seamus dubhghaill

Promoting Irish Culture and History from Little Rock, Arkansas, USA


Leave a comment

Birth of Rob Kearney, Former Rugby Union Player

Robert Kearney, former rugby union player, is born on a dairy farm on March 26, 1986, on the Cooley Peninsula in County Louth. He plays for 15 years for Leinster followed by a six-month stint in Australia, playing for Perth based side Western Force. He also plays over a decade for the Ireland national rugby union team with whom he earns 95 caps and goes on two British & Irish Lions tours in 2009 and 2013. As a youth he also plays rugby union for Clongowes Wood College and Gaelic football for Louth in the All-Ireland Minor Football Championship.

Kearney is the third of five children. He has an older brother, Richard, a younger brother Dave (who plays for Leinster) and a sister, Sara, the youngest of the five children. His elder brother Ross dies at the age of six following an accident in 1988. He is a seventh cousin of former U.S. President Joe Biden.

Like many of his peers, Kearney gets involved in athletics at an early age. The dominant sport in the area is Gaelic football. As a youth, he plays Gaelic for Naomh Muire, and in the Cooley Kickhams underage setup, before graduating to the Cooley senior football team at the age of 17 in 2004 and also Louth at minor level.

Kearney attends Clongowes Wood College in County Kildare for his secondary education. After his Leaving Certificate he moves to University College Dublin (UCD) on a sports scholarship, where he plays for the rugby team. He graduates in April 2010 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in economics. In 2005 he helps the U-20s team win the McCorry Cup, beating Dublin University Football Club (DUFC) in the final. In 2018, he is awarded the UCD Alumni Award in Sport.

Kearney plays for Leinster at both schoolboy and U-19 level before going on to represent them as a senior. He scores a hat-trick of tries on his debut for Leinster in a pre-season friendly win over Parma.

Kearney makes his Celtic League debut for Leinster in 2005 in a 22–20 defeat away to the Ospreys. He makes 32 appearances in the competition, scoring eight tries, with three penalties during a period in September 2006, when usual place kicker, Felipe Contepomi, is injured. He plays in his first Heineken Cup game in a 19–22 defeat against Bath at the Royal Dublin Society (RDS) on October 22, 2005. It is the first of ten appearances scoring ten tries in the process. He is part of Leinster’s Heineken Cup winning team in 2009 but misses the 2011 final due to injury. On May 21, 2012, the day after Leinster wins their second straight Heineken Cup, he is announced as the ERC Player of the Year for 2012. During the 2011–12 campaign he starts all nine European matches scoring six tries. He is crowned Leinster player of the year for the 2011–12 season. He confirms his departure from Leinster on September 24, 2020.

In late September 2020, it is confirmed that Kearney has signed a one-year contract with Australian side Western Force. He makes his Force debut in an 11–27 defeat to the Brumbies on February 19, 2021. He announces his retirement from rugby after one season with Western Force in Super Rugby AU and Super Rugby Trans-Tasman. Following his retirement, he returns to Louth GAA club Cooley Kickhams where he begins training in August 2021 for the first time since 2005.

Kearney represents Ireland at schoolboy and U-19 level, and tours with Ireland A in the 2006 Churchill Cup. He is first called into the Irish training squad for 2005’s autumn internationals but does not play. He is named in the Irish squad to the 2007 summer tour of Argentina and earns his first cap against Argentina on June 2, 2007, in a 16–0 defeat. During the 2008 Six Nations Championship he scores two tries, one against Scotland and one against England. He is a member of the victorious Ireland team that wins the 2009 Six Nations Championship, Triple Crown and Grand Slam. One of the most famous incidents in his career is a high tackle incident involving Italy‘s Andrea Masi in the first minute of a game. The incident is taken as an indication of the danger posed by Kearney in attack. He misses almost a year – from November 2010 until August 2011 – due to a knee injury that requires surgery.

In the 2011 Rugby World Cup, Kearney is selected but is injured for the first game against the United States. However, he plays in all the other matches which take Ireland through to the quarterfinals, in which they are knocked out by Wales, 22–10. He is selected in the Ireland squad for the 2012 Six Nations Championship and named in the starting team to play Wales in the opening match. He plays in all the other games, which see Ireland finish third in the table. He is also in the first Irish rugby team in 39 years to beat Australia on Australian soil, in the 2018 summer series. He is named in the Ireland squad for the 2019 Rugby World Cup in Japan, starting three of Ireland’s five matches and splitting time at fullback with Jordan Larmour.

