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John Cashel Hoey : ウィキペディア英語版 | John Cashel Hoey John Baptist Cashel Hoey, (25 October 1828 – 7 January 1892) was an Irish writer, editor, and public servant for colonial New Zealand and Australia. Cashel Hoey was born in 1828, the eldest son of Mr. Cashel Fitzsimons Hoey, of Dundalk, county Louth, Ireland, and Charleston, U.S. He was educated at St. Patrick's College, Armagh, and was one of the principal writers for the ''Nation'', and editor 1849–57, taking over from Charles Gavan Duffy, and was one of the "Young Irelanders".〔 From 1865 to 1878 he was sub-editor of the ''Dublin Review''. He was called to the bar at the Middle Temple in 1861.〔〔 Cashel Hoey was member of the board of advice and secretary to the Agent-General for Victoria 1872–73 being appointed by Gavan Duffy, and secretary to the Agent-General for New Zealand 1874–79, since when he had been secretary to the Agent-General for Victoria. He was secretary to the London committees for the Melbourne International Exhibition in 1880 and 1888, and to the Colonial Museums Committee.〔 Hoey married, in 6 February 1858, Frances, daughter of Mr. C. B. Johnston, of Busby Park, Dublin, and widow of Mr. A. M. Stewart, of Cromleich, Dublin, who survived him; as Frances Cashel Hoey she was a well-known author and translator. He died in London in 1892. His honours included Knight of the Orders of Malta, d'Este, Pius IX., Francis I., and El Caridad, and a Fellow of the Roman Academy of the Catholic Religion. The Companionship of the Order of St. Michael and St. George was conferred upon him in 1881 for his services in connexion with the International Exhibit in Melbourne in 1880.〔〔〔 ==References==
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