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・ John Charles Groome
・ John Charles Groome (Maryland)
・ John Charles Groome (Pennsylvania)
・ John Charles Haines
・ John Charles Harding, 2nd Baron Harding of Petherton
・ John Charles Herries
・ John Charles Horsey James
・ John Charles Kaine
・ John Charles King
・ John Charles Lewis Sparkes
・ John Charles Linthicum
・ John Charles Martin
・ John Charles Mason
・ John Charles McCorkill
・ John Charles McIntosh
John Charles McQuaid
・ John Charles Melliss
・ John Charles Molteno
・ John Charles Molteno, Jr.
・ John Charles Norman
・ John Charles Oakes Marriott
・ John Charles Olmsted
・ John Charles Price
・ John Charles Priscu
・ John Charles Pritz
・ John Charles Puddester
・ John Charles Ramsden
・ John Charles Rykert
・ John Charles Stetson
・ John Charles Tarsney


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John Charles McQuaid : ウィキペディア英語版
John Charles McQuaid

John Charles McQuaid, C.S.Sp. (28 July 1895 – 7 April 1973) was the Catholic Archbishop of Dublin and Primate of Ireland between December 1940 and January 1972. He was known for the unusual amount of influence he had over successive governments.
==Early life 1895–1914==
John Charles McQuaid was born in Cootehill, County Cavan, on 28 July 1895, to Dr. Eugene McQuaid and Jennie Corry. His mother died a week after his birth. His father remarried and Dr. McQuaid's new wife raised John and his sister Helen as her own. It was not until his teenage years that John learned that his biological mother had died.
He was a stellar student at the Cootehill National School〔quoted in article "Inspired Educator and Ecumenist of Sorts" by Michael O'Carroll CSSp in Studies Quarterly Review, Vol 87, No 348〕 After primary school, McQuaid attended St. Patrick's College, Cavan and then Blackrock College in Dublin, run by the Holy Ghost Fathers where he received excellent grades. In 1911 he entered Clongowes Wood Jesuit College in County Kildare with his brother Eugene.
In 1913, on completion of his secondary studies, he entered the novitiate of the Holy Ghost Fathers in Kimmage, Dublin. The celebrations of the centenary of the birth of Thomas Davis, a famous Protestant nationalist occurred in 1913 while McQuaid was a novice in Kimmage. Significantly McQuaid referred in his notebook to Davis' famous question: "What matter that at different shrines, we pray unto one God?" He noted: "Yes for a logical Protestant but No for Catholics. We must heed what is in the creed. ... If a neutral nationality be set up, if Protestants are drawn in and not converted, is not the supernatural end missed?"

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