Personal information | |||||||||
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Irish name | Séamus Ó hEithir | ||||||||
Born | Ballynacally, County Clare, Ireland | 13 May 1887||||||||
Died | 17 April 1957 69) Whitehall, Dublin, Ireland | (aged||||||||
Occupation | Civil servant | ||||||||
Inter-county titles | |||||||||
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James O'Hehir (13 May 1887 - 17 April 1957) was an Irish civil servant and hurling and Gaelic football trainer.
Biography
Born in Ballynacally, County Clare, O'Hehir joined the civil service in London in 1907. The following year he was transferred to Dublin where he worked in the Department of Local Government until his retirement. A keen sportsman, he trained the Clare senior hurling team which, in 1914, won their first ever All-Ireland Championship. In the 1927 season he acceded to a request to become trainer of the Leitrim senior football team and guided them to their inaugural Connacht Senior Football Championship win.[1]
O'Hehir died from prostate cancer on 17 April 1957. He was survived by his wife and son, Michael O'Hehir.[2]
Honours
- Clare
- Leitrim
References
- ↑ Rouse, Paul (29 March 2019). "County success cherished all the more fervently for its scarcity". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 6 August 2020.
- ↑ "Micheal O'Hehir would have celebrated his 100th birthday today". Hogan Stand. 2 June 2020. Retrieved 6 August 2020.
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