Kearney is named in the British & Irish Lions squad for the 2009 tour to South Africa. He makes his Lions test debut as a substitute in the 26–21 first test defeat in Durban. Due to an injury to Lee Byrne, he is selected again for the second test in Pretoria. He scores the only try for the Lions in a 28–25 defeat. He then plays in the final test in Johannesburg which the Lions win 28–9. On April 30, 2013, he is named in his second British & Irish Lions squad.

Kearney marries Jess Redden in 2021, and their son is born in 2023.


Leave a comment

Birth of Standish James O’Grady, Author, Journalist & Historian

Standish James O’Grady (Irish: Anéislis Séamus Ó Grádaigh), Irish author, journalist, and historian, is born in Castletownbere, County Cork, on September 18, 1846. He is inspired by Sylvester O’Halloran and plays a formative role in the Celtic Revival, publishing the tales of Irish mythology, as the History of Ireland: Heroic Period (1878), arguing that the Gaelic tradition has rival only from the tales of Homeric Greece.

O’Grady’s father is the Reverend Thomas O’Grady, the scholarly Church of Ireland minister of Castletown Berehaven, County Cork, and his mother Susanna Doe (or Dowe). The Glebe, his childhood home, lies a mile west of Castletownbere near a famine mass grave and ruined Roman Catholic chapel. He is a cousin of Standish Hayes O’Grady, another noted figure in Celtic literature, and of Standish O’Grady, 1st Viscount Guillamore. After a rather severe education at Tipperary Grammar School, he follows his father to Trinity College, Dublin, where he wins several prize medals and distinguishes himself in several sports.

O’Grady is a paradox for his times, proud of his Gaelic heritage, he is also a member of the Church of Ireland, a champion of aristocratic virtues (particularly decrying bourgeois values and the uprooting cosmopolitanism of modernity) and at one point advocates a revitalised Irish people taking over the British Empire and renaming it the Anglo-Irish Empire.

O’Grady proves too unconventional of mind to settle into a career in the church, and takes a job as a schoolmaster at Midleton College, then in a period of expansion. He also qualifies as a barrister, while earning much of his living by writing for the Irish newspapers. Reading Sylvester O’Halloran’s A general history of Ireland (1778) sparks an interest in early Irish history. After an initial lukewarm response to his writing on the legendary past in History of Ireland: The Heroic Period (1878) and Early Bardic Literature of Ireland (1879), he realises that the public wants romance, and so follows the example of James Macpherson in recasting Irish legends in literary form, producing historical novels including Finn and his Companions (1891), The Coming of Cuculain (1894), The Chain of Gold (1895), Ulrick the Ready (1896) and The Flight of the Eagle (1897), and The Departure of Dermot (1913).

O’Grady also studies Irish history of the Elizabethan period, presenting in his edition of Sir Thomas Stafford‘s Pacata Hibernia (1896) the view that the Irish people had made the Tudors into kings of Ireland to overthrow their unpopular landlords, the Irish chieftains. His The Story of Ireland (1894) is not well received, as it sheds too positive a light on the rule of Oliver Cromwell for the taste of many Irish readers. He is also active in social and political campaigns in connection with such issues as unemployment and taxation.

Until 1898, O’Grady works as a journalist for the Daily Express of Dublin, but in that year, finding Dublin journalism in decline, he moves to Kilkenny to become editor of the Kilkenny Moderator, which is printed at 28 High Street. It is here he becomes involved with Ellen Cuffe, Countess of Desart, and Captain Otway Cuffe. He engages in the revival of the local woolen and woodworking industries. In 1900 he founds the All-Ireland Review and returns to Dublin to manage it until it ceases publication in 1908. He also contributes to James LarkinsThe Irish Worker paper.

O’Grady’s influence crosses the divide of the Anglo-Irish and Irish-Ireland traditions in literature. His influence is explicitly stated by the Abbey Theatre set with Lady Gregory, W. B. Yeats and George William Russell attributing their interest in the Fenian Cycle of Gaelic tradition in part to him. This leads to him being known as the “Father of the Celtic Revival.” Some of the figures associated with the political party Sinn Féin, including its founder Arthur Griffith, have positive things to say about his efforts in helping to retrieve from the past the Gaelic heroic outlook.

O’Grady marries Margaret Allen Fisher, daughter of William Allen Fisher, and they have three sons. Advised to move away from Ireland for the sake of his health, they leave Ireland in 1918. After living in the north of France and Northamptonshire, they move to the Isle of Wight. He is working on a final exposition of his ideas when he dies suddenly on May 18, 1928.

O’Grady’s eldest son, Hugh Art O’Grady, is for a time editor of the Cork Free Press before he enlists in World War I in early 1915. He becomes better known as Dr. Hugh O’Grady, later Professor of the Transvaal University College, Pretoria (later the University of Pretoria), who writes the biography of his father in 1929.