Showing posts with label Hamar Greenwood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hamar Greenwood. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 05, 2024
1920 - A GAME OF 'ROAD BOWLS' WASN'T 'CRICKET' FOR THESE BRITISH SOLDIERS...
ON THIS DATE (5TH JUNE) ELEVEN YEARS AGO - DEATH OF A STAUNCH IRISH REPUBLICAN.
"A national security threat, a dedicated revolutionary, undeterred by threat or personal risk.." - FBI description of Peter Roger Casement Brady / Ruairi Ó Brádaigh (from here).
Eleven years ago on this date (5th June [2013]) the Republican Movement lost one of its founding fathers, a gentleman who, during his lifetime (born in Longford 2nd October 1932, died 5th June 2013) joined the then Sinn Féin organisation at 18 years of age and, one year later, joined the IRA.
At 23 years of age he was the Officer Commanding during the Arborfield arms raid and, at 24 years young, he was second-in-command of the Teeling Column, South Fermanagh, which was lead by Noel Kavanagh.
In 1957, at 25 years of age, Ruairi was elected in Longford-Westmeath as a Sinn Féin TD (to an All-Ireland Parliament) and, the following year, he escaped from the Curragh Internment Camp in Kildare with Dáithí Ó Conaill, with whom he served in the IRA as Chief of Staff (between 1958 and 1959, and again between 1960 and 1962) and, in 1966, at 34 years of age, he contested a seat for the Movement in Fermanagh-South Tyrone.
He was Sinn Féin President from 1970 to 1983 and again from 1987 to 2009 (which was a year after the organisation re-constituted itself as 'Republican Sinn Féin') and was the Patron of the Movement from 2009 until his untimely death in 2013.
He worked throughout his life for economic, political and social justice both in Ireland and internationally and has now joined the other Patrons of the Republican Movement - Comdt-General Tom Maguire, Michael Flannery, George Harrison and Dan Keating.
'Forego tears for the glorious dead and gone ; his tears if his, still flow for slaves and cowards living on...'
RIP, Ruairi.
Born 2nd October 1932, in Longford.
Died 5th June 2013 (age 80 years), in Roscommon University Hospital, Roscommon.
LOCAL COUNCIL AND EU STATE ELECTIONS, FRIDAY 7TH JUNE 2024.
If you intend to vote in the Friday, 7th June 2024 local Council and EU elections that are being held in this State, please use your vote to, at least (hopefully!) slow down the disastrous effects of the 'Come-One-Come-All/Open Borders' migrant madness that is destroying all that we, the indigenous Irish, hold precious here.
If you vote for any of the political parties that are now in Leinster House the situation will continue as is, and it will deteriorate further, as your vote will be interpreted as approval for their open borders policy.
Please use your vote against them and their pro-'asylum seeker/refugee/migrant' policies, not for them.
These are the migrant crime stats for last month (May 2024), and there are similar records for each month, for each year, for each decade...
May 1st
• Foreigner tried to snatch a baby in Dublin.
• Asylum seekers in Newtownmountkennedy start a fight.
2nd
• Foreign man Lazlo Pop caught trying to take a child.
• Africans brawling in Dublin.
3rd
• Foreign man caught trying to rape a boy in Cork.
• Turkish man sentenced to 3 years for sexual assault.
• Asylum seeker from Afghanistan gives an interview explaining how he entered Ireland illegally.
5th
• Africans found setting up a camp in residential Dublin.
• Warrant issued for Polish man, assault.
• Warrant issued for Romanian man, robbery.
• Warrant issued for Romanian woman, robbery.
8th
• The Dáil hears about a human trafficking operation operating out of London, sending foreigners to Ireland.
10th
• Group of asylum seekers attempt to storm a bus.
12th
• Moldovan man murdered at a house party by another Moldovan man.
• Asian man Le Wang in court for secretly recording a female tenant in the shower.
• Swedish man investigated by CAB, organised crime.
• Group of foreigners attack Irish kids at beach.
13th
• Penneys security guard Abdul Rahman Mohammed sexually assaulted a 15 year old girl.
• American tourist (80's) mugged by Tomas Starodubcevas.
• Petra Budai, community service for biting off a man's ear.
• Valeriu Melnic charged with murder.
15th
• Foreign man arrested, public order offence.
• Andy Mayuma in court for assault on woman.
• Agon Menhei jailed for rape.
• Tomasz Zukauskas threatened people with replica gun.
• Zainab Agoro in court, 84 counts of fraud.
21st
• Eastern European man attacked his wife.
22nd
• Samuel Nunes Neto charged with setting fire to 5 shops in Cork.
23rd
• Youseff Azeddou, asylum seeker, in court for stabbing a security guard.
• African Blair Okonye in court for money laundering.
24th
• Vimalkarthick Balasubramaniam suspended sentence, sexual assault on girl.
• Asylum seeker Imad Kucimi in court, spat blood into the face of a garda.
25th
• Seif Waleed al Hindawi, Syrian immigrant, charged after attacking a woman.
27th
• Xamse Jamac, Somalia, jailed for jumping in front of a Luas.
28th
• Robert Nachtygal, attacked woman.
• TUSLA reports number of children in state care being targeted for sexual abuse has doubled.
• Aivaras Dvaranauskas touched child and called him sexy.
Please ; on Friday, 7th June 2024, vote against the candidates from the establishment parties that have enabled the above.
(List compiled by Michael O'Keeffe.)
'AN OLD AND UNFAIR CRITICISM...'
From 'The United Irishman' newspaper, April 1955.
"At the last meeting of the Standing Committee immediately preceeding the Extraordinary Ard Fheis (10th March 1926) I intimated that the Draft Programme was ready, and when the President (Eamon de Valera) disregarded the work on which we had been earnestly engaged for months, in compliance with an order by the organisation, I said I would bring it forward as an amendment.
And so when I got up to second Fr. O'Flanagan's amendment at the Ard Fheis, the President arbitrarily ruled me out of order."
Later on, further remarks are given by Sceilg, as he says, to controvert the statement that Sinn Féin had no policy.
Not only had Sinn Féin a policy of its own but he shows that de Valera took and presented essential parts of Sinn Féin policy as his own at the inaugural meeting of Fianna Fáil...
(MORE LATER.)
ON THIS DATE (5TH JUNE) 156 YEARS AGO - JAMES CONNOLLY BORN.
James Connolly (pictured) was born on June 5th, 1868 - 156 years ago on this date - at 107, the Cowgate, Edinburgh, Scotland. His parents, John and Mary Connolly, had emigrated to Edinburgh from County Monaghan in the 1850s. His father worked as a manure carter, removing dung from the streets at night, and his mother was a domestic servant who suffered from chronic bronchitis and was to die young from that ailment.
Anti-Irish feeling at the time was so bad that Irish people were forced to live in the slums of the Cowgate and the Grassmarket which became known as 'Little Ireland'. Overcrowding, poverty, disease, drunkenness and unemployment were rife - the only jobs available was selling second-hand clothes and working as a porter or a carter.
James Connolly went to St Patricks School in the Cowgate, as did his two older brothers, Thomas and John.
At ten years of age, James left school and got a job with Edinburgh's 'Evening News' newspaper, where he worked as a 'Devil', cleaning inky rollers and fetching beer and food for the adult workers. His brother Thomas also worked with the same newspaper.
In 1882, aged 14, he joined the British Army in which he was to remain for nearly seven years, all of it in Ireland, where he witnessed first hand the terrible treatment of the Irish people at the hands of the British. The mistreatment of the Irish by the British and the landlords led to Connolly forming an intense hatred of the British Army.
While serving in Ireland, he met his future wife, a Protestant named Lillie Reynolds (pictured). They were engaged in 1888 and in the following years Connolly discharged himself from the British Army and went back to Scotland.
In 1890, he and Lillie Reynolds were wed in Perth and, in the Spring of 1890, they moved to Edinburgh and lived at 22 West Port, and joined his father and brother working as labourers and then as a manure carter with Edinburgh Corporation, on a strictly temporary and casual basis.
He became active in socialist and trade union circles and became secretary of the Scottish Socialist Federation, almost by mistake. At the time his brother John was secretary ; however, after John spoke at a rally in favour of the eight-hour day he was fired from his job with the corporation, so while he looked for work, James took over as secretary.
During this time, Connolly became involved with the Independent Labour Party which Kerr Hardie formed in 1893.
In late 1894, Connolly lost his job with the corporation ; he opened a cobblers shop in February 1895 at number 73 Bucclevch Street, a business venture which was not successful.
At the invitation of the Scottish Socialist, John Leslie, he came to Dublin in May 1896 as paid organiser of the Dublin Socialist Society for £1 a week.
James and Lillie Connolly and their three daughters, Nora, Mona and Aideen set sail for Dublin in 1896, where he founded the Irish Socialist Republican Party in May of 1896. In 1898, Connolly had to return to Scotland on a lecture and fund-raising tour but, before he left Ireland, he had founded 'The Workers' Republic' newspaper, the first Irish socialist paper, from his house at number 54 Pimlico, where he lived with his wife and three daughters.
