Fr.  Joseph L. Levesque, C.M., president emeritus of Niagara University, will celebrate the 50thanniversary of his ordination into the Vincentian priesthood this Saturday evening with friends and family at the Niagara Falls Country Club.

From the Niagara University web site..

A native of North Tarrytown, N.Y., Father Levesque was ordained as a Vincentian priest on May 27, 1967, at Mary Immaculate Seminary in Northampton, Pennsylvania. He taught religious studies at St. John’s Preparatory School in Brooklyn and at St. Joseph’s Seminary in Princeton, N.J., before being assigned to Niagara’s religious studies department in 1970. Father Levesque left his teaching duties at Niagara University to pursue his studies in theology at The Catholic University of America, where he received his doctoral degree.

A native of North Tarrytown, N.Y., Father Levesque was ordained as a Vincentian priest on May 27, 1967, at Mary Immaculate Seminary in Northampton, Pennsylvania. He taught religious studies at St. John’s Preparatory School in Brooklyn and at St. Joseph’s Seminary in Princeton, N.J., before being assigned to Niagara’s religious studies department in 1970. Father Levesque left his teaching duties at Niagara University to pursue his studies in theology at The Catholic University of America, where he received his doctoral degree.

In 1978, Father Levesque resumed teaching at Niagara, and was also named dean of the College of Arts and Sciences and director of the college’s graduate division. He remained in the post until 1986, when he returned to seminary work, serving as president of St. Joseph’s Seminary.

Father Levesque was elected provincial superior of the Eastern Province of the Congregation of the Mission in 1990. He stepped down from the position in June of 1999 after the maximum nine-year term, and, in 2000, he was named the 25th president of Niagara University.

During his tenure as president, the fourth-longest in the history of Niagara, the university experienced a continuous process of transformation that significantly developed the physical character of the university’s campus and its 21st century approach to teaching and learning.

Nearly $100 million was invested in new construction, renovation and improvement projects, including the Academic Complex and Bisgrove Hall, the B. Thomas Golisano Center for Integrated Sciences, the Leary Theatre and the Elizabeth Ann Clune Center for Theatre, and the Gacioch Family Alumni and Admissions Center.

In September 2011, reinforcing Father Levesque’s vision for community service, NU launched the Institute for Civic Engagement. An initiative developed through the President’s Office, the institute was designed to strengthen existing community partnerships and form new town-gown relationships.

When Father Levesque announced in January 2013 that he would be stepping aside as president of Niagara University, the institution’s Board of Trustees granted him the esteemed title of president emeritus. Four months later, it was announced that NU’s Institute for Civic Engagement would be renamed the Rev. Joseph L. Levesque, C.M. Institute for Civic Engagement to honor his commitment to the community.

In November 2013, it was announced that the Rev. Joseph L. Levesque, C.M., Endowed Scholarship had been established as a tribute to Father Levesque’s lasting, positive impact on the university. The scholarship is available to first-year NU students who live in a rural community from one of the eight counties that comprise the Western New York region.