antiquities of Cleveland_ (1846) _portrait_.
ORD, WILLIAM REDMAN. _b._ about 1792; second lieut. R.E. 25
April 1809, colonel 17 Feb. 1854, col. commandant 20 April 1861
to death; general 1 Jany. 1868. _d._ Stoke Damarel, Devonport 11
April 1872.
ORDISH, ROWLAND MASON (son of John Ordish, land agent and
surveyor). _b._ Melbourne, near Derby 11 April 1824; employed
by R. E. Brounger, civil engineer, London 1847, afterwards
by Charles Fox; made the working drawings for the iron work
of the Great Exhibition building 1851, and was engaged on
the re-erection of the building at Sydenham 1852–4; chief
draughtsman in the works’ department of the admiralty at
Somerset house Jany. 1856 to March 1858; engineer at 18 Great
George st. Westminster 1858; partner with W. H. Le Feuvre;
took out a patent April 1858 for an improvement in suspension
bridges, which is known as Ordish’s straight chain suspension
system; designed the Franz-Joseph bridge over the Moldau at
Prague 1868, and the Albert bridge over the Thames at Chelsea,
opened Sept. 1873, both constructed on this principle; designed
the roof of the Dutch-Rhenish railway station at Amsterdam
1863, roof of the Dublin winter palace 1865, winter garden for
Leeds infirmary 1868, and the railway station at Cape Town;
designed with J. W. Grover the roof of the Albert Hall at South
Kensington 1870; member of the Society of Engineers 1857,
president 1860. _d._ Stratford place, Camden Town, London 12
Sept. 1886. _bur._ Highgate cemet.
O’REARDON, JOHN. _b._ 1776; educ. Maynooth 1797; a physician
1802; studied in Paris 1803; a prisoner in France to 1814;
physician to fever hospital, Cork st. Dublin 1814–48, wrote
the annual reports for 1824, 1827, 1830 and 1833; physician
to Daniell O’Connell; author of De ictero 1802; A memoir of
Richard Kirwan, the chemist. _d._ Mount Prospect, Killarney 14
March 1866. _Medical Times 31 March 1866 p._ 353.
O’REGAN, ANTHONY. _b._ Kiltullagh, Ireland 1809; a priest in
Tuam cathedral; professor and then president of St. Jarlath’s
coll. Tuam; went to U.S. of America; vicar-general of diocese of
St. Louis; president of the college of Carondelet and professor
of theology and sacred scriptures; bishop of Chicago 1854,
resigned 1858 and was transferred to the titular see of Dora;
resided in Europe 1858 to death. _d._ Michael’s grove, Brompton,
London 13 Nov. 1866. _bur._ Cloonfad, co. Galway, 22 Nov. _The
Tablet 17 Nov. 1866 p._ 721, _1 Dec. p._ 764.
O’REILLY, BERNARD. _b._ co. Longford 1803; embarked for U.S. of
America 17 Jany. 1825; educ. Ecclesiastical seminary, Montreal
1825, and at St. Mary’s coll. Baltimore; ordained in New York
13 Oct. 1831; a priest at St. James’ ch. Brooklyn from 1831;
devoted himself to the sick during the cholera of 1832; pastor
of St. Patrick’s ch. Rochester Dec. 1832; vicar-general of the
new see of Buffalo Oct, 1847; consecrated bishop of Hartford
in St. Patrick’s ch. 1850; introduced Sisters of mercy to the
states of Rhode Island and Connecticut, and protected them
against a mob in 1855; went to Europe 5 Dec. 1855; embarked at
Liverpool on board the steamer Pacific on his return to his
diocese 23 Jany. 1856, but the ship was never again heard of,
requiem masses said for him in June 1856. _R. H. Clarke’s Lives
of bishops of catholic church in United States ii_ 391–407
(1872).
O’REILLY, BERNARD (son of a farmer). _b._ Ballybeg, co. Meath
10 Jany. or June 1824; educ. at St. Cuthbert’s college, Ushaw,
Durham 10 June 1836 to 17 May 1847; received tonsure and 4
minor orders 15 Feb. 1845, sub-deacon 20 Sept. 1845, deacon 19
Dec. 1846, priest 9 May 1847; assistant priest of mission at
St. Patrick’s, Toxteth park, Liverpool 18 May 1847 to 8 Dec.
1852; removed to new mission of St. Vincent de Paul 8 Dec. 1852,
erected a new church 1857; canon of chapter of Liverpool 24 Dec.
1862 and vicar-general; bishop of Liverpool 28 Feb. 1873 to
death; consecrated at St. Vincent’s, Liverpool 19 March 1873.
_d._ St. Edward’s coll. Everton 9 April 1894. _bur._ Upholland
cemet. Wigan 13 April. _Brady’s Episcopal succession iii_ 423
(1877).
O’REILLY, DOWELL (4 son of Matthew O’Reilly of Knock Abbey
castle, co. Louth, _d._ Jany. 1817). _b._ May 1795; called to
Irish bar; barrister L.I. 17 April 1832; attorney general of
Jamaica 1831–55; nominated president of legislative council
there June 1855, but he died before being inaugurated. _d._ St.
