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Quiz about Notable and Famous Irish Immigrants
Quiz about Notable and Famous Irish Immigrants

Notable and Famous Irish Immigrants Quiz


The Irish have fought misfortune and bigotry to make their way in American society. This quiz on their achievements is in honor of my paternal grandmother, Helen Caruso (nee Campbell). Enjoy!

A multiple-choice quiz by jouen58. Estimated time: 11 mins.
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Author
jouen58
Time
11 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
173,887
Updated
Jul 23 22
# Qns
25
Difficulty
Difficult
Avg Score
13 / 25
Plays
586
- -
Question 1 of 25
1. Sir William Johnson, born in County Meath, Ireland, was a pioneer in the Mohawk Valley in the early 18th century. He was much liked by the Mohawk Indians, over whom he exerted a benign dictatorship. He was active in the Anglo-French wars and was probably largely responsible for keeping the land from becoming French territory. He built Johnson Hall on the banks of the Mohawk River and was instrumental in attracting Irish migration and settlement in the area. A widower, he took as his second wife a woman named Molly Brant; which of the following is true of Molly? Hint


Question 2 of 25
2. Which of these heroines of the American Revolutionary War was born in Ireland? Hint


Question 3 of 25
3. Three signers of the Declaration of Independence were born in Ireland. Which of these was NOT one of them? Hint


Question 4 of 25
4. Irish clergyman Philip Embury was born in Limerick in 1728, the son of German immigrants to Ireland. He emigrated to New York in 1760 and eventually established this Protestant religion in the United States. Hint


Question 5 of 25
5. Architect James Hoban emigrated to America in 1785, eventually settling in North Carolina. In 1791 he completed work on the State Capitol at Columbia, which he had designed. Hoban's magnum opus, however, was this major Washington edifice, which was completed in 1793 and rebuilt in 1815 (after the War of 1812). Which is it? Hint


Question 6 of 25
6. William Theobald Wolfe Tone was the son of the celebrated Irish patriot Wolfe Tone, who had committed suicide in prison to escape execution after an unsuccessful uprising in 1798. William eventually emigrated to America, where he studied law in New York and served in the military; he also wrote a two-volume biography of his famous father. Prior to his emigration to America, however, Tone had been declared an adopted child of the republic of this European country. Hint


Question 7 of 25
7. Stephen Clegg Rowan was born in Dublin in 1808 and emigrated with his family to Ohio in 1818. He joined the navy and became a commander in 1855 in the Mexican War. He subsequently served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War.


Question 8 of 25
8. Although the name by which she is generally known suggests that she was born elsewhere, this celebrated seductress and adventuress, whose lovers included King Ludwig of Bavaria, author Alexander Dumas, and composer Franz Liszt, was born Marie Dolores Eliza Rosanna Gilbert in Limerick, Ireland in 1818. Hint


Question 9 of 25
9. Irish nationalist Thomas Meagher was dubbed "Meagher of the Sword" by author William Makepeace Thackery after a fiery speech to the Repeal Association in 1846 in which he described the sword as a sacred weapon. Sentenced to death after the uprising of 1848, his sentence was commuted to a life sentence of penal servitude in Tasmania. He escaped in 1852 and emigrated to America, where he bacame a journalist. During the Civil War he became a brigadier general of the Union Army and organized the Irish Brigade. In 1848, before his arrest, Meagher made a significant proposition regarding Ireland which was subsequently adopted and remains today; what did he propose? Hint


Question 10 of 25
10. John Hughes, born in 1797 at Annaloghlan, emigrated to America in 1817. He took holy orders in 1826 and became a vigorous champion of the embattled American Catholic Church. He eventually became the first archbishop of the newly formed archdiocese of New York in 1850 and laid the cornerstone of St. Patrick's Cathedral. What famous university did Hughes first establish in 1841? Hint


Question 11 of 25
11. George Armstrong was born in Armagh in 1822 and emigrated to America at the age of 8 with his family in 1830. Which of these is Armstrong considered to be the "father" of? Hint


Question 12 of 25
12. Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa was among the first to join the Fenian movement organized by James Stephens in 1858, and became the manager of its journalistic organ "Irish People". He emigrated to America in 1871 after enduring twenty years of grueling penal servitude following an arrest in 1865 (he was freed on condition that he leave Ireland). Rossa remained in America for the remainder of his life; he became an editor and wrote two books on his experiences in Ireland. After his death in 1915, was his body returned to Ireland for burial?


