Cathal O'Byrne
Cathal O'Byrne (1867 – 1 August 1957) was an Irish singer, poet and writer.
Early life[]
O'Byrne was born and raised at Balmoral County Down, the son of parents from County Wicklow. He was employed at a grocery on Beersbridge Road in where he would befriend Joseph Devlin. He settled in the Falls Road area of Belfast where he lived with his sister in a house at 43 Cavendish Street. In 2004, the Ulster History Circle placed a blue plaque on this house in his memory. [1]
Career[]
He joined the Gaelic League in Belfast and became a popular singer and storyteller. He was a stage manager of the Ulster Theater and would even become involved with the IRA, likely a member of military council. In 1921 O'Byrne traveled to America as a freelance journalist and opened a bookstore. He would return to Ireland after raising $100,000 for victims of the Belfast riots through White Cross. He was a devout Catholic, and even interviewed the Pope. Known for his dandified dress style, Cathal remained a bachelor his entire life. O'Byrne suffered from a stroke one month before his death on 1 August 1957. He is remembered as an important figure in the Celtic revival in Northern Ireland.[2]
His most famous book is entitled As I Roved Out: A Book of the North.[3]
O'Byrne's poem "A lullaby" from " Lane o' the Thrushes" was set to words by an Irish composer of the same time, Hamilton Harty, in his "Six Songs of Ireland".
Published Works[]
- The Grey Feet of the Wind (1917)
- From Far Green Hills (1935)
- The Burthen and the Returned Swank(1940)
- As I Roved Out: A Book of the North (1946)
- Ashes on the Hearth (1948)
- Pilgrim in Italy (1949)
References[]
- ^ "Ulster History Circle CATHAL O'BYRNE". Archived from the original on 20 February 2015. Retrieved 19 September 2018.
- ^ [1] Ricorso
- ^ "As I roved out". Retrieved 19 September 2018.
External links[]
- Works by or about Cathal O'Byrne at Internet Archive
- Works by Cathal O'Byrne at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- O'Byrne at Ulster History Circle
- 1867 births
- 1957 deaths
- Musicians from Belfast
- Irish songwriters
- Irish dramatists and playwrights
- Irish male dramatists and playwrights
- Irish poets
- Irish journalists
- Roman Catholic writers
- Irish writer stubs
- Northern Irish people stubs