He was born Francis Leader MacCarthy on 10 May 1905 at
Goldington,
Bedford. His father was John Leader MacCarthy, a descendant of the
MacCarthy Reagh family, Princes of Carbery who was a local civil engineer, and his mother was Mary Susanna
Willis Bund, the daughter of
John William Willis Bund, a Worcestershire landowner and historian of the Celtic Church. He adopted the additional surnames of Willis Bund by Royal Licence in 1950 in compliance with a condition set out by his maternal grandfather to allow him to inherit family property in
Worcestershire. He was educated at
Bedford Modern School and
Emmanuel College, Cambridge (BA 1927, MA 1932), and became an assistant master at
Shrewsbury School. He was appointed Chaplain and Fellow of Balliol in 1945, and after serving as a college
proctor also became Dean. In this role he appears to have displayed a great deal of patience and tolerance amidst the growing rebelliousness of student life in the 1960s.
Howard Marks, the notorious user and later smuggler of
cannabis was an undergraduate at Balliol, and was frequently summoned to see the dean. In his autobiography Marks recalls developing "an enormous liking and respect" for MacCarthy Willis Bund, who interceded on Marks's behalf over drug use with the College's Senior Proctor. Also amongst MacCarthy Willis Bund's charges were
J. I. Packer, the Christian theologian, whose studies in philosophy of religion he supervised, and the writer
Ved Mehta, who also recalls the dean's tolerant approach to his duties. MacCarthy Willis Bund also became a
Fellow of
All Souls College, Oxford. He married first, Joan Mildred Elton Carey (died 1948) and secondly, Roberta J. ("Jane") Dalkin (died 2016). His eldest daughter, Alison MacCarthy Willis Bund married the distinguished American academic
L. Perry Curtis who became
Emeritus Professor of
History at
Brown University. Francis Leader MacCarthy Willis Bund died in 1980 and was buried at
Combe, Oxfordshire. There is a plaque dedicated to him outside the Old Dean's Room on the library staircase at Balliol. ==References==