Six other families, a total of 30 people, also lived in number 54 Pimlico, at the same time!
In 1902, he went on a five month lecture tour of the USA and, on returning to Dublin he found the ISRP existed in name only. He returned to Edinburgh where he worked for the Scottish District of the Social Democratic federation. He then chaired the inaugural meeting of the Socialist Labour Party in 1903 but, when his party failed to make any headway, Connolly became disillusioned and in September 1903, he emigrated to the US and did not return until July 1910.
In the US, he founded the Irish Socialist Federation in New York, and another newspaper, 'The Harp'.
In 1910, he returned to Ireland and in June of the following year he became Belfast organiser for James Larkin's Irish Transport and General Workers Union. In 1913 he co-founded the Labour Party and in 1914 he organised, with James Larkin, opposition to the Employers Federation in the Great Lock-Out of workers that August.
Larkin travelled to the USA for a lecture tour in late 1914 and James Connolly became the key figure in the Irish Labour movement.
The previous year, 1913, had also seen Connolly co-found the Irish Citizen Army, at Liberty Hall, the headquarters of the ITGWU. This organisation, the ICA, was established to defend the rights of the working people.
In October 1914, Connolly returned permanently to Dublin and revived the newspaper 'The Workers' Republic' that December following the suppression of his other newspaper, 'The Irish Worker'. In 'The Workers' Republic' newspaper, Connolly published articles on guerrilla warfare and continuously attacked the group known as The Irish Volunteers for their inactivity.
This group refused to allow the Irish Citizen Army to have any in-put on its Provisional Committee and had no plans in motion for armed action. The Irish Volunteers were by this time approximately 180,000 strong and were urged by their leadership to support England in the war against Germany.
It should be noted that half of the Provisional Committee of the Irish Volunteers were John Redmonds people, who was the leader of the Irish Parliamentary Party. The Irish Volunteers split, with the majority siding with Redmond and becoming known as the National Volunteers - approximately 11,000 of the membership refused to join Redmond and his people.
However, in February 1915, 'The Workers' Republic' newspaper was suppressed by the Dublin Castle authorities. Even still, Connolly grew more militant.
In January 1916, the Irish Republican Brotherhood had become alarmed by Connolly's ICA manoeuvres in Dublin and at Connolly's impatience at the apparent lack of preparations for a rising, and the IRB decided to take James Connolly into their confidence. During the following months, he took part in the preparation for a rising and was appointed Military Commander of the Republican Forces in Dublin, including his own Irish Citizen Army.
He was in command of the Republican HQ at the GPO during Easter Week, and was severely wounded, and was 'arrested' and court-martialled following the surrender.
On May 9th, 1916, James Connolly was propped up in bed before a court-martial and sentenced to die by firing squad - he was at that time being held in the military hospital in Dublin Castle. In a leading article in the Irish Independent on May 10th, William Martin Murphy, who had led the employers in the Great Lock-out of workers in 1913, urged the British Government to execute Connolly.
At dawn on May 12th, 1916, James Connolly was taken by ambulance from Dublin Castle to Kilmainham Jail, carried on a stretcher into the prison yard, strapped into a chair in a corner of the yard and executed by firing- squad.
Connolly's body, like that of the other 14 executed leaders, was taken to the British military cemetery adjoining Arbour Hill Prison and buried, without coffin, in a mass quicklime grave. The fact that he was one of the seven signatories of the 1916 Proclamation bears evidence of his influence.
"The odds are a thousand to one against us, but in the event of victory, hold onto your rifles, as those with whom we are fighting may stop before our goal is reached." - James Connolly's words to the Irish Citizen Army on the 16th April, 1916, and those words hold the same value today.
James Connolly was born on this date - 5th June - in 1868, in the Cowgate, in Edinburgh, Scotland, and was executed by the British in 1916.
Had he lived, he would have been 51 years of age on the 5th June, 1919.
On that date in 1919, his comrades in the 'Socialist Party of Ireland' and the 'Irish Citizen Army' had organised a concert to celebrate the anniversary of his birth, in the Mansion House, in Dublin.
However, Westminster didn't want any of the men and women of 1916 to be remembered, never mind commemorated, so they banned the concert under their 'DORA' legislation and classed it as an "illegal gathering".
But the organisers, their supporters and the paying public dismissed the 'concerns' of the British and carried-on organising and planning for the concert, despite the pressures applied by the British and their friendly 'police force' in Dublin, the 'DMP'.
On Thursday, 5th June 1919, the armed 'DMP' surrounded the Mansion House and near-by streets to prevent the concert from going ahead and the stewards (/'bouncers', known as the 'Red Guard of the Workers') from the 'Irish Citizen Army' challenged them.
As those 'discussions' were taking place on Dawson Street, outside the Mansion House, armed groups from the 'ICA' arrived on the scene and joined in the 'negotiations', which prompted the 'DMP' to try and 'arrest' an 'Irish Citizen Army' officer - the officer drew his handgun and fired at the 'policeman', and his comrades done the same.
Four DMP men were wounded, as was one civilian.
However, the concert went ahead, but in a different venue - the 'Trades Hall', in Capel Street, Dublin City Centre, and was a great success!
==========================
SO, FAREWELL THEN, CELTIC TIGER....
It had to happen, sooner or later.
Most of the pundits and economists were too busy singing the Celtic Tiger's praises to notice, but a few critical observers worried all along about the weaknesses of a boom economy that depended so much on a few companies from one place - the United States.
By Denis O'Hearn.
From 'Magill' Annual 2002.
If the downturn of the US-owned high-tech sector reverberates into the wider Irish economy, joblessness will skyrocket, not slowly but rapidly.
For all its faults, it could be argued that attracting foreign companies was the only real growth strategy Irish governments could pursue, given the fact that the EU has taken away most economic policy instruments, from interest rates to trade controls.
But what about the second key question, the social impact of growth or stagnation?
Is, or was, the 'Celtic Tiger' the high tide that lifts all boats?
Twenty years ago, in the wake of other bubble economies in Latin America, the social scientist Alain de Janvry asked is economic growth socially articulating?
What he meant was the following...
(MORE LATER.)
On the 5th June, 1920, ten IRA Volunteers were waiting at their ambush point - formed around a false game of 'road bowls' - for a 12-man Crown Forces patrol, which they knew would be travelling on the Mile Bush route, near Midleton, in County Cork.
Volunteer Diarmuid Hurley (pictured) was in command of the operation, on which he worked alongside Tadhg Manley, Joseph Ahern, David Desmond, Jerry Aherne, Michael Hallahan and Tom Hourihan, among others.
Their target, when it presented itself - after having been seen approaching by a Na Fianna Éireann scout - consisted of 11 British Army Cameron Highlanders and one RIC member, named O'Connor, all on pushbikes, who were returning from Carrigtwohill, in Cork.
The Crown Force patrol rode into the men who were playing bowls and, when they were all inside the cordoned area, the 'road bowlers' drew their revolvers and demanded they surrender, but about 3 of the enemy jumped behind the road wall and began firing at the IRA men.
Volunteer Hurley instructed one of the prisoners, a Lance Corporal, to tell his men to surrender for their own sake, which he did, and which the 3 British soldiers did.
A twelfth British soldier, a Corporal, approached the scene on his bike, late to the party, as he had had to do a quick repair on his bike and, when he finally realised what was happening, he jumped off his pushbike and took a couple of shots at the Volunteers, one of whom - Volunteer Joseph Aherne - used a 'borrowed' rifle to fire back at him ; the Corporal threw his rifle to the ground and ran away across a field. He wasn't fired at again.
Twelve rifles, steel helmets, bayonets and about twelve hundred rounds of ammunition were captured, and these were taken away from the scene in a commandeered motor car by two of the Volunteers, Joseph Aherne and Tadhg Manley. None of the IRA men were injured in the attack, none of the arms were recaptured by the British and the now-unarmed British soldiers were released, a bit shook up but otherwise unharmed.
Shortly afterwards, Volunteer Tadhg Manley was 'arrested' by the British and held prisoner in Cork Jail - he wasn't released until July 1921.
Also, after the British soldiers had been captured, the RIC member, O'Connor, was removed from their midst by some of the IRA men, who wanted to shoot him, but their commanding officer, Volunteer Hurley, prevented them from doing so, but did remind the 'policeman' that if he identified any of the Republican soldiers to anyone he would be shot dead.
And that turned out to be another silver lining - a few days later, the RIC member contacted Volunteer Hurley, told him he was employed as the clerk to the 'District Inspector' of the RIC in Midleton, and offered to pass on RIC information to the IRA, which he did, saving Irish rebel lives in the process!
==========================
Humphrey Murphy, who was IRA Battalion 0fficer Commanding of Kerry Number 2 Brigade at the time (later promoted to Commander of the Number One Brigade), held meetings with some of his own men, a few Volunteers from the Duagh Company, Kerry No. 1 Brigade, some of the Volunteers from the Abbeyfeale Company and members of the West Limerick Brigade, and a plan was put in place to attack the RIC Barracks in the town of Brosna, in County Kerry, on the 5th June, 1920.
