Rev Dr William O’Neill lays down his pen after 55 years

Author of Presbyterian Notes for ‘The Irish Times’ since 1960 finishes writing career

Rev Dr William O’Neill, who  had been author of Presbyterian Notes for The Irish Times since 1960.  Photograph: Sara Freund/The Irish Times
Rev Dr William O’Neill, who had been author of Presbyterian Notes for The Irish Times since 1960. Photograph: Sara Freund/The Irish Times

His name is Bill O'Neill and at the end of last month he finished writing for The Irish Times after 55 years. Is this a record?

He had been author of the paper's Presbyterian Notes since 1960, when Éamon de Valera was president, Seán Lemass was taoiseach, Harold Macmillan was Britain's prime minister, John F Kennedy was president of the US, John XXIII was pope and Bono wasn't even born.

Rev Dr William O’Neill, known to all and sundry as “Bill”, is told by neighbours in Howth he looks 65.

Here at the paper we thought he was in his early 80s. He is 92.

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“So too was Madge,” he says.

Madge (Margaret), his beloved wife who taught at Sutton Park School for 25 years, died last January.

“A wonderfully, wonderfully healthy woman all her life, she had a fall,” he recalls.

Bill O’Neill was born in Woodvale Park at the top of the Shankill Road in Belfast, the eldest of nine children.

He felt his mother wanted a daughter. It took her six boys before she had one.

Messenger boy

On leaving school at 14 he worked as a messenger boy, in a linen mill, as a butcher, then as an apprentice engineer, then an iron turner, before becoming a member of the Amalgamated Engineering Union.

He worked at James Mackie and Sons and at Short Brothers and Harland. During the second World War he made shells and aircraft parts.

Then he decided on the ministry. He attended Magee College, Trinity College Dublin, Union Theological College, and Queen's University Belfast, from where he graduated in 1954.

He was then briefly assistant to Rev Billy Thompson – who brought the Samaritans to Ireland – in east Belfast.

From there Rev Bill went to Union Theological Seminary in New York, where he took a master’s in sacred theology.

He was a chaplain with the Royal Air Force for four years, involving service in Wales, England, Cyprus and Iraq, and then studied for a doctorate in philosophy at Trinity.

It was around then he first met Madge. Both had learned the piano from the same teacher in Finaghy.

He had called around to the teacher to say hello and she was there. She gave him a lift home in her father’s car.

Some time afterwards she went on a camping trip to Scotland and sent him a postcard. On it she wrote, "I love you."

Around the same time he talked to Rev Eric Gardner in Lucan, "who was desperately looking for someone to take services at the church on Athy Road, Carlow". Bill did so.

Madge asked afterwards: “Could you go there?” He did, for three years.

Engagement

“I bought the engagement ring in Drogheda.”

The couple married in 1960 and had three children.

That same year Rev Murray Moore, then in Clontarf, approached him about writing the Presbyterian Notes for The Irish Times.

“Look here, you write those,” he said. And so he did, for 55 years.

“I liked the crowd [at the newspaper] and was very happy to keep scribbling,” he said.

In 1963 he became a minister in Howth-Malahide and has been living in Howth since.

He was minister there until 2004 and has been in the ministry over 60 years.

He was also a founder member of Irish Council for Radio and Television Affairs and Presbyterian administrator for radio and television services in the Republic from 1960 to 2000.

Nowadays his children “are all around”, but he is not enamoured of old age. Asked about plans he replies, directly: “Dying.”

He says that old age is a “problem” for him.

“The inevitability of moving on and the idea of being tied to a wheelchair doesn’t appeal.”

Meanwhile he is “quite active” and takes daily walks on the pier.

“People say I look 65,” he mentions. Casually. Hopefully, perhaps.

Patsy McGarry

Patsy McGarry

Patsy McGarry is a contributor to The Irish Times