Question 13 of 25
13. Inventor John Phillip Holland was born in County Clare in 1841 and emigrated to the U.S. in 1872; what major contribution did he make to the field of naval warfare? Hint


Question 14 of 25
14. John Butler Yeats, father of the great poet William Butler Yeats, was a prominent painter and portraitist of his day. In 1908, he travelled to this prominent American city for what he thought would be a brief stay; actually, he remained there for the remainder of his life. Which city was it? Hint


Question 15 of 25
15. James O'Neill, born in Kilkenny in 1849, was the father of the great American playwright Eugene O'Neill; what was James' profession? Hint


Question 16 of 25
16. Dublin-born composer Victor Herbert would achieve great fame in the U.S. as a composer of operettas, comic operas, and popular songs; he would also earn renown as a conductor. Originally, Herbert was an instrumentalist; what was his instrument? Hint


Question 17 of 25
17. Leonora Marie Kearney Barry was born in County Cork in 1849 and emigrated as a child with her family in 1852. She married in 1871, but was left a widow ten years later with two children to support. She took a factory job and learned first-hand about the terrible conditons and low wages that were the lot of female factory workers at that time. She would eventually devote her life to improving the lot of the working woman. By what name did she become popularly known? Hint


Question 18 of 25
18. Another famous reforming "mother" was Mother Jones, nee Mary Harris, coincidentally also born in County Cork in 1830. Brought to America by her father at the age of five, Mary became a schoolteacher and married a member of the Iron Moulder's Union in Memphis, Tenessee and had four children. Her entire family was tragically wiped out in the yellow fever epidemic of 1867. She began a dressmaking business in Chicago to support herself, but she lost both her business and all of her possessions in the Great Chicago Fire. She threw herself into philanthropic work and social reform on behalf of workers' rights and child labor, which consumed the remainder of her life. At what age did Mother Jones die? Hint


Question 19 of 25
19. Our third "mother" is Mother Marie Joseph Butler, born Joanna Butler in (appropriately) Ballynunnery, County Kilkenny. In 1876, she entered the novitiate of the Congregation of the Sacred Heart in France. She was sent to Portugal three years later and took her final vows in 1880. She was made superior of a convent school in Braga, Portugal, in 1893; ten years later, she was sent to New York to take charge of the school of the Sacred Heart. Where in New York was she sent? Hint


Question 20 of 25
20. John Robert Gregg was born in Rockcory, County Monaghan, in 1867 and emigrated to the U.S. in 1893; what significant contribution did he make in the line of office work? Hint


Question 21 of 25
21. Filmmaker Rex Ingram emigrated to the U.S. in 1911 at the age of 18 and directed his first film, "The Great Problem", at the age of 23. He became a major force in the still nascent motion picture industry, creating such notable films as "Black Orchids", "Under Crimson Skies", "The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse", and "The Prisoner of Zenda". His films also introduced such legendary stars as Rudolph Valentino and Ramon Novarro. Ingram was actually not his true surname, but his middle name. His actual surname was the same as another legendary filmmaker; what was it? Hint


Question 22 of 25
22. Legendary Irish tenor John McCormack became an American citizen in 1919, having appeared there for many years in opera and concerts. Hailed along with Enrico Caruso as possibly the greatest tenor of all time, McCormack was also a noted philanthropist, especially active on behalf of Catholic charities. What special recognition did he receive in 1928 in honor of his work in this regard? Hint


Question 23 of 25
23. Actor Barry Fitzgerald moved to America from Ireland in 1936 and enjoyed a highly successful career in motion pictures as a character actor in such films as "The Quiet Man", "How Green Was My Valley", "And Then There Were None", and especially "Going My Way", co-starring with Bing Crosby. In the latter film Fitzgerald played the lovable Irish Catholic priest Father Fitzgibbon, the role for which he is best remembered; was Fitzgerald himself a Catholic?