All the main roads leading into Brosna were blocked and patrolled by armed Volunteers but, unknown to the IRA, the RIC had been tipped off about the intended attack and they, in turn, notified the British Army, who had stationed their soldiers at and around the Peale's Bridge area.
Six IRA Volunteers, an advanced party from the Duagh IRA Company, were caught in the Bridge area by the British soldiers, removed from their car, disarmed, and 'arrested'.
The British Army activity was witnessed by Volunteer James Collins (a republican-gamekeeper-turned-Free State-politician) who sent Volunteer PJ O'Neill to a creamery building in the Mountcollins area, on the Limerick/Kerry border, where Humphrey Murphy and dozens of Volunteers had assembled for the operation and, after some discussion, the attack was called off.
However, on that same date, a British Army patrol was attacked in the town of Newtownsandes (aka Moyvane), in County Kerry, and their barracks in that town was burned down.
==========================
BEIR BUA...
The Thread of the Irish Republican Movement from The United Irishmen through to today.
Republicanism in history and today.
Published by the James Connolly/Tommy O'Neill Cumann, Republican Sinn Féin, The Liberties, Dublin.
August 1998.
('1169' comment - 'Beir Bua' translates as 'Grasp Victory' in the English language.)
AN ADDENDUM (August 1914) :
"Since I spoke the words here reprinted there has been a quick movement of events in Ireland.
The young men of the nation stand organised and disciplined, and are rapidly arming themselves.
Blood has flowed in Dublin streets, and the Cause of the Volunteers has been consecrated by a holocaust.
A European war has brought about a crisis which may contain, as yet, hidden within it, the moment for which the generations have been waiting.
It remains to be seen whether, if that moment reveals itself, we shall have the sight to see and the courage to do, or whether it shall be written of this generation, alone of all the generations of Ireland, that it had none among it who dared to make the ultimate sacrifice..."
(MORE LATER.)
On the 5th June, 1921, as a three-car convoy of Crown Forces was making its way from the Curragh to Carlow a gunshot rang out as they neared Kildangan Crossroads, Doneany, in Monasterevin, County Kildare.
The enemy convoy consisted of a mix of British Army soldiers from the 1st North Staffordshire Regiment (pictured) and RIC members.
On investigation, it was discovered that a BA soldier, a Private William Green, had been "accidentally shot dead" by an RIC member in that same convoy.
Mr Green was 25 years young, and was listed as 'Service Number 5041233'. He was brought home for burial in Wolstanton (St Margaret) Churchyard in Staffordshire, England.
==========================
On the 5th June, 1921, in Swatragh, County Derry, an RIC patrol was ambushed by the IRA and an RIC 'Sergeant', a Mr Michael Burke, was shot dead, and one of his RIC colleagues, a Mr John Kennedy, was wounded.
The ambush was organised and led by Volunteer Seán 'Johnny' Haughey (Charlie Haughey's father), pictured, a republican-gamekeeper-turned-Free State-poacher, who turned so much that he practically morphed into Michael Collins' right arm.
That night, following the ambush, Crown Forces shot dead a local Sinn Féin member, Alexander O'Connor, as he was cycling through Ballintemple, near Swatragh and, over the next few days, they raided and wrecked over 200 homes in the area.
Incidentally, the dead RIC member, Mr Michael Burke, had been stationed in Swatragh RIC Barracks and was a single man, 28 years of age. He was born in Ballinrobe, County Mayo, and had joined the RIC when he was 20 years of age in 1913.
==========================
On the 5th June, 1921, a Mr Eugene Swanton was in the house of a friend of his, a Mr Patrick Gleeson, in Ballinacurra, County Cork, when a knock came to the door at about 1am.
Mr Swanton had 'served the Empire' with the 'Royal Dublin Fusiliers' and with the 'Machine Gun Corps' in Salonika (Thessalonica/Thessaloniki) in northern Greece and, as such, his friendship with another ex-BA soldier, a Mr William Daly, from Darby's Lane in Midleton, Cork, was noticed ; Mr Daly was on an IRA list as 'a person of interest' and his acquaintances were being noted.
Anyway - Mr Gleeson answered the knock on the door to be met by a group of men who stated that they were Crown agents and needed to talk to Mr Swanton ; when he came to the door to talk to them, he was taken outside and driven away. Previous to that day, Mr Swanton had been approached by a Mr Edmond Desmond and other men, all dressed in British military uniforms, and questioned about IRA activity in his area and he told them everything he knew - names, dates etc - and was thanked by those men who then left his company.
Mr Swanton didn't know it then, but his 'visitors' were all IRA Volunteers, dressed as Crown Forces and, indeed, two or three of them were ex-British Army soldiers.
When he was taken away and searched, Mr Swanton was discovered to have incriminating paperwork on him, including material to do with the 'Prisoners Dependents Fund'.
He was never seen again, and his body has never been found.
==========================
Not much information on this shooting, but it appears that an ex-British Army soldier, a Mr Charles Cox, was working in a shop in the North Strand area of Dublin on the 5th June, 1921, when an IRA attack on a British Army vehicle took place outside the shop.
One of the British Army soldiers shot in the direction he believed the attack was coming from and Mr Cox was hit and died from his wound at the scene.
==========================
In April, 1921, the IRA damaged Carrigaphooca Bridge in County Cork, to hinder the movement of the enemy in, and through, the area.
Due to a busy schedule (!) and a reluctance to stand still in any one spot for too long - 'health and safety' reasons - British Army engineers were still working on repairs in June.
And so it was that they were still at it on the 5th June when one of their lookouts, from the 'Cameron Highlanders' (pictured), spotted a person in the near distance observing them as they worked on the repairs.
The foreign gunmen later claimed that the man watching them was an IRA man and they called several times to him to stay where he was, but he turned and made a break for it so they shot and killed him, stating that he was an Officer in the Seventh Battalion of the Cork No. 1 Brigade and that he had been 'on the run' at the time.
The "IRA Officer" was a local man, 30 years of age, who was known by all and sundry to be 'a bit slow, touched', as they called it at the time, named Cornelius O'Riordan, known as 'Dan'. He would have been curious as to what was happening on the bridge, not realising the danger he had put himself in.
As it happened, the shooting was seen by an IRA Volunteer, Jamie Moynihan, who gave the following account -
"As the soldiers worked, they noticed a man observing them from the nearby rocks. The soldiers shouted at him to come forward to be searched, but the man didn’t move.
When the officer in charge threatened to shoot him, Dan started to walk away and was fired on, but the shot went wide. The second volley hit him and he started to run. The third volley killed him.
Dan O'Riordan was a quiet, harmless, innocent man, curious to find out what the soldiers had been up to at the bridge, never realising the fearful danger that confronted him. Two days later, the mobile column that had killed Dan O'Riordan left Macroom, and the British authorities in Dublin Castle stated that prevailing circumstances did not permit the holding of an enquiry into Dan's death..."
A report on Mr O'Riordan's death was published in 'The Irish Independent' newspaper on the 8th June (1921) -
'Crown forces, it is alleged, were moving through the district at the time. Deceased was mentally deficient.'
A few days later, 'The Southern Star' newspaper stated -
'On Sunday [5th June 1921] the troops moved out of Macroom, and it would be difficult to describe the feeling of relief with which the people observed their departure. Women at the doorways confided to each other their sense of safety and offered up their fervent thanks.
On the following day news reached town that a poor, simple-minded young man named Riordan was shot dead...'
And his death was deemed by the then British 'authorities' as trivial, not worth looking into...
==========================
On Sunday, 5th June 1921, as Mass was being conducted in the village church (pictured) in Ballinaglera, County Leitrim, proceedings were very rudely interrupted by armed British soldiers who stormed into the church and began harassing the parishioners.
Two men were dragged off their knees and frog-marched through the church and out the door ; the parish priest, Fr Michael Kelly, intervened to stop the British terrorists but, in his own words, he was... "..driven back to the church gate by the officer's subordinates with revolvers, after which they entered the sacristy and church, where their conduct was most objectionable.."
'Sir' Hamar Greenwood was questioned in Westminster about the attack and replied that... "..the two men involved in this incident were touched on the shoulder and requested to come outside, which they did...".
He denied Fr Kelly's 'allegations' and claimed that the two men were detained when they were observed transferring documents to a woman in the congregation, and stated that Mass was not interrupted during the attack!
And if you believe that, I've a bridge to sell you...
==========================
On the 5th June, 1921, three young British Army musicians/bandboys - Matthew Carson (18), Charles Chapman (17) and John Cooper (16) - members of the First Battalion of the Manchester Regiment, all of whom were in their BA uniforms, left their barracks in Ballincollig and made their way, on foot, to Srelane Cross, near the village of Ovens, in County Cork.
When they got there, the IRA were waiting for them and all three were arrested and taken three miles south-west to an IRA prison ('Kilbawn House', owned by the Cullinane family), under the control of 'D Company' of the Third Battalion of the Cork No. 1 Brigade, located about one mile south of Aherla village, where they were tried as "young soldier-spies of the Essex/Manchester Regiment", sentenced to death, and executed on that same date.