Andrews, Kingston, Jamaica 13 Sept. 1855. _bur._ in R.C. cemet.
Kingston 14 Sept. _G.M. xliv_ 651 (1855).
O’REILLY, EDMUND JOSEPH. _b._ London 30 April 1811; studied
at Maynooth and the Irish college at Rome 1830, doctor in
sacred theology 1835; professor of theology at Maynooth college
1838–50; member of the Society of Jesus 1852; teacher of
theology at the Jesuits’ college of St. Beuno, near St. Asaph
1852–8; teacher of divinity in the catholic univ. of Ireland
1858–9; superior of the Jesuits’ house of retreat at Milltown
Park, Dublin 1859 to death; Irish provincial of Society of Jesus
1863–70. _d._ Milltown Park 10 Nov. 1878. _bur._ Glasnevin
cemet. Dublin. _E. J. O’Reilly’s The relations of the church to
society_ (1892) _memoir pp. i–viii_; _Irish Monthly vi_ 695–700
(1878).
O’REILLY, JOHN BOYLE (2 son of Wm. David O’Reilly, master of
the national school attached to the Netterville institution
at Dowth Castle, near Drogheda 35 years, _d._ 17 Feb. 1871).
_b._ Dowth Castle 28 June 1844; a compositor on the Guardian
newspaper at Preston 1859, reporter on the paper to March 1863;
a trooper in the 10 hussars May 1863, arrested at Island Bridge
barracks, Dublin 13 Feb. 1866, tried by court martial at the
royal barracks, Dublin 27 June 1866 for having in Dublin in
January 1866 come to the knowledge of an intended mutiny in her
majesty’s forces in Ireland and not giving information to his
commanding officer, ordered to be shot 9 July, but eventually
sentenced to 20 years penal servitude, sent to Western Australia
Oct. 1867, escaped on an American whaler April 1869; editor and
part proprietor of the Pilot newspaper in Boston 1870; took
part in the Fenian invasion of Canada June 1870; organised the
rescue of all the military political prisoners from Western
Australia April 1876; wrote odes to commemorate many national
celebrations; author of Songs from the Southern seas, Boston
1873; Songs, legends, and ballads, Boston 1878; The statues
in the block and other poems 1881; Ethics of boxing and manly
sports 1888; In Bohemia, poems 1886; Moondyne, a story 1889;
edited The poetry and songs of Ireland 1889; author with Robert
Grant, F. J. Stimson, and J. T. Wheelwright of The king’s man,
a tale of tomorrow 1884, a satirical novel. _d._ Winthrop st.
Boston 10 Aug. 1890. _bur._ Holyhood cemetery, Brookline,
Massachusetts 12 Aug. _J. J. Roche’s Life of J. B. O’Reilly_
(1891) _portrait_; _Cosmopolitan ix_ 768 (1890) _portrait_;
_Irish Monthly xiii_ 19 (1885).
O’REILLY, MONTAGU FREDERICK. _b._ 1822; entered R.N. Feb. 1835,
lieut. 12 Dec. 1845, capt. 23 June 1862, retired 1 April 1870,
R.A. 9 March 1878; served in the Chinese war 1841; first lieut.
of Retribution in Black sea during Russian war, wounded at
Odessa 22 April 1854, present at attack on Sebastopol 17 Oct.
1854, Crimean medal, two Turkish medals and the medal of the
Medjidié fifth class; author of Twelve views in the Black sea
and the Bosphorus, with letterpress 1856, the original sketches
are at Windsor Castle. _d._ Suffolk st. Pall Mall, London 20 May
1888.
O’REILLY, MYLES WILLIAM PATRICK (only son of Wm. O’Reilly of
Knock abbey, co. Louth 1792–1844). _b._ Dublin 13 March 1825;
educ. St. Cuthbert’s college, Ushaw, Durham; B.A. London 1845,
LL.D. Rome 1847; sheriff of co. Louth 1848; captain Louth rifles
militia; major in service of Pius IX, commanded the Irish
brigade, defended Spoleto against the Piedmontese troops Sept.
1860, but was obliged to surrender; M.P. co. Longford March 1862
to April 1879; assistant comr. of intermediate education in
Ireland April 1879 to death; author of Progress of catholicity
in Ireland in the nineteenth century 1865; Memorials of those
who suffered for the Catholic faith in Ireland 1868, reprinted
under the title of Lives of the Irish martyrs and confessors,
New York 1878. _d._ Dublin 6 Feb. 1880. _bur._ Philipstown near
Knock Abbey.
