John MacNeice
John Frederick MacNeice (1866–1942), was born at Omey, Co. Galway, to a Protestant family which claimed descent from the kin of the early Irish saint MacNissi. Opting for the Church of Ireland ministry he served notably as rector of Carrickfergus, Co. Antrim and afterwards as bishop of Cashel, Emly, Waterford and Lismore (1931–1934) and until his death as bishop of Down, Connor and Dromore (1934–1942). MacNeice is well known for his symbolic opposition to the Partition of Ireland (accepted as a political reality): hence his refusal to allow the Union Flag to be laid on Carson's grave at his funeral in St Anne’s Cathedral, Belfast in 1935. MacNeice was twice married. One of his sons by his first marriage was the poet, Louis MacNeice.
References
- Jon Stallworthy: Louis MacNeice, Faber and Faber, 1995
- Christopher Fauske: 'Side by Side in a Small Country': Bishop John Frederick MacNeice and Ireland, Church of Ireland Historical Society, 2004
- David Fitzpatrick: 'Solitary and Wild': Frederick MacNeice and the Salvation of Ireland, Lilliput Press, 2011.
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- Tiberio Ugolino
- Robert Blyth
- Eugene Magennis
- James MacCawell
- John Merriman
- Hugh Allen
- Edward Edgeworth
- John Charden
- Robert Humpston
- John Todd
- James Dundas
- Robert Echlin
- Henry Leslie
- Jeremy Taylor
- Roger Boyle
- Thomas Hacket
- Samuel Foley
- Edward Walkington
- Edward Smyth
- Francis Hutchinson
- Carew Reynell
- John Ryder
- John Whitcombe
- Robert Downes
- Arthur Smyth
- James Traill
- William Dickson
- Nathaniel Alexander
- Richard Mant (became Bishop of Down, Connor and Dromore)
- Richard Mant
- Robert Knox
- William Reeves
- Thomas Welland
- John Crozier
- Charles D'Arcy
- Charles Grierson
- John MacNeice
- Charles King Irwin
- William Kerr
- Frederick Mitchell
- George Quin
- Robin Eames
- Gordon McMullan
- Harold Miller
- David McClay
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