The IRA believed they were spies planted by the British, who would have considered them to be 'untouchable' by the IRA because of their young age.
Their bodies were buried in a yard beside the prison but only the IRA ASU that was involved knew that, and their final resting place remained unknown to everyone else until August 1923, when their bodies were exhumed by the State 'Civic Guards' and reburied in the grounds of Bandon Workhouse.
In September 1924, the three bodies were exhumed again, transferred to England, and interred in Hurst Cemetery at Ashton-Under-Lyne in Tameside in the greater Manchester area.
==========================
In late May/early June 1921, the IRA in Abbeyfeale, in County Limerick, postered their area with 'Black and Tans Go Home!'-leaflets and posters and monitored the response to them by the Crown Forces.
On the 5th June, the RIC were observed travelling around Abbeyfeale removing the leaflets and posters from lamp posts etc, which is what the IRA were waiting on - Volunteers from the 2nd Battalion of the West Limerick Brigade, under the command of Patrick O'Brien, opened fire on one such RIC grouping and an RIC member, Robert W. Jolly (37), from Kent, in England, who had only joined that outfit in December 1920, was shot dead.
Five other RIC members were wounded in the attack, including a man named Mahony ('Service Number 68675'), who was shot in the ankle and was deemed by his Crown Force colleagues to be "non-effective ever since".
==========================
A Mr John Kelleher, a farmer in Ballyvourney, County Cork, was in his cottage on the 5th June, 1921, when he heard the sound of gunshots coming from his field.
He went out to investigate and was shot and badly wounded ; a passing British Army patrol came upon him (!) and, according to them, he stated that he had been shot by civilians, but the local IRA asked around and came to the conclusion that Mr Kelleher had been shot by the British Army patrol, who would have observed him crossing the field ('target practice' or mistaken identity).
Mr Kelleher died from his wounds on the 9th June.
==========================
Between the dates May 27th and June 10th, 1922, the build-up to and actual clash between the 'Ulster Special Constabulary', the British Army, the Free State army and the IRA - 'The Battle Of Pettigo' - took place along the Donegal/Fermanagh Border.
It was the last occasion that the Free Staters and the IRA fought side-by-side against British and pro-British forces.
The British military occupied Pettigo, a small village and townland on the border of County Donegal and County Fermanagh, until January 1923, when it was handed over to Free State troops and stayed in Belleek until August 1924, when the RUC and the 'Specials' took over the security (!) of the village -
'Pettigo, that little dismembered village, half in County Fermanagh, half in County Donegal, half free and half unfree, recalls to thousands of us very vivid memories of our Pilgrimage to Saint Patrick's Purgatory, Lough Derg.
...the stand made by less than one hundred IRA Volunteers against overwhelming numbers of British forces and lasting over a week, began on Saturday, May 27th 1922.
On that day a hundred Specials crossed Lough Erne in a pleasure steamer named 'The Lady of the Lake', towing a number of small boats, and landed above Belleek.
They (the pro-British 'Special Constabulary') marched to Magheramenagh Castle, the residence of the late Reverend L. O'Kierans, the Parish Priest of Pettigo, and ordered him to leave immediately, which he did.
A party of thirty I.R.A. Volunteers advanced down the railway line towards Magheramenagh Castle (but) on their way there they were intercepted by a patrol of Specials who engaged them and then retreated to Magherameena Castle, pursued by the IRA Volunteers.
The Specials then abandoned the Castle for good, retreated to their boats on the Lough and withdrew in them to the Buck Island in Lough Erne, where they were reinforced by another hundred Specials with medical attendants who treated their wounded.
The Volunteers had suffered but a few minor injuries...' (...more here.)
==========================
On the 5th June, 1922, as patients and staff in the Mater Hospital in Belfast (pictured) were settling in for the night, windows came crashing in on them, doors and walls etc inside the building were pounded with bullets and medical equipment shattered into pieces.
Staff members lifted as many patients as they could out of bed and made them as comfortable as they could on the floor and behind cabinets etc, as the wards and other rooms became pock-marked with bullet holes.
Panic ensued - screaming, shouting, crying, dust, glass and wood splinters raining down on those seeking shelter.
This lasted for about 45 minutes, then - silence.
The still of the night was then broken again, as three separate raiding parties from the 'Ulster Special Constabulary' charged into the bullet-ridden building, shouting and roaring as they searched through and ran from room to room, from ward to ward.
The 'USC' and their colleagues in the Crown Forces later claimed that the hospital, and its grounds, was being used by the IRA as a base from which to stage their attacks and, by 'firing back', they were only 'defending themselves'.
The attempted massacre was raised in the Westminster Parliament, but no disciplinary action was taken against the perpetrators.
In Westminster, mention was made of.. '...the attack on the Mater Infirmorum Hospital, Belfast, on the night of Monday, 5th June, between 11.15 and midnight, by armed forces under the control and direction of the Government of Northern Ireland (sic).
The attack lasted upwards of 40 minutes, during which time a constant fusillade of bullets was rained on the hospital from Crown forces in Crumlin Road Gaol and surrounding streets, windows being smashed, and bullets flattening themselves against the walls of the wards, in which lay sick and wounded men, women and children.
The patients, many of whom were hysterical, had to be removed from their beds and laid on the floors, where they remained for over an hour.
After the cessation of fire the hospital was raided by three separate parties of special constables, some of whom were under the influence of drink, and the doctors, sisters in charge and lay nursing staff subjected to insult and indignity.
The attack took place during curfew hours, when the special constables and Crown Forces had full control and possession of the streets..'
As stated, shoulders were shrugged in Westminster, but no remedial action was taken, as expected.
==========================
On the 5th June, 1924, the British Prime Minister, Mr James Ramsay MacDonald, announced to the 'British House of Commons' that Mr Justice Richard Feetham (pictured), of the South African Supreme Court, would be the chairman of the Boundary Commission.
In early July that year, he 'toured' the border areas and asked for clarification on two issues - 'unanimity in the Commission' and he questioned whether he and/or the Commission had the power to order plebiscites from the 'Judicial Committee of the Privy Council'.
Mr Feetham was a good friend of the British political 'Establishment' and also happened to be the British representative on the Commission and was aware that his colleague, 'Sir' James Craig, was determined that the Boundary Commission "..would deal only with minor rectifications of the boundary.."
One of his other colleagues, the then British 'Colonial Secretary to Ireland', Mr Winston Churchill, told him that the possibility of the Commission "..reducing Northern Ireland (sic) to its preponderatingly Orange (ie Unionist) areas (is) an extreme and absurd supposition, far beyond what those who signed the [1921] Treaty meant.."
The final report of the Commission, completed in November 1925, was never published, after disagreements about its recommendations led to the resignation of the Free State Commissioner and, as a result, no alterations were made to the border.
Westminster continues to maintain jurisdictional control over six Irish counties.
==========================
Thanks for the visit, and for reading!
Sharon and the team.
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Wednesday, October 19, 2022
BRITISH ARMY FLOGGINGS IN IRELAND IN 1920.
ON THIS DATE (19TH OCTOBER) 277 YEARS AGO : DEATH OF THE MAN WHO URGED THE IRISH "TO BURN EVERYTHING ENGLISH EXCEPT THEIR COAL".
"Burn everything English but their coal" - the 'Hibernian Patriot' [from the 'Drapier's Letters' collection], Jonathan Swift (pictured), an Irish author and satirist (perhaps best known for 'Gulliver's Travels' and for his position as dean of St. Patrick's Cathedral in Dublin) was born in Dublin on the 30th November 1667 ; his father (from whom the 'Patriot' got his first name) was an attorney, but he died before the birth of his son.
As if that wasn't misfortune enough, young Jonathan suffered from Meniere's Disease and, between the bill's mounting up and her sickly son, his mother, Abigail, found that she was unable to cope and the young boy was put in the charge of her late husband's brother, Godwin, a wealthy member of the 'Gray's Inn' legal society.
His position in St. Patrick's Cathedral ensured that he had a 'pulpit' and a ready-made audience to listen to him, an opportunity he readily availed of to question English misrule in Ireland - he spoke against 'Wood's Halfpence' and in favour of 'burning everything English except their coal' and, satirically, wrote a 'modest proposal' in which he suggested that poor children should be fed to the rich ('a young healthy child well nursed is at a year old a most delicious, nourishing, and wholesome food, whether stewed, roasted, baked, or boiled..')!
In 1742, at 75 years of age, Jonathan Swift suffered a stroke, severely affecting his ability to speak, and he died three years later, on the 19th October, 1745 - 277 years ago on this date. He was buried next to the love of his life, Esther Johnson, in St. Patrick's Cathedral in Dublin.
"It is impossible that anything so natural, so necessary, and so universal as death, should ever have been designed by providence as an evil to mankind" - Jonathan Swift.
'TOMÁS MacCURTAIN COMMEMORATION...'
From 'The United Irishman' newspaper, April 1955.
In his oration, Domhnall O Cathain said -
"In his validictary address to the insurgent Volunteers on the Friday before the surrender, Pádraig Pearse wrote - 'Justice can never be done to their heroism, to their discipline, to their gay and unconquerable spirit in the midst of peril and death..'.