Question 24 of 25
24. Padraic Colum, the celebrated author, poet, and dramatist, was born at Longford in 1881. He is best known as the author of the lyrics to the song "She Moved Through the Fair". In 1912 he married fellow writer Mary Maguire and they emigrated to the U.S. together, where each taught at Columbia University. In 1923, the legislature of this future U.S. state authorized him to collect and edit the region's native legends and folklore and adapt them as children's literature. Which state was it? Hint


Question 25 of 25
25. Actress Maureen O'Sullivan, best known as Jane to Johnny Weismuller's Tarzan in the 1932 film "Tarzan", was born in Roscommon, Ireland, in 1911. Which of these other famous Irish-American actresses was born in Ireland? Hint



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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. Sir William Johnson, born in County Meath, Ireland, was a pioneer in the Mohawk Valley in the early 18th century. He was much liked by the Mohawk Indians, over whom he exerted a benign dictatorship. He was active in the Anglo-French wars and was probably largely responsible for keeping the land from becoming French territory. He built Johnson Hall on the banks of the Mohawk River and was instrumental in attracting Irish migration and settlement in the area. A widower, he took as his second wife a woman named Molly Brant; which of the following is true of Molly?

Answer: She was a Mohawk.

Molly was the sister of Joseph Brant, a Mohawk chief; after her marriage to Johnson she became known as the "Indian Lady Johnson". They had eight children together, whom Johnson recognized in his will. Sir William Johnson died in 1774.
2. Which of these heroines of the American Revolutionary War was born in Ireland?

Answer: Lydia Barrington Darragh

Lydia and her husband William emigrated to America from Dublin around 1754 and settled in Philadelphia. During the Revolutionary war, General William Howe establshed his headquarters in the house adjoining theirs. On the night of December 2, 1777, Lydia eavesdropped on a meeting of Howe and his officers in which they detailed a plan to attack Washington at Whitemarsh two days later. On December 4, Lydia obtained a pass to leave the city to buy flour from the Frankford mill; en route to the mill, she stopped at Whitemarsh and told General Thomas Craig what she had heard. That evening, when Howe and his army attacked, the Continental army was ready for them and they successfully routed the British.
3. Three signers of the Declaration of Independence were born in Ireland. Which of these was NOT one of them?

Answer: John Hancock

Hope I made this one easy for you! Hancock was born in Braintree (Quincy) Massachusets. Smith emigrated to America with his father in 1729. He was among the first to organize resistance to British authority, and was a friend and ardent supporter of George Washington. Smith was made a high court judge in 1780; he died in 1806. Taylor emigrated to America in 1736; although he held a position of colonel in the Continental army, he never saw active service.

He became a member of the Continental Congress in 1776 and was active in negotiating treaties with Native American tribes. Taylor died in 1781. Thornton emigrated to America as a child in 1718; as an adult, he was a practicing physician.

He presided over the Provincial Convention in 1775 and was a delegate to the Continental Congress the following year. Thornton died in 1803.
4. Irish clergyman Philip Embury was born in Limerick in 1728, the son of German immigrants to Ireland. He emigrated to New York in 1760 and eventually established this Protestant religion in the United States.

Answer: Methodism

Embury was a carpenter by trade, an itinerant preacher by vocation. In 1768 he built the John Street Methodist church, the first in the United States. Embury, who migrated to Washington County in 1770 and remained there until his death three years later, is considered the founder of American Methodism.
5. Architect James Hoban emigrated to America in 1785, eventually settling in North Carolina. In 1791 he completed work on the State Capitol at Columbia, which he had designed. Hoban's magnum opus, however, was this major Washington edifice, which was completed in 1793 and rebuilt in 1815 (after the War of 1812). Which is it?

