James Jeffrey Roche
James Jeffery Roche | |
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Born | Mountmellick, Ireland | May 31, 1847
Died | April 3, 1908 Bern, Switzerland | (aged 60)
Resting place | Holyhood Cemetery, Brookline, Massachusetts, United States |
Title | American Consul in Switzerland |
Term | April 1907 – 3 April 1908 |
Spouse | Mary Frances Halloran (m. 1875–85; her death) |
James Jeffrey Roche (May 31, 1847 – April 3, 1908) was an Irish-American poet, journalist and diplomat. Roche emigrated as a young child, and grew up in Prince Edward Island, Canada. He came to Boston in 1866, and joined the staff of the Irish newspaper. He became editor-in-chief in 1890, and was a leading spokesman for Catholic intellectuals in New England. When most Democrats in the region deserted William Jennings Bryan in 1896, Roche and the Boston Pilot gave Brian strong support. At the end of his life he was the American Consul in Switzerland.[1][2]
Life and works
[edit]Through his father, Edward Roche, an able mathematician and scholar, who occupied the office of Provincial Librarian in Prince Edward Island, he inherited the literary quality dominant in his temperament and his art. The family settled in Prince Edward Island in the same year as his birth. The boy was educated by his father, and later in St. Dunstan's College. Here, at the age of fifteen, foreshadowing his career, he turned journalist and proudly edited the college weekly "unto the urn and ashes" of its infant end. His youth had a fair share of spirited adventure, an encountering of odd characters and scenes, a sharp observance of events, and a close, rapid, honest mental life.[3]
In 1866 he went to Boston, became a businessman and prospered there, but later reverted to literature, his early love and first unconscious choice. In print he was noted for an absurd, unique humor. Already married, in 1883 he joined the staff of the Boston Boston Pilot as an assistant editor under John Boyle O'Reilly, and later became editor of the newspaper.[1] At this time he wrote a History of the Filibusters in Spanish America, a novel, and a drama. In 1886, he published Songs and Satires.[3]
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James Jeffrey Roche Tombstone in Holyhood Cemetery
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Bronze plaque embedded in the rock face next to the tombstone for James Jeffrey Roche in Holyhood Cemetery
Works
[edit]- Songs and Satires (1887) Boston & Cambridge (USA)
- Life of John Boyle O'Reilly (1891)
- Ballads of Blue Water (1895) Boston
- The Vase and Other Bric-a-brac (1900)
- Her Majesty the King, A Romance of the Harem (1901)
- ”Panama” (1904)
Further reading
[edit]Mann, Arthur. Yankee reformers in the urban age: social reform in Boston, 1880-1900 (Harper & Row, 1954) pp 44–51
References
[edit]- ^ a b O'Donoghue, D. J., The poets of Ireland, 1912.
- ^ Arthur Mann, Yankee reformers in the urban age: social reform in Boston, 1880-1900 (1954) pp 44-51
- ^ a b The Magazine of poetry, Vol.1 (1889) Charles Wells Moulton, Buffalo, New York
External links
[edit]- Works by James Jeffrey Roche at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about James Jeffrey Roche at the Internet Archive
- Works by James Jeffrey Roche at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- 1847 births
- 1908 deaths
- Writers from Prince Edward Island
- British emigrants to pre-Confederation Prince Edward Island
- British emigrants to the United States
- Irish poets
- Writers from Boston
- American male journalists
- American diplomats
- Saint Dunstan's University alumni
- 19th-century poets
- Irish male poets
- 19th-century American male writers
- People from Mountmellick
- Burials at Holyhood Cemetery (Brookline)
- Writers from County Laois