John O'Rourke (1809–1887), was a priest and historian. O'Rourke's first book was Holly and ivy for the Christmas holidays, published in 1853 under a pseudonym, Anthony Evergreen.[1] The novel depicts the impoverishment of a Wicklow farming family by famine and a dishonest land agent; they are saved by a son's return from the California goldmines.
O'Rourke's best-known work is The history of the great Irish famine of 1847, with notices of earlier Irish famines (1875).[2] It is partially based on eyewitness evidence. He is as critical of Sir Robert Peel as of Lord John Russell, since he believes the repeal of the corn laws was not merely irrelevant but positively harmful. He praises the protectionist Lord George Bentinck for advocating subsidies for railway building. O'Rourke's fiercest hostility, however, is reserved for the landlords. He states that the government was in a difficult situation and at least tried to help, while landlords ‘as a class’ did little or nothing.
O'Rourke died on 17 July 1887 at the presbytery in Maynooth.[3]
References
edit- ^ Anthony Evergreen, Holly and ivy for the Christmas holidays (Dublin, London: James Duffy, 1868)
- ^ John O'Rourke, The great Irish famine (McGlashan and Gill,1875)
- ^ Maume, Patrick (October 2009). "O'Rourke, John". Dictionary of Irish Biography. Retrieved 27 March 2023. This article incorporates text from this source, which is available under the CC BY 4.0 license.
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