As in all his writings, Pearse spoke not only for his own time and for the past but also for the future.
How full, how complete a description of the 16 men who went over the barrack wall in Omagh, how beautiful, how fitting an appreciation of the eight men in the court of 'imperialist justice'. And to follow in the same strain with Pearse, if they did not win they had deserved to win, and like the Volunteers they had won a great thing.
The 1916 Volunteers had redeemed Dublin from many shames. The Armagh and Omagh Volunteers had pulled aside the veil, unloosened the drapery of words, had shown us all the light ; they had floodlit the path of freedom, had shown that there was but one way. They had shown that the staccato of the Thompson Gun was the most effective way of making the Orange junta sit up and take notice.
They did for Ireland what Ireland needed to have done for her. They did for Ireland what Ireland deserved to have done for her..."
(MORE LATER.)
ON THIS DATE (19TH OCTOBER) 102 YEARS AGO - BRITISH 'HAMAR' MISSES ITS TARGET.
British 'Chief Secretary for Ireland', Lieutenant-Colonel 'Sir' Hamar Greenwood (pictured, and short video here showing 'the Hamar' rewarding his troops in this country for the destruction they wrought while maintaining 'law and order') promised to put an end to republican "outrages" but that was just another outrageous false promise by the British!
In May 1920 the British Foreign Secretary, 'Lord' George Nathaniel Curzon, proposed vigorous 'Indian measures' to suppress the rebellion in Ireland and he and other British imperialist 'gentlemen' formulated a policy with that objective in mind. On the 9th August 1920, the British 'Lords Commissioners' announced that 'Royal Assent' had been granted for the following 14 items -
1. Overseas Trade (Credit and Insurance) Act, 1920.
2. Unemployment Insurance Act, 1920.
3. Restoration of Order in Ireland Act, 1920.*
4. Aberdeen Corporation Order Confirmation Act, 1920.
5. Pilotage Orders Confirmation (No. 3) Act, 1920.
6. Local Government Board (Ireland) Provisional Orders Confirmation (No. 3) Act, 1920.
7. Ministry of Health Provisional Order Confirmation (Chesterfield Extension) Act, 1920.
8. Mid-Glamorgan Water Act, 1920.
9. Wallasey Corporation Act, 1920.
10. Life Association of Scotland Act, 1920.
11. Uxbridge and Wycombe District Gas Act, 1920.
12. Exmouth Urban District Council Act, 1920.
13. North British and Mercantile Insurance Company's Act, 1920.
14. Lever Brothers, Limited (Wharves and Railway) Act, 1920.
On the 19th October 1920 - 102 years ago on this date - the British 'Chief Secretary for Ireland', Lieutenant-Colonel 'Sir' Hamar Greenwood (who later threatened to resign his position if Westminster agreed to a ceasefire with Irish republicans before they had surrendered their weapons!) stated, re the British 'law and order' campaign in Ireland -
"The outrages against the police and military forces since the 1st January last, which I regret to say include the loss of no less than 118 lives, are as follows: police killed -100, military killed -18, police wounded -160, military wounded -66. There have been 667 attacks on police barracks, resulting in most cases in their complete destruction.
There has been an organised attempt to boycott and intimidate the police, their wives and relations. The hon. Member will realise that I cannot publish the steps that are being taken to cope with the campaign of murder, outrage and intimidation, but I can assure him that the means available to the Government for protecting all servants of the Crown in the discharge of their duties, and for bringing to justice those who commit or connive at outrages, are steadily improving.
The Royal Irish Constabulary is rapidly increasing in numbers owing mainly to the flow of recruits from ex-officers and ex-service men who served in the Army or Navy during the War. The effective strength of the Force is now higher than it has been for the last 15 years. In the last three weeks alone there have been 194 trials by Court Martial under the 'Restoration of Order in Ireland Act 1920', and 159 convictions. The Forces of the Crown are now effectively grappling with the organised, paid and brutal campaign of murder in Ireland.." (*The 'Restoration of Order in Ireland Act' was a 'legal' item through which the British could authorise, in Ireland, 'the issue of Regulations under the Defence of the Realm Consolidation Act, 1914, for effecting the restoration and maintenance of order in Ireland where it appears to His Majesty in Council that, owing to the existence of a state of disorder, the ordinary law is inadequate for the prevention and punishment of crime, or the maintenance of order..')
The British claimed that the 'legal' changes had been rendered necessary by the abnormal conditions which at that time prevailed in certain parts of Ireland, where 'an organised campaign of violence and intimidation has resulted in the partial breakdown of the machinery of the ordinary law and in the non-performance by public bodies and officials of their statuary obligations...in particular it has been found that criminals (sic) are protected from arrest, that trial by jury cannot be obtained because of the intimidation of witnesses and jurors, and the local authorities and their officers stand in fear of injury to their persons or property if they carry out their statuary duties...'
The 'Order in Council' provided, among other things, for the putting into operation of many of the existing 'Defence of the Realm Regulations' for the purpose of 'the restoration or maintenance of order, for the trial of crimes by Courts Martial or by specially constituted Civil Courts, and for the investment of those Courts with the necessary powers'.
Also, it was now to be allowed for 'financial punishments' to be implemented - the withholding from local authorities who refuse to discharge the obligations imposed upon them by Statute, financial grants which otherwise would be payable to them from public funds and for the application of the grants so withheld to the discharge of the obligations which the local authority has failed to fulfill, for the holding of sittings of courts elsewhere than in ordinary courthouses, where these courthouses have been destroyed or otherwise made unavailable and '..although the Regulations are not, in terms, restricted to any particular part or parts of Ireland, it is the Government's intention that they shall not be applied in substitution for the provisions of the ordinary law in places where the judicial and administrative machinery of the ordinary law are available, and are not obstructed in their operations by the methods of violence and intimidation above mentioned...for instance, under the Regulations an ordinary crime can only be tried by a Courts Martial or by a specially constituted Civil Court, if the case is referred to the Competent Naval or Military Authority.
Instructions will be issued by the Irish Executive to ensure that such cases will not be referred to the Competent Naval or Military Authority except where the prevalence of actual threatened violence or intimidation has produced conditions rendering it impracticable for them to be dealt with by due process of ordinary law...'
Greenwood stated the above, as mentioned, on Tuesday, 19th October 1920 - 102 years ago on this date - and, the following day, a young (19 years old) IRA Volunteer, from Fleet Street in Dublin, Kevin Barry (pictured), became the first person to be tried by court martial under the new 'Restoration of Order in Ireland Act 1920' which,among its other trappings, allowed for the suspension of the courts system in Ireland (bad and all as that system was) and the establishment of military courts with powers to enforce the death penalty and internment without trial.
On the 10th December 1920 martial law was proclaimed in counties Cork, Kerry, Limerick, and Tipperary and, in January 1921, this order was extended to include Clare and Waterford. The 'ROIA' was widely used by the British against Irish republicans and, indeed, was used as a 'tool' to impose censorship on the media of the day, an imposition which was challenged, sometimes succesfully so - in 1921, a ROIA court-martial convicted the proprietors and editor of a Dublin newspaper for violating ROIA press regulations. At the end of the trial, a military detachment acting without a written order from the military court arrested the defendants and conveyed them to a civil prison.
The prisoners petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus on the ground that a transfer from military to civil custody based merely on oral statements of anonymous soldiers was unlawful.
The Crown argued that since the defendants were subject to military law, they could be moved from military to civil confinement without a written order. Finding this contention to be "quite untenable," the King's Bench put on record its desire "in the clearest way possible to repudiate" the doctrine that a civil prison could detain a king's subject without proper written authority : "To sanction such a course would be to strike a deadly blow at the doctrine of personal liberty, which is part of the first rudiments of the constitution." Moreover, the court-martial's failure to issue an order left the civil jailer "without the protection of any written mandate" and therefore exposed to the risk of a lawsuit.
Declaring that there was "no vinculum or bond of union between the military and the civil custody," the King's Bench issued the writ of habeas corpus. Ostensibly protecting the liberty of civilians against overreaching by the British Army, the court equally protected a civil institution from subordination to military command.
Today, the British and their political colleagues in Stormont and Leinster House are still attempting to use 'laws' of that nature, and media censorship, to destroy Irish republicanism. But it didn't work then and won't work for them today, either - we are in this for the long haul!
ON THIS DATE (19TH OCTOBER) 21 YEARS AGO : FINAL ARRANGEMENTS MADE FOR FREE STATERS TO 'HONOUR' AN IRISH REPUBLICAN.
"Fight on, struggle on, for the honour, glory and freedom of dear old Ireland. Our hearts go out to all our dear old friends. Our souls go to God at 7 o'clock in the morning and our bodies, when Ireland is free, shall go to Galbally.
Our blood shall not be shed in vain for Ireland, and we have a strong presentiment, going to our God, that Ireland will soon be free and we gladly give our lives that a smile may brighten the face of 'Dear Dark Rosaleen'.
Farewell! Farewell! Farewell!"
