Eduardo O'Gorman

Eduardo O'Gorman (1827 – 1901) was an Argentine Catholic priest,[1] who served as dean in the Parish of San Nicolás de Bari.[2] He had extensive work on matters related to the political and social life of Argentina since the mid-19th century, including its participation in the foundation of the Asilo de huérfanos of Buenos Aires in 1871.[3]


Eduardo O'Gorman
Dean of the Parroquia de San Nicolás de Bari
In office
1862–1901
Preceded byMariano Rebollo
Succeeded byMarcial Álvarez
Personal details
Born
Dionicio Eduardo O'Gorman y Ximénez

April 8, 1827
Buenos Aires
DiedMarch 14, 1901
Buenos Aires
Resting placeLa Recoleta Cemetery
Nationality Argentine
Occupationpriest
Professionecclesiastical
Signature

He was appointed Honorary Canon of the Catedral Metropolitana de Buenos Aires together with Anthony Dominic Fahy in 1864.[4] He was received in special audience by the Pope Pius IX in Rome in 1870.

Biography

He was born in Buenos Aires the son of Adolfo O'Gorman and Joaquina Ximénez Pinto, belonging to a distinguished Patrician family. He studied some years in the Colegio del Salvador, and was ordained a priest in the Convento de las Catalinas on August 2, 1846, during the government of Juan Manuel de Rosas,[5] [6]

He went into exile in Montevideo after the murder of his sister Camila O'Gorman, returning to the country after the Battle of Caseros.[7] He was appointed honorary canon of the Cathedral of Buenos Aires by decree of the then president Bartolomé Mitre in 1864.[8]

He actively participated in the fight against yellow fever that ravaged Buenos Aires during the epidemics of 1870 and 1871.[9] Among its works of charity are remembered the foundation of the Asylum of Orphans and its participation in the opening of Cementerio del Oeste.

He served as parish priest of St. Nicholas of Bari between 1862 and 1901.[10] He traveled to Europe to arrange a visit with the Pope Pius IX in 1870.[11]

He belonged to the clan of the O'Gorman's, a French-Irish family established in Buenos Aires towards the end of the 18th century. His maternal grandmother was Marie Anne Périchon de Vandeuil, born in Saint-Denis.[12]

References

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