Frank McCourt was born in New York City's
Brooklyn borough, on August 19, 1930, the eldest child of
Irish Catholic immigrants Malachy Gerald McCourt, Sr. (October 11, 1899 January 11, 1985), of
Toome, County Antrim, who was aligned with the IRA during the
Irish War of Independence, and Angela Sheehan (January 1, 1908December 27, 1981) from
Limerick. Frank McCourt lived in New York with his parents and four younger siblings:
Malachy Jr. (1931–2024); twins Oliver and Eugene, born in 1932; and a younger sister, Margaret, who died just 21 days after birth, on March 5, 1934. and
Alphonsus, who published a memoir of his own and died in 2016. Frank McCourt himself nearly died of
typhoid fever when he was 11. McCourt related that when he was 11, his father left Limerick to find work in the factories of wartime
Coventry, England, rarely sending back money to support his family. McCourt recounts that eventually Malachy Senior abandoned Frank's mother altogether, leaving her to raise her four surviving children, on the edge of starvation, without any source of income. Frank felt obliged as a child to steal bread, milk, and lemonade in an effort to provide for his mother and three younger brothers, until relatives stepped in to aid the family. Frank's formal education in Limerick ended at age 13, when the
Irish Christian Brothers rejected him as a student in their secondary school. Frank then worked for the post office delivering telegrams from age 14 to 16; then he worked for
Eason's delivering magazines and newspapers, and he gave most of what he earned to his mother. Less formally and in secret, he wrote debt-collection letters for a local Limerick woman who paid for clothing and other items and allowed debtors to make payments with high interest rates. Frank saved his money and once he had saved enough to pay the fare to New York and have some money upon his arrival, he left Ireland on a freighter, at age 19. ==Career==