- the last words of Limerick (Ballylanders) IRA man Patrick Maher, 32 years of age (pictured), to his comrades.
He was hanged by the British administration in Ireland on the 7th June 1921 for his alleged involvement in the rescue of Tipperary IRA man Seán Hogan, even though he was not involved in that operation.
Thousands of people (including his mother and sister) had gathered outside Mountjoy Jail in Dublin in protest against his execution, but to no avail (it should be noted that at the time, Munster and a small part of Leinster were under British 'martial law' and those executed there were shot as soldiers, but Dublin was under civilian law and that is why those executed in Mountjoy were hanged).
Patrick Maher and his comrade Edmond Foley were executed in Mountjoy jail, Dublin, on the 7th of June 1921, after being charged with the 'murder' of two RIC men (Peter Wallace and Michael Enright) - he strongly protested his innocence but, even though two juries failed to reach a verdict, he was convicted (by a military court martial) and sentenced to death.
He was one of 'The Forgotten Ten' IRA Volunteers (Kevin Barry, Patrick Moran, Frank Flood, Thomas Whelan, Thomas Traynor, Patrick Doyle, Thomas Bryan, Bernard Ryan, Edmond Foley, and Patrick Maher) - Kevin Barry was executed in 1920 by the British and the other nine men were put to death in 1921. All ten were buried in the grounds of Mountjoy Jail in Dublin, where six of them were placed in the same grave.
On Sunday, 14th October 2001, nine of those men were reinterred in Glasnevin Cemetery in Dublin by representatives of a 26-county state in an 'official' ceremony and, on Friday, 19th October 2001 - 21 years ago on this date - this state made the final arrangements to do the same for the tenth man, Patrick Maher, who was reburied in his home parish of Glenbrohane in Limerick (at the request of his family) on Saturday, 20th October 2001.
Both reinterments were carried out by a state which none of the ten men were fighting for - a 26-county free state - as the objective of the republican campaign - then (1920/1921) and now (2022)- was and is for a free Ireland, not a partially-free Ireland.
And, to add insult to injury, the then Free State 'minister for justice', John O'Donoghue, was the 'official figurehead' present, on both occasions, during which he delivered the graveside orations.
Irish republicans are looking forward to the day when those moral and political misappropriations can be corrected, in much the same manner that an English 'queens' presence and aura in the Garden of Remembrance in Dublin was corrected by Irish republicans in 2011.
'THE BRITISH STORY...'
Roy Foster (pictured) in the British media.
By Barra Ó Séaghdha.
From 'Magill' Annual, 2002.
Jonathan Freedland on Roy Foster - "To make his point, he merely has to walk to the pub at the end of the street. It's Auntie Annie's Porter House, Irish-themed from the Celtic typeface sign above the door to the Guinness served behind the bar, and the perfect illustration of Professor Roy Foster's latest bugbear ; the reduction of Irish history to theme-park kitsch."
Freedland explains that 'The Irish Story' is not another history of Ireland but a history of Irish history, before formally introducing his interviewee ;
"Roy Foster, the Carroll Professor of Irish history at Oxford and constantly cited as the greatest Irish historian of his generation, is ittitated at a trend he's noticed in the last decade, a lapse back into an old Irish habit - reducing the complexity of history to a cosy fairytale."
Foster's irritation at pseudo-Irish pubs, tacky theme-parks and sentimentalised autobiography (Frank McCourt and Gerry Adams are prime targets in his new book) will be shared by readers right across the spectrum of cultural politics. Because such irritation is shared by many of us, however, we will not - unlike his interviewers in 'The Times' and 'The Guardian' - be reeling in admiration at Foster's apparently lonely stance on these matters...
(MORE LATER.)
ON THIS DATE (19TH OCTOBER) 109 YEARS AGO : DEATH OF A GREEN-HEARTED LOYALIST.
Emily Lawless, pictured (aka 'Emily Lytton'), the writer and poet, was born on the 17th of June, 1845, in Ardclough, County Kildare and was educated privately.
War battered dogs are we
Fighters in every clime;
Fillers of trench and of grave,
Mockers bemocked by time.
War dogs hungry and grey,
Gnawing a naked bone,
Fighters in every clime -
Every cause but our own. (Emily Lawless, 1902 ; "With the Wild Geese".)
She was born into a politically mixed background, the eldest daughter and one of eight children ('Sir' Horace Plunkett was her cousin).
Her father was 'Titled' by Westminster (he was a 'Baron') even though his father (Emily's grandfather) was a member of the 'United Irishmen'.
Her brother, Edward, seems to have taken his direction from his father rather than his grandfather - he held and voiced strong unionist opinions, wouldn't have a catholic about the place and was in a leadership position within the anti-Irish so-called 'Property Defence Association'.
Perhaps this 'in-house' political confusion, mixed between staunch unionism and unionism with sympathies for Irish nationalism/republicanism, coupled with the 'whisperings of shame' that Emily was a lesbian and was having an affair with one of the 'titled' Spencer women, was the reason why her father and two of his daughters committed suicide.
She wrote a full range of books, from fiction to history to poetry, and is best remembered for her 'Wild Geese' works, although some of her writings were criticised by journalists for its 'grossly exaggerated violence, its embarrassing dialect and staid characters..' - 'The Nation' newspaper stated that 'she looked down on peasantry from the pinnacle of her three-generation nobility..' and none other than William Butler Yeats declared that she had "an imperfect sympathy with the Celtic nature.." and that she favoured "theory invented by political journalists and forensic historians."
But she had a great talent :
After Aughrim :
She said, "They gave me of their best,
They lived, they gave their lives for me ;
I tossed them to the howling waste
And flung them to the foaming sea."
She said, "I never gave them aught,
Not mine the power, if mine the will ;
I let them starve, I let them bleed,
they bled and starved, and loved me still."
She said, "Ten times they fought for me,
Ten times they strove with might and main,
Ten times I saw them beaten down,
Ten times they rose, and fought again."
She said, "I stayed alone at home,
A dreary woman, grey and cold ;
I never asked them how they fared,
Yet still they loved me as of old."
She said, "I never called them sons,
I almost ceased to breathe their name,
then caught it echoing down the wind
blown backwards, from the lips of fame."
She said, "Not mine, not mine that fame ;
Far over sea, far over land,
cast forth like rubbish from my shores
they won it yonder, sword in hand."
She said, "God knows they owe me nought,
I tossed them to the foaming sea,
I tossed them to the howling waste,
Yet still their love comes home to me."
She considered herself to be a Unionist although, unlike her brother, she appreciated and acknowledged Irish culture (or, in her own words - "I am not anti-Gaelic at all, as long as it is only Gaelic enthuse and does not include politics..") and, despite being 'entitled' to call herself 'The Honourable Emily Lawless', it was a 'title' she only used occasionally.
She spent a lot of her younger days in Galway, with her mother's family, but it is thought that family tragedies drove her to live in England, where she died, on the 19th of October 1913 - 109 years ago on this date - at the age of 68, having become addicted to heroin. She is buried in Surrey.
Emily Lawless, 1845-1913.
'FORTH HIS BANNERS GO...'
Jer O'Leary (pictured) has become bannermaker to the radical and labour movement. Brian Trench reports on the growing recognition of his art.
From 'Magill' magazine, May 1987.
It was in John Arden's and Margaretta D'Arcy's 'Non-Stop Connolly Show' in Liberty Hall in 1974 that Jer O'Leary first took up his imposing Jim Larkin stance. Since 1977, he has done it in half-a-dozen productions of James Plunkett's 'The Risen People'.
Jer O'Leary had also been painting as well as acting, winning two art competitions organised by the ITGWU. Encouraged by the union's late general secretary, Michael Mullen, O'Leary applied his skills to posters and then to banners. Union banners which usually spend very long periods in storage had been much in evidence in the tax marches of the late 1970's.
Jer O'Leary approached his banners with the demands of the street in mind - "I always felt that the old union banners were too intricate for the street ; I purposely used stark black and white images on a colour background to make more impact..."
(MORE LATER.)
ON THIS DATE (19TH OCTOBER) 33 YEARS AGO : BRITISH ESTABLISHMENT AGREE THAT 'THE CONVICTIONS ARE UNSAFE AND UNSATISFACTORY...OUR POLICE OFFICERS MUST HAVE LIED...' (Page 22, here.)
On the 19th October 1989 - 33 years ago on this date (after serving 15 years in prison)- the 'Guildford Four' - Gerard Conlon, Patrick Armstrong, Carole Richardson and Paul Hill - are released from prison in what is considered to be one of the biggest-ever miscarriages of justice in Britain.
Their convictions in 1974 for the Guildford pub bombings of that year were quashed at the Old Bailey in London on the 19th October 1989. All four had been falsely accused of the attacks on two pubs in which five people died and more than sixty people were injured. 'Confessions' were obtained by the use of torture and attempts to appeal the convictions were unsuccessful - the British establishment and its police force wanted 'those responsible' (and/or those whom it could somewhat plausibly present as being responsible) caught and for 'justice' to be done.
