Lil O'Grady
Elizabeth "Lil" O'Grady (Eilís Ní Ghráda) from Cork was the 13th president of the Camogie Association.[1]
Lil O'Grady, Eilís Ní Ghráda | |
---|---|
13th President of the Camogie Association | |
In office 1965–1968 | |
Succeeded by | Rosina MacManus |
Presidency
She was Munster chair before she was elected unopposed at Congress in 1965 and used her casting vote to defeat the motion calling for the abolition of the double crossbar. During her presidency in 1966 the first national training programmes for coaches were introduced. She was one of three camogie selectors of the Gaelic Weekly All Star award, predecessor of the current GAA All-stars, when the scheme was extended to camogie in 1964.
Unusually, she resumed the chair in Munster after her presidency. She refereed the 1969 All Ireland senior final.
gollark: Also worse health conditions because no medicine.
gollark: No convenient transport, no automation, basically zero economy, no modern computers and networking, manual labour all day because no automation...
gollark: Oh [REDACTED], that would be HORRIBLE.
gollark: Without the global supply chains we have I would lack nice things like computers or possibly orange juice.
gollark: I don't agree, trade is generally pretty positive-sum for everyone.
References
- Moran, Mary (2011). A Game of Our Own: The History of Camogie. Dublin, Ireland: Cumann Camógaíochta. p. 460.
External links
- Camogie.ie Official Camogie Association Website
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