Patrick Shea (civil servant)

Patrick Shea CB, OBE, FRSA (27 April 1908 31 May 1986)[1] was a Northern Irish civil servant and the first Roman Catholic since A. N. Bonaparte-Wyse in the 1920s to achieve the rank of permanent secretary of a government department in Northern Ireland.

Career

Shea was born in Delvin, County Westmeath, where his father, a native Irish speaker from West Kerry, was a member of the Royal Irish Constabulary. His father had various postings until the RIC was disbanded in 1922 upon the creation of the Irish Free State via the Anglo-Irish Treaty/Partition of Ireland. Shea's father joined the Royal Ulster Constabulary, attaining the rank of head constable and later clerk of petty sessions in Newry, County Down, where the family later lived.

Patrick Shea attended the Abbey CBS in Newry. Upon leaving, he joined the Northern Ireland Civil Service in June 1926. His postings included:

  • Ministry of Labour, clerical officer 1926–1935 Belfast, outdoor officer Enniskillen 1935–1938, senior clerk, headquarters 1938–1939
  • Ministry of Finance, assistant principal 1939–1941, deputy principal 1941. His initial appointment to this office was blocked because he was a Roman Catholic by the Minister of Labour John F. Gordon who was later overruled by John M. Andrews the Minister of Finance.
  • Secretary Civil Service Committee for Northern Ireland 1941
  • Ministry of Education, principal December 1947 – 1959, establishment officer and accountant
  • Ministry of Finance, Public Buildings and Works, 1959–1963, assistant secretary 1963–1969
  • Ministry of Education, permanent secretary, December 1969 – 1973

After retirement he chaired Enterprise Ulster from 1973 to 1979. Shea commented on his own career by recalling that it "was my experience that some Catholics, and especially those in Belfast, where I had been told, the Bishop advised them against seeking Government employment, looked with suspicion on Catholic civil servants. We had joined the enemy, we were lost souls".[2][3]

Honours

Shea was given an OBE in 1961 and CB 1972. He was made an Honorary member of the Royal Society of Ulster Architects in 1971 and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts in 1977. He was a long-time member of the Ulster Arts Club.

Personal life

He married Eithne McHugh (d. 2000) in September 1941, and they had a daughter and two sons.

Sources

  • Shea, Patrick. Voices and the sound of drums, Blackstaff Press: 1981; ISBN 0-85640-247-8.
gollark: Well, maybe not that slow, I don't know the exact details of OC networking, but at least would make latency a bit higher, and stress any relays you use.
gollark: 4 drives to a server would allow... 12MB? each, which is much more than you can do now, and would give each node a decent amount of computation power (especially with data cards), but splitting everything across the network would be sloooow.
gollark: You could possibly make some sort of storage clustering thing - servers can have 4 drives each, after all, and use all of them for remote-accessible storage if they network-boot with an EEPROM.
gollark: But accessed as one peripheral *from another computer*, I mean.
gollark: Except for another computer and some network cards, but latency.

References

  1. "Deaths". The Times. The Times Digital Archive. 7 June 1986. p. 1.
  2. Elliott, Marianne. Catholics of Ulster, Basic Books (19 February 2002); ISBN 0465019048; ISBN 978-0465019045; p. 389
  3. A New History of Ireland, Volume II, edited by Art Cosgrove, p. 217; ISBN 978-0-19-821755-8 (hc); ISBN 978-0-19-953970-3 (p)


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.