Answer: The White House

The design of the White House bears certain similarities to that of Leinster House in Dublin (Hoban had studied at the school of the Dublin Society). Hoban oversaw the rebuilding of the White House after its destruction in the War of 1812, and was also the designer and builder of the Great Hotel and the Little Hotel in Washington, as well as the State and War offices. Hoban died in Washington in 1831.
6. William Theobald Wolfe Tone was the son of the celebrated Irish patriot Wolfe Tone, who had committed suicide in prison to escape execution after an unsuccessful uprising in 1798. William eventually emigrated to America, where he studied law in New York and served in the military; he also wrote a two-volume biography of his famous father. Prior to his emigration to America, however, Tone had been declared an adopted child of the republic of this European country.

Answer: France

Tone's father had attempted to enlist French military support for the Irish cause, but the French forces were disorganized and the entire project was doomed to failure. William, a seven year-old child at the time of his father's death, was adopted by the French republic. William Tone died of tuberculosis in 1828 at the age of 27 and is buried on Long Island, N.Y.
7. Stephen Clegg Rowan was born in Dublin in 1808 and emigrated with his family to Ohio in 1818. He joined the navy and became a commander in 1855 in the Mexican War. He subsequently served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War.

Answer: False

Rowan served in the Union navy and commanded the "Pawnee", which launched the first naval attack on the Confederate forces at Aquia Creek. Rowan rose quickly to the rank of commodore and restored Union authority in North Carolina with the capture of Fort Mason.

He was put in command of the "New Ironsides" and was promoted to rear admiral in 1866 and to vice admiral in 1870. In his later years, he was chairman of the lighthouse board, a position he held until the year before his death in 1890.
8. Although the name by which she is generally known suggests that she was born elsewhere, this celebrated seductress and adventuress, whose lovers included King Ludwig of Bavaria, author Alexander Dumas, and composer Franz Liszt, was born Marie Dolores Eliza Rosanna Gilbert in Limerick, Ireland in 1818.

Answer: Lola Montez

Montez was the daughter of a British army officer; as a girl, she lived in India, but received her schooling in England and Scotland. In 1837, she eloped with Lieutenant Thomas James, but she and James separated five years later. Adopting the stage name Lola Montez, she attempted to pass herself off as a Spanish dancer in London, but was recognized and laughed off the stage. Undeterred, she traveled to Germany, Poland, Russia, and France and established herself as an entertainer. During her liaison with Ludwig of Bavaria, she exerted considerable influence at court (the cabinet came to be known as the "Lolaministerium") and she acquired the titles of Baroness Rosenthal and Countess of Lansfeld. Eventually, her notorious liaison with Ludwig resulted in his downfall; he was forced to abdicate in 1848 in favor of his son. Lola returned to London, married another officer (bigamously, since she was legally still married to Lt. James) who left her two years later.

She emigrated to America in 1851 and continued her career as a dancer; her notorious "Spider Dance" was a particular sensation.

In her later years, she underwent a religious conversion, published a few books of memoirs, and settled in New York, where she engaged in various philanthropical endeavors, particularly on behalf of "fallen women". Montez died in 1861.
9. Irish nationalist Thomas Meagher was dubbed "Meagher of the Sword" by author William Makepeace Thackery after a fiery speech to the Repeal Association in 1846 in which he described the sword as a sacred weapon. Sentenced to death after the uprising of 1848, his sentence was commuted to a life sentence of penal servitude in Tasmania. He escaped in 1852 and emigrated to America, where he bacame a journalist. During the Civil War he became a brigadier general of the Union Army and organized the Irish Brigade. In 1848, before his arrest, Meagher made a significant proposition regarding Ireland which was subsequently adopted and remains today; what did he propose?

Answer: The tricolor flag as the national flag of Ireland.

Meagher was the first to propose the tricolor- green, orange, and white- as Ireland's national flag. The orange traditionally represents the Protestants of Ireland (originally, the supporters of William of Orange), the green represents Ireland's Catholics (the older Gaelic tradition), and the white symbolizes the much hoped-for peace between them. Meagher, whose "Irish Brigade" served with especial distinction in the Battle of Fredericksburg (December 13, 1862) was made temporary governer of the Montana territory following the Civil War.

