White Star Line, 1845-1934, shipping company
- Corporate body
- 1845-1934
White Star Line, 1845-1934, shipping company
Wright, John, 1864-1926, Jesuit priest
Marefoschi, Mario, 1714-1780, Roman Catholic Cardinal
Clement XIV, Pope, 1705-1774, Head of the Catholic Church
Pollen, John Hungerford, 1858-1925, Jesuit priest
Galton, Charles S., 1860-1936, Jesuit priest
Gwynn, Stephen Lucius, 1864-1950, author, politician, and soldier
Maher, James, 1793-1874, parish priest for Carlow-Graigue
James Maher was born at Donore, Bagenalstown, County Carlow, in 1793. Entered Carlow College, studied in Rome, and ordained 1821. Returned to Ireland. In 1844, spent two years in Rome. He stayed at the Irish College where his nephew Dr Paul Cullen was Rector.
Irish Ecclesiastical Record, 1864-1968
Doyle, John, 1868-1898, Jesuit brother novice
Born: 14 January 1868, County Kildare
Entered: 24 March 1897, St Stanislaus College, Tullabeg, County Offaly
Died: 02 October 1898, St Stanislaus College, Tullabeg, County Offaly
◆ HIB Menologies SJ :
He was a Carpenter by trade.
He died at Tullabeg 02 October 1898 just over a year and a half after Entry.
Devine, James, 1860-1892, Jesuit priest novice
Born: 23 September 1860, County Derry
Entered: 12 November 1890, St Stanislaus College, Tullabeg, County Offaly
Ordained - pre Entry
Died: 17 April 1892, St Stanislaus College, Tullabeg, County Offaly
◆ HIB Menologies SJ :
Contracted flu a year and a half into his Novitiate. He was already a priest. he died at Tullabeg 17 April 1892
Suárez, Francisco, 1548-1617, Jesuit priest, philosopher and theologian
St Joseph’s Young Priests Society, 1895-
St Joseph’s Young Priests Society was started by Galway born Olivia Mary Taaffe. Publication entitled, St Joseph’s Sheaf.
Zambian Vice-Province of the Society of Jesus, 1969-
Vice-Province since 1969. Zambian - Malawian Province of the Society of Jesus, 1992-
Peal, Frederick, 1864-1934, Jesuit priest and chaplain
Johnson, John Stafford, 1889-1983, medical doctor and philatelist
University Hall, Dublin, 1913-2004
Lea-Wilson, Marie, 1887-1971, medical doctor
Bourke, Joseph, priest and president of St Munchins' seminary
President of St Munchins' Seminary, Limerick.
Gwynn, Denis Rolleston, 1893-1971, journalist and historian
Gwynn, Edward Lucius, 1890-1919, historian
Lavery, Lady Hazel, 1880-1935, artist, model, and socialite
Daughter of Hazel Martyn (later Lady Lavery), Alice Trudeau (1904–1991) was born on 10 October 1904 in Chicago.
Alice McEnery, widow of John A. McEnery of Co. Kilkenny, and daughter of Edward Trudeau of New York, surgeon, and his wife Hazel (afterwards Lady Lavery). Married Denis Gwynn, 1963.
Osborne, Walter Frederick, 1859-1903, painter
Burke, Edmund, 1730-97, politician and philosopher
White, James, 1913-2003, director of the National Gallery of Ireland
Barry, James, 1741-1806, history painter
Tynan, Katharine, 1859-1931, novelist, poet, and journalist
Hadcock, Neville, -1980, historian
Hong Kong Vice-Province, 1966-
Vice Province of Hong Kong, 1966-1980
Vice Province of Macau-Hong Kong, 1980-1985
Province of Macau-Hong Kong, 1985-1991
Macau-Hong Kong Region of the Chinese Province, 1991-2002
Hong Kong has Provincial delegate, 2002-2005
See: Irish Jesuit Mission to Hong Kong, 3 December 1926-3 December 1966
Daniel Purcell & Son, Solicitors
MacGennis, Edward, 1847-1906, Roman Catholic Bishop of Kilmore
Walsh-Strnad, Katherine, -2011, historian
FitzRalph, Richard, c.1300-1360, archbishop, theologian, and scholar
National Gallery of Ireland, 1854-
Since 1620 the Jesuits have, with some involuntary intermissions, been working in Galway. In 1645 our first school was founded through the generosity of Edmund Kirwan. The school, incorporated it seems into a Jesuit residence in the present Abbeygate St, survived and flourished although it had been established at a time of political upheaval and military activity. After the surrender of Galway to the Cromwellian forces in 1652, the Jesuits tried to maintain contact with the people of the area, and there is reference in 1658 to three members of the Society living secretly in County Galway. Jesuits returned openly to Galway after the Restoration of Charles II, but were banished again by Williamite forces in 1691. Once more they made a comeback in 1728 and for forty years they worked among the people of Galway. Sadly, a decrease in manpower forced the withdrawal of the “Mission” in 1768.
