Knowledge (XXG)

Mary O'Hagan

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products. She set up classes for lace, embroidery, drawing and design for the girls. When the building of the school was completed in 1864 and there was no further work for the men, the boys were taught drawing and design, and were trained in leatherwork, woodcarving and plasterwork. By 1869 the sales figures for the goods the students were producing had reached ÂŁ500 per annum.
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While the school was being built, from the existing building once used as a work house, there was employment for the men in the area. O'Hagan set up an industrial school with courses designed to improve the local women's ability to have employment, or a trade and craft where they could sell their
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where they set up a school and convent. While the building work was going on they lived in “Rose Cottage” and they turned the old coach house associated with the cottage into a breakfast room where their students and local children could get breakfast before school.
120: 99:, later Lord Chancellor of Ireland. Their parents died when O'Hagan was young and she became the ward of her brother. They travelled as his work took him to Dublin. O'Hagan entered the convent of the Sisters of 107:
when she was 21, where she became Sister Mary Michael and remained there until 1861. By 1853 O'Hagan had become the abbess of the Newry convent. When a request was made for a new establishment in
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However O'Hagan herself died at the Convent of the Holy Cross, Kenmare on 31 January 1876. One of her friends, one of the six nuns who initially accompanied her on the journey to Kerry was
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in 1823. Her parents were Edward O'Hagan, a merchant, and his wife Mary Bell, daughter of Captain Thomas Bell. Her brother was
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In Memoriam: Mary O'Hagan, Abbess and Foundress of the Convent of Poor Clares, Kenmare
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In Memoriam: Mary O'Hagan, Abbess and Foundress of the Convent of Poor Clares, Kenmare
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or “Point d’Irelandaise” became highly sought after and popular until the end of the
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Abbess in Newry and Kenmare, founder of the convent in Kenmare
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Index

Belfast
Thomas O'Hagan
Poor Clares
Newry
County Kerry
Kenmare

Kenmare lace
First World War
Margaret Anna Cusack



O'Hagan, Mary
"Grey plaque â„– 40305"


"Mary O'Hagan"
"The History of Kenmare Lace"
In Memoriam: Mary O'Hagan, Abbess and Foundress of the Convent of Poor Clares, Kenmare
Categories
1823 births
1876 deaths
Religious leaders from Belfast
People from Kenmare
Irish Roman Catholic abbesses
19th-century Irish nuns

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