In 1867, he was tragically drowned in the Missouri River following an accidental fall from a boat.
10. John Hughes, born in 1797 at Annaloghlan, emigrated to America in 1817. He took holy orders in 1826 and became a vigorous champion of the embattled American Catholic Church. He eventually became the first archbishop of the newly formed archdiocese of New York in 1850 and laid the cornerstone of St. Patrick's Cathedral. What famous university did Hughes first establish in 1841?

Answer: Fordham

Hughes founded St. John's College in Fordham in 1841; it was re-established as a university in 1907 and given the name Fordham University. The bell in the university's church tower is said to have inspired Edgar Allen Poe's poem "The Bells" and has been dubbed "Old Edgar". Hughes died in 1864; he had supported the Union in the Civil War and had been active in encouraging support in Europe for the Union cause.

A bronze statue of Hughes stands on the grounds of Fordham university; it was completed in 1891 and is the work of the Irish-born sculptor Maurice J. Power.
11. George Armstrong was born in Armagh in 1822 and emigrated to America at the age of 8 with his family in 1830. Which of these is Armstrong considered to be the "father" of?

Answer: The U.S. Railway Mail Service

Armstrong entered the postal service at an early age and rose to the rank of assistant postmaster at Chicago. Through hard work and intense study of mail transportation, he pioneered the idea of a railway mail service. The first of which took place in 1864 between Chicago, Ill. and Clinton, Iowa, and was an unqualified success.

In 1869, Armstrong was placed at the head of the newly formed bureau of railway postal service by President Grant, a post he held until his untimely death two years later at the age of forty-eight.
12. Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa was among the first to join the Fenian movement organized by James Stephens in 1858, and became the manager of its journalistic organ "Irish People". He emigrated to America in 1871 after enduring twenty years of grueling penal servitude following an arrest in 1865 (he was freed on condition that he leave Ireland). Rossa remained in America for the remainder of his life; he became an editor and wrote two books on his experiences in Ireland. After his death in 1915, was his body returned to Ireland for burial?

Answer: Yes

Rossa was buried in Glasnevin cemetery in Dublin in a ceremony attended by an enormous crowd. Delivering the eulogy was Irish revolutionary and author Patrick Pearse, who would himself be executed the following year after the 1916 uprising. Pearse's eulogy ranks as one of the most memorable speeches in Irish history; it includes the famous phrase "They have left us our Fenian dead, and while Ireland holds these graves, Ireland unfree shall never be at peace!"
13. Inventor John Phillip Holland was born in County Clare in 1841 and emigrated to the U.S. in 1872; what major contribution did he make to the field of naval warfare?

Answer: The submarine

Holland, whose father was a coast-guard, took orders from the Christian Brothers in 1858 and worked as a school teacher, but was released from his vows in 1872 and came to America. He invented the prototype for the submarine in the late 1870s (much of his funding came from Irish nationalists who hoped that the new invention would be used against England!) eventually forming a production company in 1895.

Although the first ship they built was a failure, the second was successful and was formally launched in 1902; its tremendous effectiveness in naval combat became immediately apparent.

The "Holland I" was accidentally sunk in Wales in 1913; it was recovered in 1980 and placed in conservation. It is now on display at the Royal Navy Museum. Holland, now universally recognized as the "father of the modern submarine", died in Newark, New Jersey in 1914.
14. John Butler Yeats, father of the great poet William Butler Yeats, was a prominent painter and portraitist of his day. In 1908, he travelled to this prominent American city for what he thought would be a brief stay; actually, he remained there for the remainder of his life. Which city was it?

Answer: New York, N.Y.

Yeats enjoyed a modest career as a portraitist in New York, but was more celebrated as a critic, philosopher, lecturer, and essayist apart from being one of the most noted raconteurs and conversationalists in New York society. In addition to son William's success as a writer, Yeats' other son Jack achieved considerable fame in his time as an artist; the elder Yeats was a source of great encouragement and sage advice to both his sons. John Butler Yeats died in 1922 and is buried in the Adirondacks.
15. James O'Neill, born in Kilkenny in 1849, was the father of the great American playwright Eugene O'Neill; what was James' profession?

