H. Ormonde McConnell was born in
Clonakilty, County Cork on 27 February 1904. The family moved to
Holywood, County Down when his father, Henry McConnell, was appointed as a
Methodist minister there. At age 23, he competed at the World Convention at Crystal Palace and was part of the winning Irish relay team. He was invited to
Lerry in 1927 to enter the Methodist ministry and to take up overseas service. He studied French at
Queen's University Belfast, and theology at
Edgehill Theological College. In 1933, he was appointed to
Port-au-Prince, Haiti. On 6 July 1934, he married
Primrose Beckett in Coke Memorial Church,
Kingston, Jamaica. They had four children, Patrick, Marian, Alec and Hazel. The couple lived in Haiti for 36 years. They learned
Creole, and developed a written phonetic form of the language, which later became known as
McConnell–Laubach orthography. They organised literacy programmes for children and adults and founded the Nouveau Collège Bird. They published a number of books on a wide variety of subjects in Creole. In 1954, McConnell received permission from
President Magloire to build a new church and donated $15,000. McConnell's father-in-law,
George F. Beckett, designed the church. When
Hurricane Hazel hit Haiti in October 1954, McConnell was the chair of the
Red Cross Committee. He was Haiti's administrator for Church World Services. He oversaw the establishment of 40 missions, as well as a farming training programme and the building of an aqueduct. For his work in Haiti, he was awarded the
National Order of Honour and Merit by the Haitian government, and an
MBE. He retired in 1970, and the couple returned to live in Holywood, County Down. In 1991, he published his memoir,
Co-Workers with God. McConnell died in Northwick House Residential Home for the Elderly,
Brookeborough, County Fermanagh on 5 January 1998. ==References==