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{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see ]. --> | {{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see ]. --> | ||
| NAME = |
| NAME = Eveleigh, William | ||
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES = | | ALTERNATIVE NAMES = | ||
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = Irish organist | | SHORT DESCRIPTION = Irish organist | ||
| DATE OF BIRTH = |
| DATE OF BIRTH = 11 May 1868 | ||
| PLACE OF BIRTH = | | PLACE OF BIRTH = | ||
| DATE OF DEATH = |
| DATE OF DEATH = 13 January 1950 | ||
| PLACE OF DEATH = | | PLACE OF DEATH = | ||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 16:02, 4 December 2013
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William George Eveleigh (11 May 1868 - 13 Jan 1950) was an English organist known for his remarkable work at Saint Finbarre's Cathedral in Cork, Ireland. Eveleigh was born in Meerut in India, the son of F.C. Henry Eveleigh, a Captain in the Royal Horse Artillery. Educated at Cranleigh and Peterhouse Cambridge, he gained his doctorate in music at Queen's College, Oxford in 1895. IN 1894, he married Louise, daughter of Major F. Goldhurst, of Upton Park, Slough. They had four children. After working in Ayr, Scotland, he was appointed choirmaster and organist at St. Fin Barre's Cathedral, Cork in 1903. He was wildly innovative in the field of experimental improvisations and than that he was preceded by John Christopher Marks and succeeded in the 1922 by his pupil Jonathan Thomas Horne who continued in the post until 1977. Eveleigh died at the Rosehill Nursing Home in Bristol in 1950.
Professor James Hargreaves commented on him in the Dictionary of Organs and Organists published in 1912 citing Eveleigh as a short lived yet successful and conscientious clavicist.
References
- http://www.corkpastandpresent.ie/genealogy/pikescontemporarybiographies/contemporarybiographiesa-f/biographies_hodges_complete_192_196.pdf.
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(help) - Thornsby, Frederick W., ed. (1912) Dictionary of Organs and Organists. Bournemouth: Logan