Answer: Actor

O'Neill emigrated to America with his parents at the age of five and began his acting career in Cincinnati in 1867. An appearance in 1882 as the title character in a dramatization of Dumas' "The Count of Monte Cristo" was so successful that he became typecast in the role.

At first enjoying the success and the money it brought, the elder O'Neill eventually came to regard the role as his "curse" and lamented having "fallen for the lure of easy popularity and easy money." James O'Neill died of intestinal cancer in 1920; his son Eugene was at his side when he lapsed into his final coma and remembered his last words as having been "this sort of life- froth!- rotten- all of it- no good!" Although the elder O'Neill's career as an actor is all but forgotten, he will live forever on the stage as the embittered paterfamilias James Tyrone in Eugene O'Neill's masterpiece "A Long Day's Journey Into Night".
16. Dublin-born composer Victor Herbert would achieve great fame in the U.S. as a composer of operettas, comic operas, and popular songs; he would also earn renown as a conductor. Originally, Herbert was an instrumentalist; what was his instrument?

Answer: Cello

Herbert had a distinguished career as a cellist in Germany and Austria, where he met and married his wife, soprano Therese Forster (who sang the title role in the American premiere of Verdi's "Aida"). Upon emigrating to America in 1886, he became the principal cellist of the Metropolitan Opera orchestra.

As a conductor, Herbert led the 22nd Regiment Band of the New York National Guard and the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra. He is best remembered as a composer; although his operettas (including the Irish operetta "Eileen") are infrequently revived on account of their dated and rather stilted libretti, many of the songs he wrote for them have never lost their popularity. "Ah! Sweet Mystery of Life", "The Indian Love Call", "Falling in Love With Someone", "Toyland", "The Italian Street Song", and "Kiss Me Again", to name but a few, have endured in popularity; the fact that they strongly recall the era in which they were written only adds to their appeal.

Herbert was also the first to compose a score for a motion picture; the 1915 film "Fall of a Nation", sequel to the far better-known "Birth of a Nation".

A champion of the right of composers and authors to profit from their work Herbert, along with John Philip Sousa, founded the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP); ironically, some believe Herbert's death from a heart attack in 1924 to have been brought on by an acrimonious salary dispute with impresario Florenz Ziegfeld.
17. Leonora Marie Kearney Barry was born in County Cork in 1849 and emigrated as a child with her family in 1852. She married in 1871, but was left a widow ten years later with two children to support. She took a factory job and learned first-hand about the terrible conditons and low wages that were the lot of female factory workers at that time. She would eventually devote her life to improving the lot of the working woman. By what name did she become popularly known?

Answer: Mother Lake

Leonora's first husband had been W.E. Barry; she remarried in 1890 a man named Lake, the year after the passage of a factory inspection law in Pennsylvania, the fruit of her tireless efforts. She remained active on behalf of women's suffrage and temperance and was a stalwart supporter of Prohibition. "Mother Lake" died in 1930 in Minooka, Illinois.
18. Another famous reforming "mother" was Mother Jones, nee Mary Harris, coincidentally also born in County Cork in 1830. Brought to America by her father at the age of five, Mary became a schoolteacher and married a member of the Iron Moulder's Union in Memphis, Tenessee and had four children. Her entire family was tragically wiped out in the yellow fever epidemic of 1867. She began a dressmaking business in Chicago to support herself, but she lost both her business and all of her possessions in the Great Chicago Fire. She threw herself into philanthropic work and social reform on behalf of workers' rights and child labor, which consumed the remainder of her life. At what age did Mother Jones die?

Answer: 100

Jones, a self-described "hellraiser", was an indefatigable and feisty champion of workers' rights. At a 1902 march of miners' wives in Pennsylvania, she organized the women to cudgel the strikebreakers with brooms and mops. The following year, she led a march of striking child textile workers straight to the Long Island home of President Theodore Roosevelt (who fled when he heard she was on her way). Jones turned 100 in 1930; at a ceremony in her honor, she read from numerous congratulatory telegrams, including one from her former foe John D. Rockerfeller Jr.

