John Colahan
John Joseph Aloysius Colahan (30 March 1836 – 19 November 1918) was Surgeon Major General in the British Army.
Family
[edit]The eldest of the four children of Professor Nicholas Colahan (1806–1890), and his first wife, Sarah Colahan (1814–49), née Whistler, John Joseph Aloysius Colahan was born in Galway, Ireland on 30 March 1836.[1] His three siblings were Mary Josephine Colahan (1843–1912), Francis Colahan (1843–), and William Henry Colahan (1848–).
He married Eliza McDowell Orr (1859–1899), a concert pianist, in Malta, in 1885.[2] They had six children: Mary Margarita Colahan (1886–1965); Beatrice Clare Colahan (1889–1984); Frederick John Orr Colahan (1892–1982); John Maurice Orr "Jack" Colahan (1894–1917);[3] the artist, Colin Cuthbert Orr Colahan (1897–1987); and Basil Nicholas Orr Colahan (1898–1980).
Medical career
[edit]Colohan graduated M.D. at Queen's University, Galway in 1857, and served as an army surgeon in India, Gibraltar and Malta.[citation needed]
Colahan served as Principal Medical Officer in Ireland. The family moved from Dublin to Cape Town in 1889, then to Victoria, Australia in 1896.[4]
Death
[edit]He died at St Kilda, Victoria on 19 November 1918.[5][6][7]
Footnotes
[edit]- ^ Medical Officers of the Malta Garrison: John Colahan 1836 —?
- ^ Deaths: Colahan, The Argus, (Saturday, 25 February 1899), p.1.
- ^ Roll of Honour: Gunner John Maurice Orr Colahan, Killed in Action, The Advocate, (Saturday, 17 November 1917), p.17.
- ^ Latest News: Distinguished Visitors, The (Adelaide) Evening Journal, (Monday, 15 June 1896), p.2.
- ^ Deaths: Colahan, The Argus, (Thursday, 21 November 1918), p.1.
- ^ Prattle about People, (Melbourne) Punch, (Thursday, 28 November 1918), p.7.
- ^ Obituary: Surgeon-Major-General Colahan, The Advocate, (Saturday, 30 November 1918), p.26.
References
[edit]- The Colahans - A Remarkable Galway Family, Diarmuid Ó Cearbhaill, Journal of the Galway Archaeological and Historical Society, volume 54, 2002, pp. 121–140.
- Kinnane, Gary (1996), Colin Colahan: A Portrait, Carlton South: Melbourne University Press. ISBN 9780522847109