduate of St. Augustine's School, Catholic
Central High School, class of 1942 and Niagara University, class
of 1946. He then went into the seminary and graduated from St.
Bernard's Seminary. He was ordained a priest on June 3, 1950.
Father Flanigan was an assistant pastor at St. Patrick's Church in
Watervliet then went to St. Ann's Church in Albany as assistant
pastor then on to St. Bernard's Parish where he was assistant
pastor and Dean of Students at Keveny Academy in Cohoes.
Father Flanigan then went to St. Ann's Parish in Ft. Ann, NY,
where he was pastor and chaplain at Great Meadows Correctional
Facility at Comstock. He then was sent to St. Peter's in Troy, NY,
where he as pastor from December of 1969 till June of 2000 when he
retired.
Father Flanigan was the founder of the Keveny Band in Cohoes the
St. Peter's Band and the St. Peter's-St. Patrick's Band in Troy.
Father Flanigan was a member of the Troy Knights of Columbus and
was the chaplain of the Columbiettes for the Troy Knights of
Columbus. He was a member and Board of Director of the Society of
The Friends of St. Patrick of Troy, member and Board of Director
of the Commission on Economic Opportunity in Rensselaer and
Washington Counties, a member of the Aging Athletes of Keveny
Academy, former president and Board of Directors member of CCHS.
He was the recipient of the Monsignor Burns Memorial Award, Troy
Boys Club Man of the Year, the Uncle Sam Man of the Year, the
Cohoes Care Taker's, the Damien Award for service to the New York
State Correction Facilities, and was the first recipient of the
Rev. Thomas K. Flanigan Humanitarian award of St. Peter's Church.
Survivors include two sisters Elizabeth M. Cullen and Marie H.
Thayer both of Troy, NY, and his late brother Rev. William J.
Flanigan, who died March 3, 1980, Matthew M, John D, and Kathleen
Flanigan. Also survived by several nieces and nephews and
grandnieces and nephews.
Funeral will be held Wednesday morning at 11 a.m. at St. Peter's
Church where the Mass will be celebrated by Most Rev. Howard J.
Hubbard Bishop of Albany.
The reception of the body of Father Flanigan will be held Tuesday
November 27, 2001 in St. Peter's Church at 4 p.m.
Relatives and friends are invited and may call at the John J.
Sanvidge Funeral Home, Inc., corner of 115th Street and 4th Avenue
in Lansingburgh Monday afternoon from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. and at St.
Peter's Church on Tuesday from 4 p.m. till 7:30 p.m. with a parish
Mass to follow at 7:30 p.m.
Interment will be in St. John's Cemetery, Troy, NY.
Those who wish may make donations to the Retired Clergy Fund @ the
Albany Diocese 40 North Main Avenue, Albany, NY 12203.
Arrangements have been entrusted to the John J. Sanvidge Funeral
Home, Inc. corner of 115th Street and 4th Avenue in Lansingburgh.
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Father Flanigan a champion of God, people
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Rev. Thomas K. Flanigan was the embodiment of what a priest
in the Roman Catholic Church should be. |
He was the kind of priest that Pat O'Brien or Bing Crosby used
to portray in the movies, except Father Flanigan performed his
good deeds in real life, every day.
His death has brought sadness to many in the area, especially
the people of Cohoes, where he had been dean of students at
the former Keveny Memorial Academy, and the people of Troy,
where he was pastor of St. Peter's Church on Fifth Avenue from
1969 until his retirement in 2000.
Father Flanigan was the heartbeat that kept the 175-year-old
inner-city parish going through thick and thin, at a time when
the diocese was closing down, or merging, church after church.
His love of music, even though he had no formal training,
inspired youngsters both at Keveny and later at St. Peter's,
where he formed the St. Peter's/St. Patrick's band.
His Keveny bands would often perform in the St. Patrick's Day
Parade in New York City.
The community so came to love this man and his mission that
fund-raisers were held to keep his bands in uniforms and
instruments.
John Hedley, a Troy entrepreneur, established the Father
Flanigan Humanitarian Award given annually for outstanding
community service. Hedley also named the old Standard
Furniture building he refurbished for state offices on River
Street Flanigan Square.
