McNulty was survived by his wife, Caroline Abbott Converse McNulty, and a one-year-old son named Rob Roy MacGregor McNulty (later, also, Converse), who had been born in Cincinnati in 1844. Caroline McNulty died before Rob Roy McNulty's tenth birthday, leaving him an orphan. Rob Roy MacGregor McNulty Converse become a nationally prominent
Episcopal priest and U.S. scholar, and a chaplain with the
Union Army during the
American Civil War. He was wounded at the
Battle of Gettysburg and nursed back to health at the
Mower U.S.A. General Hospital in
Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia. Returned to the field for the
Battle of the Wilderness, McNulty's brigade was captured by
Confederates, and he was held as a prisoner of war at
Andersonville from May to December, 1864. After the war Rob Roy McNulty was successively rector of St. John's Church in Waterbury, Connecticut, Christ Church in Corning, New York, and St. Luke’s Church in Rochester, New York. A
Phi Beta Kappa graduate of
Iowa's
Griswold College, he was also a professor of mathematics and science and chaplain at
Washington and Jefferson College and
Hobart College. He was also president of the
Archaeological Institute of America and a fellow of the
American Geographical Society. ==See also==