Kathleen O'Meara (writer)
Kathleen O'Meara | |
---|---|
Born |
1839 Dublin |
Died |
10 November, 1888 Paris |
Pen name | Grace Ramsay |
Nationality | Irish-French |
Kathleen O'Meara or Grace Ramsay (1839 – 10 November, 1888) was an Irish-French Catholic writer and biographer. She was the Paris correspondent of The Tablet, a leading British catholic magazine.
Life
O'Meara was born in Dublin in 1839 and she emigrated to France when she was a child. her grandfather, Barry Edward O'Meara, had been Napoleon's physician and for this reason her mother had a pension from the French state.
O'Meara wrote novels that were based around Catholicism and she wrote biographies of leading catholics. Her publishers tried to reduce any pre-disposed discrimination by giving her the less catholic nom-de-plume of Grace Ramsay.[1]
She was the Paris correspondent of The Tablet, a leading British catholic magazine.[2]
O'Meara died in Paris in 1888.[1]
Works include
- Frederick Ozanam, Professor at the Sorbonne, his Life and Works, 1876
- The Old House in Picardy, 1887
- Narka, a Story of Russian Life, 1888
- The Venerable John Baptiste Vianney, Curé d'Ars, 1891
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Thompson Cooper, ‘O'Meara, Kathleen (1839–1888)’, rev. Maria Luddy, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 6 Dec 2014
- ↑ Flaherty, M. (1911). Kathleen O'Meara. In The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved December 6, 2014 from New Advent: http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11250b.htm