She died 6 months later on November 30.
19. Our third "mother" is Mother Marie Joseph Butler, born Joanna Butler in (appropriately) Ballynunnery, County Kilkenny. In 1876, she entered the novitiate of the Congregation of the Sacred Heart in France. She was sent to Portugal three years later and took her final vows in 1880. She was made superior of a convent school in Braga, Portugal, in 1893; ten years later, she was sent to New York to take charge of the school of the Sacred Heart. Where in New York was she sent?

Answer: Long Island

Butler was sent to Sag Harbor to take charge of her order's school there. She remained in America, eventually becoming a naturalized citizen in 1927. She founded Marymount school in Tarrytown, N.Y.; other branches of this school opened elsewhere in the U.S., as well as Paris and Rome. Butler was elected Mother General of the Sacred Heart order in 1926, the first American to be made the leader of a Catholic order based in Europe.

She died in 1940 and was proposed for canonization 8 years later.
20. John Robert Gregg was born in Rockcory, County Monaghan, in 1867 and emigrated to the U.S. in 1893; what significant contribution did he make in the line of office work?

Answer: Shorthand

Gregg's shorthand system is based on the natural movements of the hand and was developed in Liverpool, where he published a pamphlet on its usage. After emigrating to America, he published a revised manual and started his own publishing company in Chicago.

He received an award from the N.Y. Academy of Public Education in 1938. The Gregg shorthand system soon became standard in the U.S. and in other countries throughout the world.
21. Filmmaker Rex Ingram emigrated to the U.S. in 1911 at the age of 18 and directed his first film, "The Great Problem", at the age of 23. He became a major force in the still nascent motion picture industry, creating such notable films as "Black Orchids", "Under Crimson Skies", "The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse", and "The Prisoner of Zenda". His films also introduced such legendary stars as Rudolph Valentino and Ramon Novarro. Ingram was actually not his true surname, but his middle name. His actual surname was the same as another legendary filmmaker; what was it?

Answer: Hitchcock

Ingram was born Reginald Ingram Montgomery Hitchcock in Grosvenor Square, Rathmines, Dublin. He joined the Metro company in 1920; it would eventually become the major partner in Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Ingram, who married actress Alice Terry, a star of many of his films, had quite a colorful career; he made films in Europe and Africa as well as the U.S. and founded the Victorine Studios of Nice, France.

He was especially fond of Morocco and produced and starred in a sound film entitled "Baround" which was filmed in that country.

At one point, he converted to Islam. Ingram was also a writer and sculptor of some note and was the recipient of several honorary degrees, including the Frence Legion of Honour and the Order of Nichan Iftkar (awarded by the Bey of Tunis).

Ingram died in 1950 in Hollywood, California.
22. Legendary Irish tenor John McCormack became an American citizen in 1919, having appeared there for many years in opera and concerts. Hailed along with Enrico Caruso as possibly the greatest tenor of all time, McCormack was also a noted philanthropist, especially active on behalf of Catholic charities. What special recognition did he receive in 1928 in honor of his work in this regard?

Answer: He was made a hereditary Papal count

McCormack, a devout Catholic, received this honor from Pope Pius XI in 1928. Widely regarded as one of the supreme vocal artists of all time, many of McCormack's vocal feats have yet to be equalled, let alone surpassed, including his perfect octave leap in the aria "Care Selve" from Handel's "Atalanta", and his astonishing single-breath phrase in the aria "Il Mio Tesoro" from Mozart's "Don Giovanni". Even Enrico Caruso was in awe of McCormack; when the two tenors encountered each other on one occasion at a hotel, McCormack inquired "How's the world's greatest tenor doing this morning?", to which Caruso replied "Since when have you retired from singing?". McCormack was a "crossover artist" long before the term was invented, performing music by Victor Herbert and Irving Berlin along with classical pieces and Irish folksongs (recordings exist of his performances of "When You Wish Upon a Star" and "Little Wooden Head" from the Disney film "Pinocchio"); he sang these with the same artistry and dedication, including impeccable eunciation. McCormack gave his farewell concert in 1938, but emerged from retirement during WWII to perform for the Red Cross.