In 1859, at the request of the Bishop, members of the Order once more took up residence in the city, this time in Prospect Hill and served in St Patrick’s Church. Within a year they had opened a college near the site of the present Bank of Ireland at 19 Eyre Square. The college’s present location on Sea Road dates from 1863. The modern phase of Coláiste Iognáid began in 1929. The local enthusiasm for the language revival efforts of the emerging State was to be served by a re-invigorated Coláiste Iognáid, which became an Irish-medium School in 1931.
The college now is a co-educational, bilingual, non-fee-paying secondary school.
St Ignatius’ College, Riverview, Sydney, Australia, 1880-
Since its foundation in 1880, Saint Ignatius’ College, Riverview has been under the care of the Society of Jesus. After Archbishop Vaughan asked the Jesuits to open a day school in Sydney (St Kilda House, later to become St Aloysius’ College) and a boarding college on the North Shore, Father Joseph Dalton purchased the Riverview Estate on behalf of the Society of Jesus on 28 June 1878. Eighteen months later Father Dalton was appointed foundation Rector of Saint Ignatius’ College.
An advertisement was placed in the Catholic newspaper, The Express, stating that boys aged between eight and 12 would be received at Riverview ‘as soon as possible after the Christmas holidays’. Classes commenced in the cottage in February 1880. The cottage soon became very cramped as more boys arrived and in order to provide better accommodation, St Michael’s House was built. The building was designed by William Wardell and opened on the feast of Saint Michael, 29 September 1880. Further building took place at the College in 1882 with the construction of a wooden boatshed, and in 1883 the infirmary was built.
In its early years, the College offered ‘Classical and Modern Languages, History, Mathematics, the Natural Sciences and all other branches required for the Civil Service, the Junior, Senior and Matriculation Examinations.’ It was advertised that the curriculum included a modern side: mercantile subjects. By December 1882, with an enrolment of only 70 students, the College extended the curriculum to include English Composition, Writing, Music, Singing, Drawing, Painting, Irish History and Oral Latin. The main building of the College was constructed in three stages between 1885–1930 and the foundation stone was laid by Cardinal Moran Archbishop of Sydney on 15 December 1885. As originally designed by the architectural firm of Gilbert, Dennihey and Tappin, of Ballarat, the building was to be a huge square, representing four identical fronts, but only the South front was completed according to plan.
Carr, Thomas Joseph, 1839-1917, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Melbourne
Born: 10 May 1839, Moylough, Galway, Ireland
Died: 6 May 1917, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Dezza, Paolo,1901-1999, Jesuit priest and Cardinal
MacDonald Gordon, Andrew, 1906-1962, Jesuit priest
Pioneer Total Abstinence Association, 1898-
The Pioneer Total Abstinence Association (PTAA) was founded in Dublin in the Presbytery of St Francis Xavier Church, Gardiner Street in December 1898 by Fr James Cullen SJ.
Warner, Edward J., 1903-1987, Jesuit priest and chaplain
Staff Chaplain to Mgr. Coghlan
Clay, Brutus J, Jesuit brother
National Portrait Gallery, London, 1856-
Mungret Apostolic School, 1880-1969
Founded by Fr William Ronan SJ, at a house adjoining the Jesuit College of the Sacred Heart (Crescent), Limerick in September 1880. Moved to Mungret College in 1882.
Mungret Agricultural College, 1858-1878
Haughey, Charles, 1925-2006, politician and taoiseach
Moran, Patrick, 1823-1895, Roman Catholic Bishop of Dunedin
Bischoff, Anthony, 1910-1993, Jesuit priest and academic
Tyrrell, Robert Yelverton, 1844-1914, Irish classical scholar
Jesuit Library, Milltown Park, 1860-2019
O'Brien, William, 1832-1899, Irish judge
Murphy, Daniel, 1815-1907, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Hobart
Butler, George, 1815-1886, Roman Catholic Bishop of Limerick
Public Record Office of Northern Ireland, 1924
Bridges, Robert, 1844-1930, poet laureate
Dixon, Richard Watson, 1833-1900, English poet
Patmore, Henry, 1860-1883, poet
Patmore, Coventry, 1823-1896, English poet and critic