Eris O'Brien
Eris O'Brien was an Australian prelate of the Catholic Church and historian. He was Auxiliary Bishop of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia and the second archbishop of the Canberra-Goulburn.
Early life
Eris Norman Michael O'Brien was born in Condobolin, New South Wales, the eldest of three children of Terence O'Brien, a native-born police constable, and his Irish-born wife Bertha, née Conroy. The family moved to Sydney and Eris studied at St Aloysius' College. After training at St Patrick's Seminary, Manly he was ordained a priest in 1918.Priesthood
O'Brien served in several Sydney parishes and wrote two books on the history of the Catholic Church in nineteenth-century Australia, The Life and Letters of Archpriest John Joseph Therry, and The Dawn of Catholicism in Australia, the story of Fr Jeremiah O'Flynn.In 1934 he was granted leave to attend the Catholic University of Louvain, Belgium, where he gained a Ph.D., and the National University of Ireland, Dublin, where he gained an M.A. His resulting book, The Foundation of Australia , was well received.
In 1940 he was instrumental in founding the Australian Catholic Historical Society.
Back in Sydney he lectured part-time at Sydney University and was parish priest of Bankstown and Neutral Bay.