He returned to Ireland and died in Dublin in 1945.
23. Actor Barry Fitzgerald moved to America from Ireland in 1936 and enjoyed a highly successful career in motion pictures as a character actor in such films as "The Quiet Man", "How Green Was My Valley", "And Then There Were None", and especially "Going My Way", co-starring with Bing Crosby. In the latter film Fitzgerald played the lovable Irish Catholic priest Father Fitzgibbon, the role for which he is best remembered; was Fitzgerald himself a Catholic?

Answer: No

The Dublin-born Fitzgerald, whose role as the loveable Father Fitzgibbon was instrumental in making the Roman Catholic clergy accessible to mainstream American WASPs, was himself a lifelong Protestant. Born Willam Joseph Shields in 1888, Fitzgerald held a civil service position and acted in his spare time (his stage name was adopted out of necessity due to his post).

A friend of James Joyce and one-time roommate of Sean O'Casey (whose play "The Silver Tassel" was written expressly for him), Fitzgerald finally quit his civil service post to devote himself to acting full-time, eventually carving out his highly successful movie career in the U.S. Fitzgerald, whose brother was the character actor Arthur Shields, returned to Ireland toward the end of his life and died in Dublin in 1961.
24. Padraic Colum, the celebrated author, poet, and dramatist, was born at Longford in 1881. He is best known as the author of the lyrics to the song "She Moved Through the Fair". In 1912 he married fellow writer Mary Maguire and they emigrated to the U.S. together, where each taught at Columbia University. In 1923, the legislature of this future U.S. state authorized him to collect and edit the region's native legends and folklore and adapt them as children's literature. Which state was it?

Answer: Hawaii

Colum's collection of Hawaiian tales appeared in 1937 as "Legends of Hawaii" (Hawaii became a state in 1959). Throughout his long career in America, Colum was the recipient of numerous awards and honorary degrees including, in 1954, the Gregory Medal of the Irish Academy of Letters, awarded for literary excellence. Colum died at age ninety in 1972 at Enfield, Connecticut.
25. Actress Maureen O'Sullivan, best known as Jane to Johnny Weismuller's Tarzan in the 1932 film "Tarzan", was born in Roscommon, Ireland, in 1911. Which of these other famous Irish-American actresses was born in Ireland?

Answer: Maureen O'Hara

And they share the same name! The beautiful O'Sullivan was educated in a parochial school; one of her classmates was Vivien Leigh. She was discovered at age 18 by director Frank Borzage. Of the many films she would make, including "The Flame Within", "Pride and Prejudice", "Anna Karenina", and "David Copperfield", none would be as wildly popular as the series of four "Tarzan" films she made with Johnny Weismuller. Audiences were initially scandalized by the scantily-clad O'Sullivan playing the love interest of the bare-breasted jungle man and it must have been a considerable leap for the convent-raised actress. O'Sullivan married Australian writer John Farrow in 1936 and the couple had a daughter, actress Mia Farrow. John Farrow died in 1963; Maureen died at age 87 in 1998.

The lovely O'Hara, best known for her roles in "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" alongside Charles Laughton, "Miracle on 34th Street" with the young Natalie Wood, "How Green Was My Valley", "The Quiet Man" with John Wayne, and Disney's "The Parent Trap", was born Maureen FitzSimons in 1920 at Ranelagh, a suburb of Dublin.

She originally dreamed of becoming an opera singer, but her red-haired beauty made her a natural for the screen. As a child she was a tomboy; as an adult, she had no trouble standing up to strong leading men such as Wayne, Anthony Quinn, and Tyrone Power (director John Ford called her "A man's kind of woman"). O'Hara married General Charles Blair, her third husband (her first two marriages had been unsuccessful) in 1968; they had ten wonderful years togeher before his tragic death in an airplane crash in 1978. In 1991, Maureen came out of retirement to play John Candy's feisty mother in "Only the Lonely"; her performance was widely regarded as the best thing about the film, which also co-starred Anthony Quinn. She has appeared since in television roles and was the Grand Marshall of New York's St. Patrick's Day Parade in 1999.
Source: Author jouen58

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