'After the incredulity and then the euphoria of release from jail, the four people who had served 15 years for the Guildford pub bombings in 1974 had to find a life. Three are now married with families but the years of adjustment have been painful...the only thing that mattered was when Lord Lane, the lord chief justice, pronounced those magic words: the convictions of Gerry Conlon, Carole Richardson, Paul Hill and Paddy Armstrong were unsafe and unsatisfactory..."
Gerry Conlon punched the air in defiance and ran the wrong way down the street. Just like a confused animal, his lawyer thought. Conlon was then 35...Richardson, 17 at the time of her arrest, was shocked and weak at the knees. She and her former boyfriend, Armstrong, disappeared separately out the back. She just wanted to hide. Hill was taken to Crumlin Road prison in Belfast and bailed two days later...theirs was the first of the momentous Irish miscarriage of justice cases which convulsed the criminal justice system and led to a rare royal commission.
The crisis of confidence was encapsulated in one of Lord Lane's concluding remarks: "The officers must have lied..." (from here.)
"Officers" of that same calibre (albeit in a different uniform), answerable to a similar political establishment as mentioned above, are still in a powerful position in the north-east of this country (and, indeed, are not confined to that area) and are still willing and able to frame innocent people for their objective of securing the British military and political presence in Ireland.
As we stated on this blog on the 5th October last - 'Westminster didn't care who was found 'guilty' once they satisfied the gutter press and it's readership that 'justice had been served', and they continue with that policy to this day - 'The Craigavon Two', Brendan McConville and John-Paul Wootton, are the 'Guildford/Birmingham' etc examples of 'British justice' in Ireland today.' The only long term solution is to end that presence and flush out the contaminants left behind.
ON THIS DATE (19TH OCTOBER) IN...
...1610 :
One of our English 'rulers' who was somewhat less cruel to us than others in his social circle was born on the 19th October 1610, in Clerkenwell, in London.
James Fitzthomas Butler was 51 years of age when he was announced as the '1st Duke of Ormond, KG, PC' and 'Lord High Steward' of England ; he was by then already a Lieutenant-General in the English Army and was a 'land owner' in Ireland.
He had spent a small fortune over the previous decades 'in royal service' and, now as a 'Duke' and 'High Steward', he was awarded large grants and a one-off payment of £30,000, all of which, apparently, kept him and 'his' estates in Ireland ticking-over but, overall, his losses still exceeded his gains!
During his political 'career' in Ireland he was in Office as 'Lord Lieutenant of Ireland' three times and, by the (anti-Irish) standards of the day, he was said to be somewhat less cruel than other 'Irish masters'.
He died in the Kingston Lacy mansion in Dorset, England, on the 21st July, 1688, and was buried on the 4th August in Westminster Abbey. Incidentally, his wife, Elizabeth, died four years earlier (in 1684) on the same date as her husband, the 21st July.
If this short piece wasn't about British imperialism in Ireland, that would almost be romantic!
======================================
...1751 :
A boy born in Dublin on the 19th October 1751 - Charles Edward Saul Jennings (pictured) - took a leaf from his Da's book and took a title from his Da's heritage. Sort of!
His Da, Theobald, from Polaniran, in Tuam, County Galway, was a doctor, and his Ma, Eleonore (Jennings, née Saul, aka 'Lady Eleonore') was the daughter of a rich Dublin distiller and, indeed, that may have given her husband, Theobald, the notion that he, too, should be 'titled'.
So when the family moved to Tonnay-Charente in the south of France in the mid-to-late 1700's, the Da continued to practice as a doctor and, in order to improve his customer base (!) declared himself to all and sundry to be the 'Baron of Kilmaine', and was accepted in posh French society as such!
Charles Edward had a rebellious streak about him and soon found an outlet for it in the French Army, where he rose to the rank of General - he supported the revolutionaries in France and Ireland (he was a devoted friend to Theobald Wolfe Tone and a close confidant of Napoleon I, and was described as the only officer Bonaparte ever trusted completely) and had, by then, already accepted his Da's 'title' and was known among his military comrades as the 'Baron of Kilmaine' and/or 'Brave Kilmaine'.
He helped to secure the financial well-being of Matilda Tone and her children after her husband was killed by the British and, such was his standing in France, he was appointed military governor of Switzerland in 1799, when he was only 48 years of age, but had to resign from the position because of health issues.
He died in Paris on the 11th of December, 1799, and was buried with full military honours, leaving behind his wife, Susanne (née Kirchmeyer) - the couple had no children, so the 'title' died with him.
======================================
...1919 :
At about 2am on Sunday morning, 19th October 1919, 23-year-old 'Dublin Metropolitan Police Constable' Michael Downing (pictured), a farmer's son from Adrigole on the Beara Peninsula in County Cork, was 'on patrol' and crossing a road near High Street in the Liberties area of Dublin, walking towards a group of men on that side of the street.
As he got nearer to the men, one of them pulled out a revolver and shot him dead.
The men were IRA Volunteers and were tending to an arms dump that the 'Constable' was (inadvertently) walking towards. He was in the wrong place at the wrong time.
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...1920 :
On the 19th October, 1920, British Crown Forces stormed into a pub in Turloughmore, in County Galway and dragged a number of men out of the premises and flogged them by the side of the road, and in the nearby villages of Corofin and Cummer, on consecutive nights, men were taken from their beds, stripped and flogged by the roadside.
This issue was raised in Westminster on the 21st October but, as expected, British politicians attempted to cover-up for the offenders, their military colleagues in Ireland, by claiming that republicans in stolen British Army uniforms were responsible! -
'Mr. T. P. O'CONNOR (by Private Notice) asked the Chief Secretary for Ireland whether his attention has been called to the statements in several newspapers that on Saturday night last two lorries of uniformed men seized Thomas and Martin Feeney at the village of Corbally and flogged them with a rope, and assaulted one of them in addition with a rifle; whether on the same night at the town of Corofin Patrick Raferty was also flogged; whether on Sunday evening a number of young men were stripped and were whipped and otherwise assaulted on the road; whether a young man named Michael Welby and a young woman named Miss Glynn were shot and wounded at the village of Cummer by the police on the same occasion; and whether an inquiry will be immediately instituted and the persons guilty of these floggings and other assaults will be brought to justice...?'
The pathetic 'they-flogged-themselves-Sir!!' absurdity can re read here, if you can stomach it.
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...1921 :
In the run-up/ prep work for the signing of the 'Treaty of Surrender' (which was signed by the Free Staters and the British on the 6th December 1921) a number of meetings were held between the Staters and Westminster political and military representatives.
One such meeting was held on the 19th October, 1921, to discuss financial issues regarding 'repatriable financial assets' ie 'because of your actions we spent this amount and you have to pay us back'. The British reps stated that the fledging Free State entity 'owed' Westminster £153 million sterling for "debt and pension charges" incurred during the British visit to the State (!!) but the Staters - masters at fumbling in greasy tills - replied that, on the basis of past over-taxation "since the Union" (!!) and retardation of the Free State's industrial and commercial development, the charge to Westminster should be about £3 billion sterling!
That was of course a bluff by the Staters, and it was called by the British (who knew the 'strength' of their new allies) - a 'compromise' arrived at was that 'Article 5' of that Treaty would contain an agreement that '...the Free State was required to pay a fair and equitable share of the UK public debt and war pensions..' and that 'settlement' was worked through by both entities involved.
Incidentally, the Staters continue to believe that they owe various British 'Lords' and 'Dukes' money, and they continue to pay them!
======================================
...1921 :
While the Staters were capitulating, politically and militarily, to Westminster - see above - on the 19th October, 1921, religious capitulation was also taking place.
It was on that same date that Pope Benedict XV sent a telegram to the English 'king' George V rejoicing at the resumption of the 'Treaty of Surrender' discussions, instead of telling him that he and his ilk should get the hell out of Ireland, politically and militarily.
The English 'king', delighted to have received such a 'thumbs-up' from that Pope, wrote back saying that he hoped that "...a settlement may initiate a new era of peace and happiness for my people..". That "new era", your kingship, won't materialise in Ireland until the British military and political presence has left the country for good.
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...1922 :
Two Free State soldiers died on the 19th October 1922 ; Private Michael M Bailey, 20 years of age, was born in Wales and was stationed in Portobello Barracks in Dublin, in the Transport Division of the FSA.
He was in a convoy which was travelling to Naas in County Kildare when a sniper shot him dead.
Two State troopers, a Sergeant Clarke and a Sergeant-Major Sean O'Suillivan (who was only 17 years of age) came across a crowd of people outside a shop on Corporation Street, in Dublin city centre.
They wanted to disperse the crowd but they wouldn't move anywhere so Sergeant Clarke fired a warning shot into the air, but the bullet rebounded off a wall and hit the young Sergeant-Major, killing him. We presume the crowd then left the scene.
======================================
...1922 :
On Thursday, 19th October 1922, Aghadoe House (pictured) in Killarney, County Kerry, was burned down by the IRA, to ensure that it would not be used as a base by the Free Staters. It was rebuilt three years later.
