Thomas b fitzpatrick biography of rory
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School of Architecture Class of 2021
Recognition Day 2021
Olivia Anne Baker
- Employed: Duvall Decker | Jackson, Mississippi
Davis Scott Beasley
Kaitlyn Riann Breland
- American Institute of Architecture Students
- Officer: Beaux Arts Ball Chair, Fundraising Chair
- Alpha Rho Chi
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- Director's Council
- Dean's Council
- 2019 Trussell Travel Award Recipient
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Brianna Mishell Brown
- National Organization of Minority Architecture Students
Ashley Elaine Casteel
- American Institute of Architecture Students
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- Freedom by Design: Project Manager, Co-Director, Public Relations
- Alpha Rho Chi
Alexander “Alex” Patton Dean
- American Institute of Architecture Students
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Jasmine Janae Dennis
- American Institute of Architecture Students
- National Organization of Minority Architecture Students
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- Employed: SRG Partnership Inc. | Seattle, Washington
Rory Conner Fitzpatrick
- American Institute of Architecture Students
- Alpha Rho Chi
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Heather Leigh Gillich
Mariah Jhane’ Green
- American Institute of Architecture Students
- National Organization of Minority Architecture Students
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Jacob Benjamin Haasl
- American Institute of Architecture Students
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Avery Caroline Harmon
- Tau Sigma Delta
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Jasper Scott Harmon
- Employed: Powers Brown Architecture | Denver, Colorado
Sarah Elizabeth Hoin Rory Maguire (soldier)
Colonel Rory Maguire (1619 – 13 November 1648) was an Irish politician and soldier. He was a leading instigator of the Irish Rebellion of 1641 and subsequently participated in the Irish Confederate Wars as a senior Confederate commander.
Biography
Maguire was the second son of Bryan Maguire, 1st Baron of Enniskillen and Rose, daughter of Art MacBaron O'Neill. In 1639, Maguire was elected as the Member of Parliament for County Fermanagh in the Irish House of Commons. He received a commission in Charles I of England's Irish army in 1640. In May 1640 he married Deborah, widow of Sir Leonard Blennerhassett and daughter of Sir Henry Mervyn. Their son was the Jacobite politician, Roger Maguire, who later claimed the title Baron Maguire. Through his marriage to Deborah, Maguire became the owner of Crevenish Castle.
Alongside his older brother, Connor Maguire, he was a prime mover in the conspiracy which led to the outbreak of rebellion in Ireland on 23 October 1641. Maguire was tasked with securing County Fermanagh for the rebels, but was only partially successful, with several key fortresses in the county, including Enniskillen Castle, remaining under Protestant settler control. His attempt to murder Sir William Cole immediately prior to the rising failed, but the landowner Arthur Champion was killed in one of the first actions of the rebellion. In November 1641 he joined Felim O'Neill of Kinard at Newry to issue a proclamation in which the rebels claimed they were acting in defence of King Charles and Catholicism. In December 1641, the Fermanagh army under Maguire slaughtered many of the garrison and refugees in Tully Castle, apparently in retaliation for the killing of the garrison of a Maguire castle which had been taken by assault some days previously. He also destroyed Castle Archdale and its neighbouring settler village, and killed eight Protestants settlers at Monea
Rory maguire bridgerton Rory maguire actor Rory O'More
Irish noble (died 1578)
For other uses, see Rory O'Moore (disambiguation).
Rory Oge O'More (Irish: Ruairí Óg Ó Mórdha; c. 1544 – 30 June 1578) was an Irish noble and chief of the O'More clan. As the Lord of Laois, he rebelled against the Tudors' sixteenth-century conquest of Gaelic Ireland.
Irish nationalists Patrick Pearse and Philip O'Sullivan Beare characterised O'More as a patriot who fought against the tyranny of the English, who had established plantations on his family's land. Unionist Peter Kerr-Smiley claimed that despite O'More's ostensible duty to protect Catholicism in Ireland, him and his followers were "nothing more or less than a band of lawless brigands whose chief aim was to attack small towns or villages, burn the Protestant houses, and murder and mutilate the inhabitants".
O'More is considered the greatest obstacle to Elizabeth I's conquest of the Irish midlands. He was killed by troops led by his loyalist cousin Barnaby Fitzpatrick, 2nd Baron Upper Ossory.
Early life
Born around 1544, Rory O'More was the son of Rory Caoch O'More, Lord of Laois. His family were Chiefs of one of the most important Irish clans.
