Draft:Brigid Anne Ryan
Irish journalist
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Brigid (or Bridget) Anne Ryan (1966 or 1967)[1][2] is a former Irish journalist. In 1992 she became the first female editor of The Irish Catholic newspaper.[2][1] She resigned as editor in 1995,[3][4] and later became involved with the Pilgrim House Community religious group.[5]
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| This is a draft article. It is a work in progress open to editing by anyone. Please ensure core content policies are met before publishing it as a live Wikipedia article. Find sources: Google (books · news · scholar · free images · WP refs) · FENS · JSTOR · TWL Last edited by Dinos.bar.and.grill (talk | contribs) 32 days ago. (Update)
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Comment: In order to establish independent notability, under WP:NJOURNALIST and WP:SIGCOV, there would ideally be more sources which deal with the subject as a bio topic in own right. Many of the sources here, while useful for supporting the text, don't really establish independent notability. The only sources, which deal with the topic in own right, are those announcing appointment to editor role in 1992/1993. Which could, potentially, fall under WP:BIO1E. (The holder of a particular role or job [or type of job] aren't considered inherently notable. Including newspaper editors. Much of the below could, as such, potentially be covered WP:WITHIN the The_Irish_Catholic#History title/section....) Where would that would leave the later activities (apology letters to Pilgrim House founders, accusatory leaflets on incest, accosting priests at mass, etc) I'm not sure.... Guliolopez (talk) 14:13, 11 February 2026 (UTC)
Journalistic career
Originally from Borrisoleigh in County Tipperary,[1] Ryan started writing for The Irish Catholic in 1989. Prior to this she had studied journalism at the College of Commerce, Rathmines and had worked in commercial journalism. In 1984, she won the Irish Goods Council's "Young Journalist of the Year" award and was an assistant editor for the trade magazine Today's Grocer.[2] Upon her appointment as the first female editor of the Irish Catholic, Ryan told the Sunday Tribune that "it is a signal of how women are taking a stronger stance in all social matters, including religion".[1]
In 1994, while writing about her television appearance on The Late Late Show in which she debated the dissident priest Pat Buckley, Nell McCafferty of the Sunday Tribune remarked that Ryan could "shoot a look that would scald at 40 paces".[6] In an interview with the Irish Independent in 1995, journalist Joan Brady noted that Ryan "had become a familiar face and voice as radio and television programmes regularly debate issues which concern the Church and our predominantly Catholic population". In that interview, Ryan expressed views on divorce and contraception which were not in agreement with the hierarchy of the Catholic Church at the time.[7]
Ryan resigned from The Irish Catholic in 1995 after criticism from the bishop of Cashel and Ossory and the archbishop of Dublin about an editorial she wrote on Pope John Paul II and his stance on capital punishment.[3] She stated that she was only permitted to write editorials that were approved by the paper's management;[8] earlier that year she written an editorial questioning the freedom of the religious media in Ireland on foot of the dismissal of Father Kevin Hegarty as editor of Intercom.[9] She was succeeded as editor by David Quinn,[10] and remains the only woman to have been editor to The Irish Catholic.
Later activities
Following her resignation, Ryan became involved with the Pilgrim House Community religious group, acting as a director.[5][11] The group has been described as "controversial" with investigations into the care home run by the group by Health Information and Quality Authority (HIQA). Ryan was one of the signatures of a public apology to the group's founder Helena O'Leary that was placed as an advert in the Irish Times in June 2008. The advert, in which the signatories apologised to O'Leary for their "dishonesty", was the subject of some media interest and was described by the Irish Times as "mysterious and dramatic".[12]
With her husband, Benedict Hogan, Ryan also ran the organisation Protect Children Against Incest with the goal of exposing "incest and the families and individuals who try to cover it up". Among their actions have been handing out leaflets (which made accusations of incest against members of a "well-known local family") and storming the altar during mass at Kill O'The Grange church in Dun Laoghaire in 2004 (accusing the priest of not preventing "adverse publicity about their group").[13]
