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Samuel Myerscough

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Samuel Myerscough (1854–1932), was an acclaimed musician(organist), teacher and examiner. He was a Fellow of the Royal College of Organists and a Fellow of Trinity College London.

Samuel Myerscough was born in 1854 in Salford, Lancashire, England.,[1] a gifted musician, he was awarded the Royal College of Organists Medal in 1873. He graduated with a Bachelor of Music from Hertford College, Oxford in October 1881[2]

He was appointed as assistant organist at Manchester Cathedral and the family moved there, he was a convert to Catholicism in 1899 accepted into the church by Fr. Bernard Vaughan S.J., gave up his job at the Cathedral and Dublin where he taught music in Loretto Abbey Rathfarnham. The first son of Samuel and Mary Myerscough was born in Rochdale on 2 April 1879, called Samuel Sebastian Myerscough(1879-1954) and also a gifted musician and attained a Bachelor of Music at Oxford, became a Jesuit Priest, training at Oscott College Birmingham.[3] His Daughter Alice Myerscough was also music teacher. The Myerscough family lived in 3 Fontenoy Terrace, Bray, Co Wicklow.

In 1904 he founded the Leinster School of Music & Drama The Musical Herald of 1 July 1909 wrote at length of Mr Myerscough‘s prominence in Irish musical life:

"The work by which Mr. Myerscough will be best remembered is the Leinster School of Music, of which he is the founder and inspiring force. .... Pupils came from as far north as Enniskillen, southwards from Waterford, and across from Galway."

He is listed as a member The Musical Association as "Myerscough, S., Esq., B.Mns. Oxon., F.R.C.O. (Liverpool)".[4]

Professor Samuel Myerscough, Mus. Bac. Oxon, F.R.C.O., F.T.C. died 28 March 1932 aged 78 years and is buried in Deans Grange Cemetery, Co Dublin.[5]

References

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  1. ^ See 1871, 1881, and 1891 Censuses of England and Wales
  2. ^ See Leeds Mercury, October 14, 1881 and The Morning Post (London), October 28, 1881
  3. ^ Obituary Fr. Samuel Sebastian Myerscough The Cottonian, Page2, Vol. XL111. Part1, No. 92, (Autumn 1954)
  4. ^ "Proceedings of the Musical Association (Fifty eight session 1931-1932), THE ROYAL MUSICAL ASSOCIATION LONDON" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 October 2006. Retrieved 8 August 2008.
  5. ^ Ireland Genealogy Projects Archives - Headstones: No. 16 Deansgrange North Section, Deans Grange Cemetery, Co. Dublin[permanent dead link]
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