Word: armagh
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...said doughty, blue-eyed Joseph Cardinal MacRory, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland, when he visited the U.S. in 1935. Last week the 81-year-old Cardinal addressed Americans in a different fashion. He found it "exceedingly hard to be patient," he complained, when he thought of "my own corner of my country overrun by British and U.S. soldiers against the will of the nation." By "my own corner" the Cardinal meant 66% Protestant Ulster, where he was born, lives...
...priests, policemen, bartenders, politicians, firemen, judges and streetcar conductors, a goodly number are named for the Scottish-born saint who brought Christianity to Ireland. Thus there was plenty of cause for pious feeling last week when the authentic spiritual successor of St. Patrick-Joseph Cardinal MacRory, Archbishop of Armagh, Primate of All Ireland-visited New York...
...Armagh, where St. Patrick founded a church, monastery and school about 445 A. D., is a small city not in Catholic Irish Free State but in predominantly Protestant Northern Ireland. The Cathedral on the hilly site of St. Patrick's buildings is no longer Catholic. Because it was long ago appropriated by Protestants, the Catholics had to build their own, which was not opened for worship until 1873, not consecrated until 1904. Even in 1915, when Joseph MacRory became Bishop of Down and Connor, there still were what quiet-loving Irishmen called "The Troubles"-stirred up by the Black...
Bishop MacRory visited the U. S. in 1926, member of the retinue of Armagh's Archbishop O'Donnell at the Chicago Eucharistic Congress. In 1928 he ascended the throne which Archbishop O'Donnell's death left vacant. In 1929 he got his red hat. Last week Cardinal MacRory arrived in Manhattan on the S. S. Pennsylvania* after traveling half way around the world from Australia, where he represented the Pope at a Eucharistic Congress...
...never accepted the Free State Government of bushy-haired President William Thomas Cosgrave, has gained hundreds of recruits. Little groups of solemn-eyed young men have been drilling seriously in clearings in the woods. First serious trouble came four months ago when Republicans and Orangemen rioted at Portadown, County Armagh (TIME, Aug. 24). That trouble spread. Just as in the bloody days of 1916, men were found dead in the ditches. On Armistice Day, Dublin was in a turmoil. Crowds surged up & down O'Connell Street, cheering, singing "Down King! Up Republican Army!" Free State officials were alive...