Lorna Reynolds Explained

Lorna Reynolds
Birth Name:Lorna Reynolds
Birth Date:17 December 1911
Birth Place:Jamaica
Death Date:4 July 2003
Death Place:Dublin, Ireland
Nationality:Irish

Lorna Reynolds (17 December 1911 – 4 July 2003) was an Irish writer, editor, and professor.[1]

Early life and education

Reynolds was born in Jamaica in 1911 to staff sergeant Michael Reynolds in the Royal Engineers and his wife Teresa Hickey.[2] She was one of five children. Her father died when she was ten.[3] [1]

In 1912, her family returned from the Caribbean to live in Birr, County Offaly. After three years they moved to Dublin, Ireland.[1]

Reynolds was educated in the Dominican College, Eccles Street. She went on to get her three degrees from University College Dublin. Reynolds studied English and graduated with a BA in 1933, her MA in 1935 and finally her PhD in 1940. She then became a lecturer in UCD where she worked for thirty years.[1] [4]

Career

In 1966 Reynolds was appointed Professor of Modern English at University College Galway. She worked as an editor as well as her academic work. She was editor of the University Review and co-edited several volumes of Yeats Studies with Robert O’Driscoll of the University of Toronto. Reynolds wrote a biography of Kate O’Brien, her lifelong friend. She also wrote poetry and short stories, and was a contributor to The Bell, Poetry Ireland Review, Arena, The Lace Curtain and Botteghe Oscure. Her recipes were published in 1990.[1] [4] She was responsible for organising the J. M. Synge centenary conference in 1971.[4] [5] She took a sabbatical to Toronto due to her work with O'Driscoll where she was attached to St. Michael's College.[6] [7]

Also an activist Reynolds mobilised a campaign to try to restore the Georgian theatre in Eyrecourt, County Galway,[8] she was a member of the Women's Social and Progressive League in the 1940s as well as involved in the Anti-Censorship Board. Reynolds was also very involved in the UCD Women Graduates' Association. She returned to Dublin when she retired in 1978. She died in 2003 and is buried in Clonoghill Cemetery, Birr.[1] [4] [5]

Bibliography

Editor

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: path breaking women 03 17. N. Reilly. NUI Galway .
  2. Web site: Marriage cert.
  3. Web site: Death cert.
  4. Web site: A life whose theme was freedom of women. 26 July 2003. The Irish Times .
  5. Book: Brian Caraher. Robert Mahony. Ireland and Transatlantic Poetics: Essays in Honor of Denis Donoghue. 2007. Associated University Presse. 978-0-87413-972-3. 47–.
  6. Web site: Toronto . University of . The Varsity, September 10, 1975 . Internet Archive . 1975-09-10 . 2020-05-31.
  7. Web site: Bulletin, vol. 29 iss. 12 : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive . Internet Archive . 1975-11-07 . 2020-05-31.
  8. Web site: Restoring Eyrecourt's Historic Theatre. 30 July 1971. Connacht Tribune.