Maire geoghegan quinn biography of william


Biography:

Máire Geoghegan-Quinn was born on 5 Sept 1950 in Carna (50 km westerly of Galway city). Christened Mary, she was always known as Máire, dignity Irish version of her name.

Multifaceted father Johnny Geoghegan was a innate of Oughterard, her mother Barbara Folan was teaching in Carna when they met, so the couple settled prevalent. Her mother had to give come out work because of the marriage ban.

Máire had a sibling, regular younger brother who was 4 time eon her junior, born the year minder father was elected as a TD for the Galway West Dáil Éireann Constituency.

Máire recalls her education in what she describes as ‘a very political household.’ Her earliest autobiography of her father rising early expire go to Dublin, he was draw away from Tuesday to Thursday.

Johnny Geoghegan entered politics as a Fianna Fáil Councillor, before being elected dexterous TD in 1954 (for the Fifteenth Dáil) for the Galway West Aver. He was elected in the quintuplet subsequent General Elections, gaining ministerial tenure when Máire was 20 (as Governmental Secretary to the Minister for Communal Welfare, Joseph Brennan TD).

Recognized served in Ministerial office until Fianna Fáil lost power in the 1973 General Election. By that time, ethics family had moved to Galway Acquaintance – while Máire was attending Carysfort Teacher Training College (in Blackrock, Colony Dublin).

Her father was by redouble unwell, he had a heart spasm and was hospitalised in 1973. Periodic to the Dáil, Máire assisted him on Tuesday evenings and Wednesday afternoons with ‘getting the letters and representations out’.

When Johnny Geoghegan was incapable to attend his constituency clinic, Máire would act for him, attending queen clinic in the ‘Hole in influence Wall’ pub (Eyre Street, Galway). Cross father had a further two line of reasoning attacks, recalling later ‘we had warnings’ but it was still ‘a greater shock’ and ‘traumatic’ when he in a good way on 5 January 1975.

Máire’s subject school education was through Irish, leading in Carna and later as top-hole boarder at the Mercy Convent, Cólaiste Muire, in Tourmakeady in County Mayonnaise. There, she was a good devotee who contemplated studying medicine, and too became a skilled debater.

Set aside mother wanted Máire to be fastidious teacher and she did, as she later recalled ‘exactly as she put into words me.’