Biography

Literary Biography

Father Hartigan was a keen student of Australian literature. In 1906 he began publishing verse in such journals as the Albury Daily News, Catholic Press and the Bulletin under the pen-name ‘Mary Ann’. Encouraged by George Robertson, C. J. Dennis and others, he published Around the Boree Log and Other verses, under the pseudonym ‘John O’Brien’, in November 1921. Recording with humour and pathos the lively faith, solid piety and everyday lives of the people around him, Hartigan successfully combined the old faith of Ireland with the mateship and ethos of the bush, towards the end of an age when the small selectors and squatters went by sulky or ‘shandrydan’ to ‘The Church Upon the Hill’.

‘We’ll all be rooned’, said Hanrahan,
In accents most forlorn,
Outside the church, ere Mass began,
One frosty Sunday morn.

‘Said Hanrahan’ and the other poems were an instant success. Dennis hailed them in the Bulletinas in ‘the direct Lawson-Paterson line mainly—unaffected talk about Australians, much as they would naturally talk about themselves’. Around the Boree Log ran to five editions and 18,000 copies by 1926, was widely popularized throughout eastern Australia by the recitations of John Byrne (‘The Joker’), acclaimed in Ireland and the United States of America, and made into a film in 1925. Twenty poems were set to music by Dom S. Moreno of New Norcia, Western Australia, in 1933.

Hartigan was a popular figure in the town and community. His years at Narrandera were happy if arduous, disturbed only perhaps by the sectarianism engendered by the Sister Liguori case. His poems and short stories regularly appeared, many in the religious journal, Manly.

Advancing age, ill health and a desire to carry out more historical research led Hartigan to retire as pastor of Narrandera in 1944; he became chaplain of the Convent of the Sacred Heart, Rose Bay.

In Sydney he was a familiar figure in the Mitchell Library and wrote a series of articles, ‘In Diebus Illis’, recording the struggles of the pioneer clergy, published in the Australasian Catholic Record in 1943-45 and posthumously in book form as The men of ’38 … (Kilmore, 1975).

Still much in demand as occasional speaker and preacher, in 1947 he was appointed domestic prelate with the title of right reverend monsignor in October 1947. His main comforts in his semi-retirement were the love of his near relations, receiving visitors (especially from Narrandera) and watching the shipping on the harbour. Ill with cancer from 1951 he completed On Darlinghurst Hill (Sydney, 1952), written for the centenary of the Sacred Heart Parish.

Hartigan died in Lewisham Hospital on 27 December 1952 and, after a requiem Mass in St Mary’s Cathedral, was buried beside his parents in North Rocks cemetery.

Tall, handsome in his young days, and impressive always, Hartigan for all his broad humanity and kindliness was shy and somewhat detached. Possessed of a dry humour underlain by a touch of wistfulness, he was a good conversationalist and raconteur: literature, art, cricket, horses, the land and cars were ready subjects.

He was an excellent, yet undemonstrative preacher—his addresses, including panegyrics on his friends, with their pervading poetic imagery, sense of history and heartfelt sincerity are beautiful examples of Irish-Australian oratory.

Much of ‘John O’Brien’s’ unpublished verse appeared in The Parish of St. Mel’s (Sydney, 1954). A selection of his poems, illustrated by the paintings of Patrick Carroll, was published as Around the Boree Log (Sydney, 1978). A portrait by E. M. Smith is at St Patrick’s College, Manly.