The Glories of Ireland eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 452 pages of information about The Glories of Ireland.

The Glories of Ireland eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 452 pages of information about The Glories of Ireland.

The list of Irish pioneer settlers in Australasia is a lengthy one.  The name of Thomas Poynton stands out prominently.  He was a New Zealand pioneer who had married an Irish girl in Sydney.  The devotion of Poynton and his wife to the faith of their fathers is evidenced by the fact that he several times made the long journey from his home to Sydney to interest the church authorities in the wants of the New Zealand Irish Catholics, and that she twice made the same arduous trip to have her children baptized.  Thomas Mooney has the distinction of being the first Irish pioneer in Western Australia; and yet another Irishman, Cassidy by name, carried out a policy of benevolent assimilation by marrying the daughter of a Maori chief.

Among the pioneer ecclesiastics were Father William Kelly of Melbourne and Father John McEncroe, a native of Tipperary and a Maynooth man, who for thirty years and more was a prominent figure in the religious and civic life of New South Wales.  Father John Brady, another pioneer priest, became Bishop of Perth.  Irish names occupy a conspicuous and honored place in the roster of the Australian episcopate.  Notable on the list are Bishop Francis Murphy of Adelaide, who was born in Co.  Meath, and Archbishop Daniel Murphy of Sydney, a native of Cork, the man who delivered the eulogy on the occasion of Daniel O’Connell’s funeral at Rome.  But scant reference can here be made to the illustrious primate of Australia, Cardinal Moran, archbishop of Sydney from 1884 to 1911, who was such a potent force in the land of his adoption, and whose masterly History of the Catholic Church in Australasia puts him in the forefront of ecclesiastical historians.  On his death he was succeeded in the see of Sydney by another Irishman, Archbishop Michael Kelly of Waterford.  Archbishop O’Reily of Adelaide is a recognized authority on music, and has written several pamphlets on that subject.  A Galway man, Dr. T. J. Carr, a great educator, is now (1914) archbishop of Melbourne, and a Clare man, Dr. J. P. Clune, holds sway in Perth.

Irishmen in Australia have figured largely in the iron and coal industries, in the irrigation projects, in the manufacturing activities, and in the working of the gold mines.  But they have likewise distinguished themselves in other fields of endeavor.  Prominent on the beadroll of Australian fame stand the names of Sir Charles Gavan Duffy (1816-1903), founder of the Nation newspaper in Dublin, member of the British house of commons, and afterwards premier of Victoria and speaker of the legislative assembly, and his sons, John Gavan Duffy and Frank Gavan Duffy, public-spirited citizens and authorities on legal matters.  The Currans, father and son, active in the public life of Sydney, were afterwards members of the British parliament.  Distinguished in the records of the Australian judiciary are Judges Quinlan, Casey, Brennan, and O’Dowd.  The Rev. J. Milne Curran, F.G.S., is a geologist who has achieved

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The Glories of Ireland from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.