Clongownians of Distinction

Page 36

I

Clongowes 1896-1897 Oliver St John Gogarty Oliver St John Gogarty (1878-1957), surgeon, politician and man of letters, was a native of Dublin, who attended Clongowes in 1896-7. He graduated in medicine from TCD in 1904, where he won prizes for poetry, excelled in sport (especially swimming and cycling), and earned a reputation for rumbustious living and bawdy wit. Throughout his life he was a renowned conversationalist. After a spell in Oxford, where he came second in the Newdigate poetry prize, he studied ear, nose and throat surgery in Vienna and was appointed to a consultancy post in the Meath Hospital. He proved a capable surgeon with a reputation for dexterity and speed. He frequently remitted the fees of poorer patients. He became a friend of Arthur Griffith, spoke at the founding meeting of Sinn Féin in 1905 and was a regular contributor to its early publications. During the Troubles, he accommodated the Sinn Féin headquarters files in his house and sheltered IRA men ‘on the run’, including Michael Collins. In 1922-36 he was an active senator and a passionate supporter of the Free State government. His country home at Renvyle in Connemara was burned in reprisal, and in 1923 he escaped republican kidnappers only by swimming across the Liffey. He later rebuilt Renvyle and converted it into a hotel. As a politician, he campaigned strongly for slum clearance in Dublin. In 1901 he became a friend of James Joyce, and they shared the Martello Tower in Sandycove for a brief period in 1904, but soon differed. Joyce later depicted Gogarty in unflattering terms as ‘stately, plump Buck Mulligan’ in the opening scene of Ulysses. He was also a close associate of WB Yeats, who included seventeen of his poems in his Oxford book of English verse (1936). Apart from poetry, he wrote plays for the Abbey Theatre, novels – one of which was banned – and a study of St Patrick. His reminiscences of the halcyon days of his youth As I Was Going Down Sackville Street (1937) embroiled him in a costly libel action, which he lost. In 1939 he settled in America, where he continued to pursue a literary career.

Clongownians of Distinction

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James Lynch

1hr
pages 54-122

Enoch Louis Lowe

1min
page 53

Matthew Lawless

1min
page 51

Patrick ‘P.J.’ Little

1min
page 52

Thomas Lane

1min
page 50

Thomas ‘Tom’ Kettle

1min
page 48

Sir Gilbert Laithwaite

1min
page 49

James Fitzgerald-Kenney

1min
page 47

James Joyce

1min
page 46

James Hogan

1min
page 43

Sir Andrew Horne

1min
page 45

John Vincent Holland

1min
page 44

George Hodnett

1min
page 42

James Hanlon

1min
page 40

Richard James ‘Jim’ Hayes

1min
page 41

William Hackett, SJ

1min
page 39

Hugh Geoghegan

1min
page 35

Thomas Finlay

1min
page 34

Aubrey Gwynn, SJ

1min
page 37

Oliver St John Gogarty

1min
page 36

Francis Hackett

1min
page 38

Thomas Esmonde

1min
page 33

Eugene Esmonde

1min
page 32

William Doolin

1min
page 31

Andrew Devane

1min
page 30

Patrick Cunningham

1min
page 27

Joseph Dalton, SJ

1min
page 28

James Deeny

1min
page 29

James Cullen, SJ

1min
page 26

George Crosbie

1min
page 24

Sir Francis Cruise

1min
page 25

Thomas Crean

1min
page 23

James Corboy, SJ

1min
page 19

John Conmee, SJ

1min
page 18

Timothy Corcoran, SJ

1min
page 20

Michael Courtney

1min
page 21

Edward Coyne, SJ

1min
page 22

Sir William Butler

1min
page 17

James Bayley Butler

1min
page 16

James Aloysius Burke/ Séamus de Búrca

1min
page 15

Introduction

3min
pages 6-7

Frederick Boland

1min
page 11

Thomas Bodkin

1min
page 10

Joseph Brennan

1min
page 12

Stephen Brown, SJ

0
page 13

John Bruton

1min
page 14

Alfred Aylward

1min
page 8

Daniel Binchy

1min
page 9
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