ORFORD, HORATIO WALPOLE, 3 Earl of (eld. son of 2 earl of Oxford
1752–1822). _b._ Whitehall, London 14 June 1783; styled lord
Walpole 1809–22; M.P. for King’s Lynn 1809–22; a lord of the
admiralty 12 June 1811; secretary of embassy at St. Petersburgh
5 July 1812 to 5 April 1825 when pensioned, minister ad interim
1814–5; a comr. for the affairs of India 17 June 1818 to 17
Feb. 1822; succeeded to the peerage 15 June 1822; colonel West
Norfolk militia 26 June 1822; high steward of Great Yarmouth
1833–6. _d._ Wolterton park, Aylsham, Norfolk 29 Dec. 1858.
ORFORD, HORATIO WALPOLE, 4 Earl of (eld. child of preceding).
_b._ Bolton row, Piccadilly, London 18 April 1813; styled lord
Walpole 1822–58; educ. Eton and Trin. coll. Camb.; M.P. for East
Norfolk 1835–7; succeeded to the peerage 29 Dec. 1858. _d._ 6
Cavendish sq. London 6 Dec. 1894.
O’RIORDAN, DANIELL O’CONNELL. Called to Irish bar 1849; Q.C. 28
Feb. 1880. _d._ 13 Aug. 1890.
ORKNEY, GEORGE WILLIAM HAMILTON FITZMAURICE, 6 Earl of (1 son of
5 earl of Orkney 1803–77). _b._ 6 May 1827; known as viscount
Kirkwall 1831–77; ensign 92 foot 8 Aug. 1845; capt. 71 foot 23
Dec. 1853; lieut. Scots fusilier guards 25 Jany. 1856, sold
out 25 Sept. 1857; served at siege of Sebastopol and capture
of Kertch, medal and clasp and Turkish medal; aide-de-camp to
sir Henry Wood in Ionian islands 1851–4; C.M.G. 1866, K.C.M.G.
28 May 1875; succeeded 16 May 1877; a representative peer for
Scotland 19 Feb. 1885 to death; author of Four years in the
Ionian islands 1864. _d._ 26 Sussex place, Regent’s park, London
21 Oct. 1889.
ORLEANS, HELENE LOUISE ELISABETH, Duchess of (youngest dau.
of Frederic Louis, grand duke of Mecklenburgh Schwerin, _d._
1816). _b._ Ludwigslust castle 24 Jany. 1814; _m._ at palace of
Fontainebleau, France 30 May 1837 Ferdinand, duke of Orleans,
prince royal of France, eld. son of Louis Philippe, king of the
French, the duke was killed by a fall from his carriage 13 July
1842; she escaped to Belgium at outbreak of French revolution
Feb. 1848; resided chiefly in Germany 1848–57, but was very
frequently in England; lived at Cambourne house, Mr. William
Paynter’s villa, Richmond, Surrey 1857–8. _d._ Cambourne house,
Richmond 18 May 1858. _H. Castille’s Portraits politiques_,
_La duchess d’Orleans_ (1856); _The duchess of Orleans_, _a
translation by Mrs. Austin_ (1859); _I.L.N. 23 July 1842 pp._
168–9, _29 May 1858 p._ 544 _portrait_; _G.M. June 1858 p._ 668.
ORLEBAR, JOHN (3 son of Richard Orlebar of Hinwick house,
Bedfordshire 1775–1833). _b._ Hinwick house 19 Oct. 1810;
entered navy 16 March 1824; captain 1 Jany. 1861, retired 1
Oct. 1864; admiralty surveyor in British North America 30
years; retired admiral 15 July 1887. _d._ 91 Pevensey road, St.
Leonards-on-Sea 11 May 1891. _An account of families of Boase_
(1893) 112.
ORMATHWAITE, JOHN BENN-WALSH, 1 Baron (only son of sir John
Benn-Walsh, 1 baronet 1759–1825). _b._ Warfield park, Bracknell,
Berks. 9 Dec. 1798; educ. Eton; matric. from Christ Church,
Oxf. 3 Dec. 1816; sheriff of Berkshire 1823; succeeded as 2
bart. 7 June 1825; M.P. Sudbury 1830–4, and 1838–40; contested
Radnorshire 19 Jany. 1835; contested Poole 25 July 1837; M.P.
Radnorshire 1840–68; lord lieutenant of Radnorshire 11 Aug.
1842, resigned 1875; cr. baron Ormathwaite of Ormathwaite,
Cumberland 16 April 1868; author of Poor laws in Ireland
in their effect upon the capital, the prosperity, and the
improvement of that country 1830, 3 ed. 1831; Popular opinion on
parliamentary reform, 4 ed. 1831; Observation on the ministerial
plan of reform 1831; On the present balance of parties in the
state, 3 ed. 1832; Chapters of contemporary history 1836; The
practical result of the reform act 1860; Astronomy and geology
compared 1872; Lessons of the French revolution 1873. _d._
Warfield park 3 Feb. 1881.
ORME, COSMO. _b._ Scotland 1780; apprenticed to James Fairbairn,
bookseller, Edinburgh; clerk in house of Longman and Rees,
London; partner in house of Longman, Rees, Hurst, and Orme 1803,
retired June 1841; the first president of the Booksellers’
provident institution 15 Feb. 1837. _d._ Tunbridge Wells 12 Aug.