| The lion of the West: Archbishop John McHale |
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John McHale was among the first Irish bishops since the Reformation to have been educated in Ireland. As a fearless critic of British mismanagement of Ireland during the Great Famine, he was attacked by the British press but loved by the Irish people.
In the evening of November 7,1881, John McHale, Archbishop of Tuam, died peacefully in his own home. . He was ninety years of age and he had been a bishop for fifty six of those years. He had been consecrated as coadjutor to Doctor Waldron of Killala in March 1825, whom he succeeded in May 1834 and three months later he became Archbishop of Tuam. He was the first Irish bishop since the Reformation to have been educated wholly in Ireland. The language of his home at Tobernavine, in Tirawley, County Mayo was Irish as was the language ot the local school which he attended before going to a school in Castlebar and to Maynooth in 1807. It is some indication of McHale's scholarly ability that after his priestly ordination in 1814 he was appointed assistant to the Professor of Dogmatic Theology, Doctor Delahogue, whom he succeeded as Professor in 1820. In March 1829 the President of Maynooth, Doctor Crotty published A Letter to the Right Hon. Lord Bexley in reply to charges against the College of Maynooth. An extract from this indicates how McHale was already winning fame and making enemies as a public defender of Irish Catholicism under the pseudonym Hieropolis. Doctor Crotty wrote: 'Dr McHale took up his pen to vindicate the Catholic Church of Ireland against the virulent and unprovoked abuse, which for years was increasingly poured out against her doctrines and her clergy. If, in doing so, he transgressed the limits of legitimate defence, he was certainly guilty of no injustice against his aggressors.' Christened 'The Lion' Nevertheless it is absolutely certain that he is not connected with civil disturbance or any counsel according to which the Civil Power could be endangered.' 'I am very happy to be able to add my testimony to the votes of the bishops of the Province of Tuam concerning that prelate, learned, pious, eloquent, and deserving well of religion.' McHale outstanding leader In the English press Catholic priests and bishops were accused of being political agitators. McHale responded publicly. This is part of his withering response: 'Are priests of the diocese silently to look on, and I myself to forbear petition or remonstrance. . . Continue, then, so to confound the distinct notion of things, and so to pervert the propriety of language as to represent under the name of "political agitation" the unceasing labours of the Catholic Hierarchy to improve the conditions, and to save the lives of the poor. Of course McHale did and said many other things not all of them, perhaps, wise and prudent. But when he died the city of Tuam was draped in mourning for a week and a flag on the town hall proclaimed 'Ireland's greatest son, John, is dead.' This article first appeared in The St Martin Magazine (November 2001), a publication of the Irish Dominicans.
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