| hough profile
Patrick Hough
They say his eyes were
as blue as Irish skies and his heart as big as all Killarney.
Patrick Hough (pronounced
Howk) was his name, and this transplanted educator from the Auld
Sod left an indelible imprint on Vancouver. Today, nearly 65 years
after his death, Paddy, as he was affectionately known, is memorialized
in the Hough neighborhood and the Hough School, 1900 Daniels St.
Paddy Hough might seem
an odd character to have inspired two generations of children here.
Short in stature, with a scraggly beard and only one arm, he did
not fit the stereotype of a born leader. He overcame his physical
shortcomings with an overflowing love for learning and for children.
He was born on the banks
of River Shannon in Ireland on St. Patick's Day, 1846, and began
teaching there at an early age. However, when the Franco-Prussian
War broke out in 1870, he voluntered as a stretcher bearer on the
battlefields of France. It was there that a German artillery shell
robbed him of his lower left arm.
Hough went home to Ireland,
scraped up $400 and booked passage for the New World. He taught
13 years in New Westminister, B.C., then emigrated to the United
States.
Hough was lured to Vancouver
by a job as head of Holy Angels College, an institution now long
gone. He taught there all day, then spent his nights training other
students to become teachers.
Hough left the parochial
schools in 1891 to become principal of the Columbian School on Kauffman
Avenue. In 1899, he became principal of Vancouver High School, a
position he held until his "retirement" in 1908.
His retirement didn't
last long, and Hough was to serve as deputy superintendent of county
schools and as a substitute teacher during World War I.
When Paddy Hough died
of a heart attack at his home on Dec. 17, 1925, the whole city mourned
the quiet man who had inspired them and their children to seek the
loftier things of life.
A Vancouver High School
1909 yearbook dedication summed up the feelings of his former pupils:"To
Patrick Hough, our dear old professor, whose sympathetic advise
and Christian example have been to us an inspiration to live higher
and nobler lives, this is affectionately dedicated."
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