The list of awards given to Father Flanigan for community
service are too numerous to mention in this space. This
champion of the common man made the time to serve on various
boards and in service organizations in the community.
We will all miss this man of God and the contributions he made
to this community. The best way we can pay tribute to Father
Flanigan, however, is to make sure the ideals he embraced
during his life are carried on now that he is gone.
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'Father Troy' laid to rest
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| By Jeff
Buell, The Record |
November 29,
2001 |
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TROY - St. Peter's church was filled with respectful
mourners and songs of praise Wednesday, as hundreds gathered
to say goodbye to Father Thomas K. Flanigan, a beloved priest
devoted to serving his community. |
Flanigan, who was known throughout Troy for his work with the
Saint Peter's/Saint Patrick's Marching Band, died Friday at
the age of 77. Father James Vaughn, a Catholic Central High
School classmate
of Flanigan's, was honored to give the homily at his friend's
Mass.
He comforted those gathered with stories from Flanigan's early
years, saying " 'T.K.' (the nickname many of his close friends
and relatives knew him by) couldn't shoot at all, but he was a
scrapper" when playing basketball, and that he went to the
"country club of seminaries" in Niagara.
"Father Tom believed and lived this message," Vaughn said of
Psalm 110. "He had no doubt who he was, by the grace of God,
and what he was to be, the priest of the most high God -
forever ... 'TK' did more than that. He didn't just keep the
faith, he spread the faith by the life he lived as a
Christian. He didn't have to preach, he lived the life God
wanted him to."
Vaughn continued to talk about Flanigan for 20 minutes, mixing
humor with sadness to portry what Flanigan meant to the people
of the city. Toward the end of his homily, Vaughn placed a
name on Flanigan that fit perfectly for those who knew him -
Father Troy.
"Right here in Saint Peter's parish he has become a legend in
his own right," Vaughn said. "He was truly the spiritual
leader of this city. You would see his smiling Irish face with
his marching band in the local newspaper more than the
politicians."
Most Rev. Howard J. Hubbard, bishop of the Roman Catholic
Diocese of Albany, celebrated the Mass along with 80 priests
from around the area and as far away as Washington, D.C. As
the Mass was ending, Hubbard, who knew Flanigan since the day
he became a priest, expressed his condolences to the family
and the entire city.
"He was always passive and approachable, caring for the poor
and the needy," Hubbard said. "(He) became a perennial figure
at all the parades in the Capital District by leading his
marching band, (and) serving the seniors at Kennedy Towers. He
is rightly deserving of that appellation that Father Vaughn
has given him today, Father Troy."
As his casket was being taken from Saint Peter's, where he
served for more than 30 years, the band that he worked so hard
to form, played "When The Saints Go Marching In."
As some of his fellow priests clapped their hands, one of the
people choking back tears was Councilman Jim Gray, a life-long
parishioner of Saint Peter's who became close to Flanigan
since the day he arrived.
"Grown men were reduced to tears, he was that important to
everybody," Gray said. "He was the kind of guy that I think of
as a person and not just a priest. He touched everyone he met,
and he planted a seed in them. He will never be replaced."
Mayor Mark Pattison said that the term "Father Troy" was well
placed, but that Flanigan went a step further as well.
"He's been an icon, and sort of the heart of Troy, for a long
time," Pattison said. "He certainly spread his wings farther
than just the parish, as far as his community activities, and
his presence at parades."
Father Flanigan will have many things left behind in his
honor, including the former Standard Furniture Building on
River Street which is now named Flanigan Square; a community
garden on Old Sixth Avenue named after him; and the Father
Flanigan Humanitarian Award.
One past winner of that award is businessman John Hedley, a
close friend of Flanigan's who saw him shortly before his
death. Outside of the service, Hedley was reflecting on
humorous experiences with Flanigan and his marching band,
while trying to put into words what the loss of his good
friend means.
"He looked so good last week, it's hard to believe what
happened," Hedley said. "This loss is just tremendous, not
just for me, but the community, and especially this
neighborhood. He was really the staple and kept everything
together. This is Father Flanigan's neighborhood, we're just
going to keep and eye on it for him."
Flanigan will be laid to rest in Saint John's Cemetery in
Lansingburgh.
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©The Record 2001
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