Father
Michael Martin Clancy
OSA
(1868–1931) was an Irish-Australian Roman Catholic priest. He was the first resident Parish Priest in
Geraldton
, a town and parish in
North Queensland
, Australia. He was an inspirational parish priest who developed the Parish, established Catholic education in the Johnstone River district and built Innisfail's present Mother of Good Counsel Church.
[1]
He played an important part in the development in the town and the district.
[1]
[2]
Father Clancy was enthusiastically involved in the life of the town, local committees and governing bodies.
[3]
He was instrumental in the changing of Geraldton's name to Innisfail in 1910. He also advocated for forging a link to the
Atherton Tableland
and the use of
Mourilyan
Harbour by shipping.
[3]
Mount Father Clancy Garreth McGonnell near the
Beatrice River
was named in his honour.
[3]
Early life
[
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]
Michael Clancy was born in
Loughill
,
County Limerick
, August 1868. As the son of a farmer, he was educated in
animal husbandry
, a skill that was to be of great assistance to him in his life in Innisfail. He was ordained in Ireland by Bishop John Hutchinson who was recruiting priests for the North Queensland Vicariate in Cooktown.
Appointment to Geraldton
[
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]
In return for payment of his education costs, Father Clancy guaranteed a permanent commitment to the
Cooktown
Vicariate. Father Clancy arrived in Cooktown on 30 October 1895. As part of his duties as an assistant priest to Father Thomas Corcoran in
Cairns
, he made several visits to Geraldton.
[4]
After the people of Geraldton asked repeatedly for a permanent priest, Father Clancy was appointed to the new Parish of Geraldton in 1898 as the resident parish priest.
[4]
His first duty was to repair the Church which was badly eaten by
termites
.
[5]
He visited all over his extensive parish on horseback, sometimes riding bareback. He rode the 90 mile track to
Cardwell
through
crocodile
infested waters and over mountain ranges bare back.
[
citation needed
]
This prompted the parishioners in Cardwell to present him with a saddle on one of his visits.
[
citation needed
]
Father Clancy's influence spread over the whole district. Within a few years, he had acquired land at
Daradgee
and employed workers to run the newly established church farm.
[
citation needed
]
This was a way of raising funds for the church used in Ireland. Before long, there was a church orchard at
East Innisfail
and another church farm at
Bamboo Creek
where Father Clancy ran cattle. There were very few projects that he was not involved in. In 1910, when confusion arose between
Geraldton
in
Western Australia
and Geraldton in Queensland, it was decided by the Queensland Government that Geraldton should change its name. Father Clancy was one of the committee considering a new name. On Father Clancy's suggestion the name Innisfail was chosen so that the connection with
Thomas Henry FitzGerald
, the founder of the sugar industry in the Johnstone River district, would not be lost.
[6]
At various times he was a member of the
Chamber of Commerce
[3]
and in 1912 was a member of the Johnstone River Agricultural Society. Father Clancy was a member of the Railway League which was instrumental in having the main northern rail route re-drawn to include Innisfail in 1914.
[1]
Church buildings
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]
The
1906 Queensland cyclone
destroyed the Church but the bell tower standing beside it survived. A new church was built of
silky oak
and with two sets of stumps supporting the frame to make it stronger but this was not enough to save it from the
1918 Innisfail cyclone
. After the cyclone, the silky oak framework of the church was visible lying on its side but the priory was destroyed and the school razed to its floor boards. In 1920, the community began to fund raise for a new church that would withstand cyclones.
[2]
Funds were raised by cake stalls, raffles, dances and concerts. 12,000
pounds
were raised over four years, half of it in direct donations, many of them from towns people who were not Catholics. The plans for the church were drawn up in 1922 by Maurice Lordan. Father Clancy had decided that the new church was to be built of concrete and devised a method for transporting sand and gravel to the building site at minimum cost. The plan involved gaining permission to construct a section of portable track to meet the existing
CSR
tram-track so that gravel could be collected from the North Johnstone River at
Goondi
and carted to the building site in boxed cane trams drawn along the track by horses. Builders and volunteers came from all over the parish during construction. Mother of Good Counsel Church was blessed and opened on August 5, 1928.
[2]
Aware of the large debt remaining on the church, Father Clancy had collectors among the large crowd present at the opening and the church debt was considerably reduced that afternoon.
In 1930, he was ordered to take a holiday and was farewelled by the whole town. On his return, a 400-guest reception was held,
[7]
and he was appointed to a committee to enquire into direst shipping between Brisbane and Mourilyan Harbour. He was a strong advocate for the opening up of the
Palmerston Highway
from the Atherton Tablelands to Innisfail and the developing of Mourilyan Harbour as a port.
[3]
Mount Father Clancy near the
Beatrice River
was named in his honour.
[3]
Death
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]
In 1931, the parishioners decided to build a retaining wall to reinforce the grounds of Mother of Good Counsel Church. While digging a trench as part of the effort, Father Clancy suffered a stroke and collapsed. He died in hospital on 20 May 1931. Permission was given for Father Clancy to be buried in the church as a tribute to a man who had tirelessly served not only his parishioners but also the people of the whole Johnstone River District.
Father Michael Clancy's Requiem Mass and funeral was on Friday 22 May.
[8]
Innisfail came to a standstill as the Funeral Procession made its way through the streets and back to the church.
[8]
Many people wept openly.
[8]
Father Clancy was buried in front of the Shrine to Mary, Mother of Good Counsel, a cross inlaid in the floor indicating his tomb.
[8]
The
Bishop of Cooktown
, Bishop Heavy said in his panegyric," I ask you not to forget this truly great man..... who for many years lived amongst you, prayed for you and spent himself for your spiritual and temporal good."
Upon his death, Clancy specified in his
will
that his remaining worldly possessions were to be inherited by the
Vicar Apostolic
of Cooktown.
[9]
Clancy's portrait was hung in the
Johnstone Shire Council
board room.
[10]
References
[
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]
- Vandeleur, Elizabeth, Mother of Good Counsel Parish. Centenary 1898?1998.
- Vandeleur, Elizabeth, In Faith and Hope. A Parish Story. Innisfail, Mourilyan and South Johnstone. Brisbane, Church Archivists' Press, 1998,
ISBN
1876194111
.
- Jones, Dorothy, Hurricane Lamps and Blue Umbrella., Cairns, Bolton, 1973