His mother was either his father's first wife, the daughter of Tadhg O'Dunne, or his second wife, Margaret, daughter of Thomas Butler and granddaughter of Piers Butler, eighth earl of Ormond.
(Note: Margaret's father was Thomas Butler (b. 1498), younger brother of James "The Lame" Butler (b. 1496), 9th earl of Ormonde. This is a different Thomas Butler than "Black Tom," 10th earl of Ormonde born in 1531 and James' first child and Red Piers' grandson. "Black Tom" was fostered in the O'More household in the years leading up to 1544 when he was sent to London to live with his father's comrade in arms, Henry VIII and to be educated alongside Henry's son, Edward. It was around the same time (1543-1544) that Rory's father married Ma
USC Marshall School of Business
Rory Maguire (soldier)
Colonel Rory Maguire (1619 – 13 November 1648) was an Irish politician and soldier. He was a leading instigator of the Irish Rebellion of 1641 and subsequently participated in the Irish Confederate Wars as a senior Confederate commander.
Biography
Maguire was the second son of Bryan Maguire, 1st Baron of Enniskillen and Rose, daughter of Art MacBaron O'Neill. In 1639, Maguire was elected as the Member of Parliament for County Fermanagh in the Irish House of Commons. He received a commission in Charles I of England's Irish army in 1640. In May 1640 he married Deborah, widow of Sir Leonard Blennerhassett and daughter of Sir Henry Mervyn. Their son was the Jacobite politician, Roger Maguire, who later claimed the title Baron Maguire. Through his marriage to Deborah, Maguire became the owner of Crevenish Castle.
Alongside his older brother, Connor Maguire, he was a prime mover in the conspiracy which led to the outbreak of rebellion in Ireland on 23 October 1641. Maguire was tasked with securing County Fermanagh for the rebels, but was only partially successful, with several key fortresses in the county, including Enniskillen Castle, remaining under Protestant settler control. His attempt to murder Sir William Cole immediately prior to the rising failed, but the landowner Arthur Champion was killed in one of the first actions of the rebellion. In November 1641 he joined Felim O'Neill of Kinard at Newry to issue a proclamation in which the rebels claimed they were acting in defence of King Charles and Catholicism. In December 1641, the Fermanagh army under Maguire slaughtered many of the garrison and refugees in Tully Castle, apparently in retaliation for the killing of the garrison of a Maguire castle which had been taken by assault some days previously. He also destroyed Castle Archdale and its neighbouring settler village, and killed eight Protestants settlers at Monea
Rory O'More
Irish noble (died 1578)
For other uses, see Rory O'Moore (disambiguation).
Rory Oge O'More (Irish: Ruairí Óg Ó Mórdha; c. 1544 – 30 June 1578) was an Irish noble and chief of the O'More clan. As the Lord of Laois, he rebelled against the Tudors' sixteenth-century conquest of Gaelic Ireland.
Irish nationalists Patrick Pearse and Philip O'Sullivan Beare characterised O'More as a patriot who fought against the tyranny of the English, who had established plantations on his family's land. Unionist Peter Kerr-Smiley claimed that despite O'More's ostensible duty to protect Catholicism in Ireland, him and his followers were "nothing more or less than a band of lawless brigands whose chief aim was to attack small towns or villages, burn the Protestant houses, and murder and mutilate the inhabitants".
O'More is considered the greatest obstacle to Elizabeth I's conquest of the Irish midlands. He was killed by troops led by his loyalist cousin Barnaby Fitzpatrick, 2nd Baron Upper Ossory.
Early life
Born around 1544, Rory O'More was the son of Rory Caoch O'More, Lord of Laois. His family were Chiefs of one of the most important Irish clans.
His mother was either his father's first wife, the daughter of Tadhg O'Dunne, or his second wife, Margaret, daughter of Thomas Butler and granddaughter of Piers Butler, eighth earl of Ormond.
(Note: Margaret's father was Thomas Butler (b. 1498), younger brother of James "The Lame" Butler (b. 1496), 9th earl of Ormonde. This is a different Thomas Butler than "Black Tom," 10th earl of Ormonde born in 1531 and James' first child and Red Piers' grandson. "Black Tom" was fostered in the O'More household in the years leading up to 1544 when he was sent to London to live with his father's comrade in arms, Henry VIII and to be educated alongside Henry's son, Edward. It was around the same time (1543-1544) that Rory's father married Ma