Patrick O'Farrell
Patrick James O'Farrell (17 September 1933 – 25 December 2003[1]) was a historian known for his histories of Roman Catholicism in Australia, Irish history and Irish Australian history. Early life and familyO'Farrell was born on 17 September 1933, in Greymouth, New Zealand,[2] into an Irish Catholic family. He was educated at the Marist Brothers High School, Greymouth, and at Canterbury University College, where he graduated Master of Arts with second-class honours in history in 1956.[2][3] Having moved to Australia in 1956, O'Farrell earned a PhD from the Australian National University in 1960 on the development of Harry Holland, an early Labour Party leader in New Zealand, as a militant socialist.[4] On 29 December 1956, O'Farrell married Deirdre Genevieve MacShane, and the couple went on to have five children.[2] Academic careerO'Farrell was appointed as a lecturer in history at the University of New South Wales in 1959, rising to become a professor in 1972.[2] On his retirement in 1990, he was conferred with the title of professor emeritus. O'Farrell's first research interests were in Labour history with the 1964 publication of a work on Harry Holland. The appearance in 1968 of his book The Catholic Church in Australia led to his recognition as the leading historian of the Catholic Church and community in Australia. He subsequently also became well known for his major contributions to the writing of Irish history and of Irish Australian history.[5] As an opponent of social history 'from below', he initiated a polemic against oral history in the 1980s. Bibliography
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