Patricia O'Connor (playwright)
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4 December 1905
Patricia O'Connor | |
|---|---|
| Born | Henrietta Norah O'Connor 4 December 1905 Dunfanaghy, County Donegal, Ireland |
| Died | 2 February 1983 (aged 77) |
| Occupations | playwright, novelist |
Patricia O'Connor (4 December 1905 – 2 February 1983) was an Irish playwright, novelist and teacher.[1]
Patricia O'Connor was born Henrietta Norah O'Connor on 4 December 1905 at Sheephaven coastguard station, Dunfanaghy, County Donegal. She was known to her family as Norah. Her parents were Patrick, coastguard and sailor, and his wife Annie May O'Connor (née Fallon). She had two sisters and a brother, her elder sister was the historian and vice-principal of Portadown High School, Theresa Margaret O'Connor. Her father was transferred to Howth, County Dublin in 1912, and O'Connor attended Celbridge Collegiate School, County Kildare as a border. She remained there after her father was reassigned to Donegal in 1913, and later in November 1918 to Peterhead in Scotland. As her family were Church of Ireland, this relocation may have been due to the Irish political climate.[1]
After passing her Irish intermediate certificate, O'Connor joined her family in Scotland, and attended Dunfermline High School. There she was directed towards a teaching career, which she later recalled: "Like most other teachers I did not choose teaching as a career. I was conscripted." She attended Dalry House teacher training college, Edinburgh from 1924 to 1926, and was awarded a teaching diploma in 1928. She worked for Fife Teaching Authority briefly, but returned to Northern Ireland, where her family had settled following her father's retirement in January 1927. She took over as principal of Viscount Bangor School, Killough after her sister in September 1930, where she worked until 1945, when she developed tuberculosis. Inspectors rated her repeatedly as "highly efficient", but some parents objected to her focus on nature studies and generally progressive educational ethos.[1]
On 25 February 1933, she married William Reginald Ingram, a civil servant. She took the pen name Patricia O'Connor, in honour of her father, and was often referred to as Miss O'Connor to avoid confusion with her mother. She was variously known as Patricia O'Connor, Patricia O'Connor Ingram, Patricia Ingram and P. Norah Ingram.[1]