Gwynn was still working for the
Guardian when he and his family moved to Dublin in 1926. Apart from a break when he covered the Round Table Conference in 1934 – he already knew
Mahatma Gandhi and had a great admiration for him – he served as the Irish correspondent of the
Guardian until 1936. He continued to review occasional books for the paper until a year or two before his death. In 1936 Jack Gwynn became the Headmaster of a boys’ preparatory school on the north side of Dublin, Baymount School, which he had bought from its founder William Scott. He and his wife ran the school successfully for a decade in spite of financial difficulties. Baymount School was closed down in 1948. A couple of years later Gwynn put the house and grounds up for sale. They were purchased by the Society of Jesus and subsequently converted into a Jesuit retreat named
Manresa House. Jack and Joan Gwynn stayed for a while in Clontarf, near Baymount, before moving to live with their daughter and son-in-law, Katharine and Laurence Liddle, in Bangor, County Down in 1953. John Tudor Gwynn died in 1956 and Joan Gwynn in 1965. John Tudor Gwynn.jpg|Jack Gwynn as a young man, c.1901 D U XI 1903.jpg|The 1903 Dublin University Cricket team (plus opponents). Jack Gwynn, captain, seated centre beside W G Grace. ==References==