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Michael George Mulhall (1836–1900) was an Irish author, statistician, economist and
newspaper editor An editor-in-chief (EIC), also known as lead editor or chief editor, is a publication's editorial leader who has final responsibility for its operations and policies. The highest-ranking editor of a publication may also be titled editor, managing ...
. He co-founded the
Buenos Aires Standard ''The Standard'' ( es, El Estandarte) was an Argentine newspaper based in Buenos Aires between 1861 and 1959. It claimed to be the first English daily in the Southern Hemisphere. This newspaper was founded by the Irish brothers Edward and Mi ...
, which in 1862 became the first English-language newspaper to be published daily in South America. He co-authored the first English-language book published in that continent, ''The Handbook of the River Plate'', a work that went to six editions, was widely consulted by immigrants and is now a historical sourcebook. His ''Dictionary of Statistics'' (1883 and later editions) became a standard work of reference.


Life

Mulhall was born on 29 September 1836 in
Dublin Dublin (; , or ) is the capital and largest city of Republic of Ireland, Ireland. On a bay at the mouth of the River Liffey, it is in the Provinces of Ireland, province of Leinster, bordered on the south by the Dublin Mountains, a part of th ...
, Ireland, the third son of Thomas Mulhall. He was educated for the priesthood at the
Irish College Irish Colleges is the collective name used for approximately 34 centres of education for Irish Catholic clergy and lay people opened on continental Europe in the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries. History The Colleges were set up to educate Roma ...
, Rome, but not having the vocation emigrated to Argentina to work with his brother Edward Thomas Mulhall, then a large sheep farmer in that country. In 1861 the Mulhall brothers founded the
Buenos Aires Standard ''The Standard'' ( es, El Estandarte) was an Argentine newspaper based in Buenos Aires between 1861 and 1959. It claimed to be the first English daily in the Southern Hemisphere. This newspaper was founded by the Irish brothers Edward and Mi ...
, which next year became a daily; it was the preferred newspaper of the
Anglo-Argentine English Argentines (also known as Anglo-Argentines) are citizens of Argentina or the children of Argentine citizens brought up in Argentina, who can claim ancestry originating in England. The English settlement in Argentina (the arrival of Eng ...
community and claimed to be the only English-language daily newspaper to be published south of the equator. (A third brother Francis Healey Mulhall also emigrated to Argentina and founded the ‘’Southern Cross’’, a newspaper of the Irish-Argentine community.) By 1864, Mulhall, "despite his relative youth, was regarded as a spokesman for the entire British community in the region". In 1878 (another source says 1868), Mulhall married Marion McMurrough Murphy, herself an author (''Between the Amazon and the Andes''; ''Explorers in the New World'') who cooperated with him closely on his statistical work. He died in Dublin on 13 December 1900.Society for Irish Latin American Studies, Dictionary of Irish Latin American Biograph

accessed 3 May 2015.


References


Bibliography of Mulhall works published in volume form (incomplete)

(All of the following were accessed at the Internet Archive on 1–3 May 2015.) *''The Cotton Fields of Paraguay and Corrientes'' (1864, Standard Printing Office, Buenos Aires). *''Rio Grande Do Sul and Its German Colonies'' (1873, Longmans, Green and Co, London.) *(With E. T. Mulhall) ''Manual de las repúblicas del Plata. Datos topográficos, históricos y económicos sobre los productos, colonias, empresas, comercio, rentas nacionales, deuda pública, immigración, ciudades, provincias, instituciones, ferro-carriles, bancos, escuelas y literatura de las Repúblicas Argentina, Oriental y Paraguay'' (Buenos Aires, 1876). *''The Dictionary of Statistics'' (G. Routledge and Son, London 1886; 1892; 1899; 1903, 1909). *(With Webb, A.G.) ''The New Dictionary of Statistics; a complement to the fourth edition of Mulhall's "Dictionary of statistics'', 1911. *''Balance-sheet of the World for Ten Years, 1870–1880'' (E. Stanford, London 1881). *''Industries and Wealth of Nations'', Longmans, Green and Co., 1896. *(With E. T. Mulhall) ''Handbook of the River Plate'', Standard Printing Office, Buenos Aires 1863 and later editions. *''History of Prices Since the Year 1850'' (1885 Longmans, Green and Co, London). *''National Progress in the Queen's Reign, 1837–1897''(G. Routledge, London, 1897). *''The English in South America'', (Standard Printing Office, Buenos Aires, and E. Stanford, London, 1878). *''The progress of the world in arts, agriculture, commerce, manufactures, instruction, railways, and public wealth since the beginning of the nineteenth century'' (E. Stanford, London, 1880). {{DEFAULTSORT:Mulhall, Michael George Irish editors Irish statisticians Writers from Dublin (city) 19th-century Irish economists 1836 births 1900 deaths Alumni of The Irish College, Rome Irish emigrants to Argentina