He was a founder member of the editorial team behind the creation of the Irish Ecclesiastical Review in 1902 and was appointed vice-president of Maynooth in 1912.[7]
From 1917-18, he was one of the four clerical members of the Irish Convention and said, in a letter to the Rector of the Pontifical Irish College that he was attending in order to oppose partition "with all my heart."[8]
He was one of the delegates who backed the option of full Dominion Status for Ireland.[9]
Sir Horace Plunkett, who chaired the convention, recorded in his diary that, in August 1917, Bishop MacRory made a bad speech "raking up the past."[10]
MacRory was a strenuous opponent of the Partition of Ireland.[12] In late 1931, MacRory made the following statement:
"The Protestant Church in Ireland – and the same is true of the Protestant Church anywhere – is not only not the rightful representative of the early Irish Church, but it is not even a part of the Church of Christ. That is my proposition."[13][14]
MacRory was a supporter of the Gaelic League, and Errigal Ciaran, one of the most famous GAA clubs in Ireland, plays at Cardinal MacRory Park, Dunmoyle, which was named in his honour in 1956.
The People's Primate
Biographer J.J. Murphy published, in 1945, a 71-page biography of the prelate, The People's Primate. A Memoir of Joseph Cardinal MacRory, (Dublin, 1945).
Death
After a brief illness, Cardinal MacRory died at the age of 84 from a heart attack at Ara Coeli, the archbishop's official residence in Armagh. He was interred in St Patrick's Cathedral Cemetery, Armagh.
References
^Miranda, Salvador. "Joseph MacRory". The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church. Retrieved 23 June 2009.
^Shanahan, Mary, "Margaret MacRory (1862–1931)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 28 January 2024