In 1870, 97% of the 32 Counties of Ireland was 'owned' by English 'landlords' and the 'big house on the hill' (the 'landlords' residence)was availed of by English troops and militia as a base from which to secure their presence, and those vermin were welcomed in by the owners. When he was the IRA Chief of Staff, Liam Lynch issued a directive that "all Free State supporters are traitors and deserve the latter's stark fate, therefore their houses must be destroyed at once...", and that order was followed with gusto by the rebels, as the 'landlords' were hated in their community by the majority.
======================================
...1923 :
On the 19th October, 1923, a State 'Criminal Investigation Department' (CID) operative named Thomas Fitzgerald was killed, following an armed robbery in a factory in Castleknock, Dublin. A Free State soldier, William Downes, was later hanged for killing Fitzgerald -
'At 8am on Monday, 29 November 1923, William Downes climbed the scaffold in Mountjoy and became the first man executed by the Irish Free State... it is ironic then that the first man to climb the scaffold would not be an 'irregular' or opponent of the new State. Downes was in fact a pro-Treaty soldier.
At 5pm on 19 October 1923, Superintendent F O'Driscoll of the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) received a phone call from the Castleknock Candle Factory. The CID was an armed police force which dealt with crime during the Civil War period and the panicked caller told him that his premises had just been robbed by armed raiders...' -More here.
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Only back after our absence last week [...bet ya never even noticed..] and we have to excuse ourselves again for next Wednesday, 26th October 2022 ; we have a christening and a funeral to attend over the weekend and early next week and, although one event is obviously more sombre than the other, both will end up in a pub, where we'll reacquaint ourselves with old friends, colleagues and comrades, and make new ones, as ya do!
We'll be back 'on air' on Wednesday, 2nd November 2022 and, if ya want, you can catch-me-if-you-can on 'Facebook' and 'Twitter'.
Oh, and by the way - we sourced three cabins in Waterford for the now-37 of us that are heading off on a ten-day break in November. The six of us that'll be sleeping in the vans and cars at night are the lucky ones...!
Thanks for the visit, and for reading!
See y'all on the 2nd November next.
Sharon and the team.
"Burn everything English but their coal" - the 'Hibernian Patriot' [from the 'Drapier's Letters' collection], Jonathan Swift (pictured), an Irish author and satirist (perhaps best known for 'Gulliver's Travels' and for his position as dean of St. Patrick's Cathedral in Dublin) was born in Dublin on the 30th November 1667 ; his father (from whom the 'Patriot' got his first name) was an attorney, but he died before the birth of his son.
As if that wasn't misfortune enough, young Jonathan suffered from Meniere's Disease and, between the bill's mounting up and her sickly son, his mother, Abigail, found that she was unable to cope and the young boy was put in the charge of her late husband's brother, Godwin, a wealthy member of the 'Gray's Inn' legal society.
His position in St. Patrick's Cathedral ensured that he had a 'pulpit' and a ready-made audience to listen to him, an opportunity he readily availed of to question English misrule in Ireland - he spoke against 'Wood's Halfpence' and in favour of 'burning everything English except their coal' and, satirically, wrote a 'modest proposal' in which he suggested that poor children should be fed to the rich ('a young healthy child well nursed is at a year old a most delicious, nourishing, and wholesome food, whether stewed, roasted, baked, or boiled..')!
In 1742, at 75 years of age, Jonathan Swift suffered a stroke, severely affecting his ability to speak, and he died three years later, on the 19th October, 1745 - 277 years ago on this date. He was buried next to the love of his life, Esther Johnson, in St. Patrick's Cathedral in Dublin.
"It is impossible that anything so natural, so necessary, and so universal as death, should ever have been designed by providence as an evil to mankind" - Jonathan Swift.
'TOMÁS MacCURTAIN COMMEMORATION...'
From 'The United Irishman' newspaper, April 1955.
In his oration, Domhnall O Cathain said -
"In his validictary address to the insurgent Volunteers on the Friday before the surrender, Pádraig Pearse wrote - 'Justice can never be done to their heroism, to their discipline, to their gay and unconquerable spirit in the midst of peril and death..'.
As in all his writings, Pearse spoke not only for his own time and for the past but also for the future.
How full, how complete a description of the 16 men who went over the barrack wall in Omagh, how beautiful, how fitting an appreciation of the eight men in the court of 'imperialist justice'. And to follow in the same strain with Pearse, if they did not win they had deserved to win, and like the Volunteers they had won a great thing.
The 1916 Volunteers had redeemed Dublin from many shames. The Armagh and Omagh Volunteers had pulled aside the veil, unloosened the drapery of words, had shown us all the light ; they had floodlit the path of freedom, had shown that there was but one way. They had shown that the staccato of the Thompson Gun was the most effective way of making the Orange junta sit up and take notice.
They did for Ireland what Ireland needed to have done for her. They did for Ireland what Ireland deserved to have done for her..."
(MORE LATER.)
ON THIS DATE (19TH OCTOBER) 102 YEARS AGO - BRITISH 'HAMAR' MISSES ITS TARGET.
British 'Chief Secretary for Ireland', Lieutenant-Colonel 'Sir' Hamar Greenwood (pictured, and short video here showing 'the Hamar' rewarding his troops in this country for the destruction they wrought while maintaining 'law and order') promised to put an end to republican "outrages" but that was just another outrageous false promise by the British!
In May 1920 the British Foreign Secretary, 'Lord' George Nathaniel Curzon, proposed vigorous 'Indian measures' to suppress the rebellion in Ireland and he and other British imperialist 'gentlemen' formulated a policy with that objective in mind. On the 9th August 1920, the British 'Lords Commissioners' announced that 'Royal Assent' had been granted for the following 14 items -
1. Overseas Trade (Credit and Insurance) Act, 1920.
2. Unemployment Insurance Act, 1920.
3. Restoration of Order in Ireland Act, 1920.*
4. Aberdeen Corporation Order Confirmation Act, 1920.
5. Pilotage Orders Confirmation (No. 3) Act, 1920.
6. Local Government Board (Ireland) Provisional Orders Confirmation (No. 3) Act, 1920.
7. Ministry of Health Provisional Order Confirmation (Chesterfield Extension) Act, 1920.
8. Mid-Glamorgan Water Act, 1920.
9. Wallasey Corporation Act, 1920.
10. Life Association of Scotland Act, 1920.
11. Uxbridge and Wycombe District Gas Act, 1920.
12. Exmouth Urban District Council Act, 1920.
13. North British and Mercantile Insurance Company's Act, 1920.
14. Lever Brothers, Limited (Wharves and Railway) Act, 1920.
On the 19th October 1920 - 102 years ago on this date - the British 'Chief Secretary for Ireland', Lieutenant-Colonel 'Sir' Hamar Greenwood (who later threatened to resign his position if Westminster agreed to a ceasefire with Irish republicans before they had surrendered their weapons!) stated, re the British 'law and order' campaign in Ireland -
"The outrages against the police and military forces since the 1st January last, which I regret to say include the loss of no less than 118 lives, are as follows: police killed -100, military killed -18, police wounded -160, military wounded -66. There have been 667 attacks on police barracks, resulting in most cases in their complete destruction.
There has been an organised attempt to boycott and intimidate the police, their wives and relations. The hon. Member will realise that I cannot publish the steps that are being taken to cope with the campaign of murder, outrage and intimidation, but I can assure him that the means available to the Government for protecting all servants of the Crown in the discharge of their duties, and for bringing to justice those who commit or connive at outrages, are steadily improving.
The Royal Irish Constabulary is rapidly increasing in numbers owing mainly to the flow of recruits from ex-officers and ex-service men who served in the Army or Navy during the War. The effective strength of the Force is now higher than it has been for the last 15 years. In the last three weeks alone there have been 194 trials by Court Martial under the 'Restoration of Order in Ireland Act 1920', and 159 convictions. The Forces of the Crown are now effectively grappling with the organised, paid and brutal campaign of murder in Ireland.." (*The 'Restoration of Order in Ireland Act' was a 'legal' item through which the British could authorise, in Ireland, 'the issue of Regulations under the Defence of the Realm Consolidation Act, 1914, for effecting the restoration and maintenance of order in Ireland where it appears to His Majesty in Council that, owing to the existence of a state of disorder, the ordinary law is inadequate for the prevention and punishment of crime, or the maintenance of order..')
The British claimed that the 'legal' changes had been rendered necessary by the abnormal conditions which at that time prevailed in certain parts of Ireland, where 'an organised campaign of violence and intimidation has resulted in the partial breakdown of the machinery of the ordinary law and in the non-performance by public bodies and officials of their statuary obligations...in particular it has been found that criminals (sic) are protected from arrest, that trial by jury cannot be obtained because of the intimidation of witnesses and jurors, and the local authorities and their officers stand in fear of injury to their persons or property if they carry out their statuary duties...'
The 'Order in Council' provided, among other things, for the putting into operation of many of the existing 'Defence of the Realm Regulations' for the purpose of 'the restoration or maintenance of order, for the trial of crimes by Courts Martial or by specially constituted Civil Courts, and for the investment of those Courts with the necessary powers'.
Also, it was now to be allowed for 'financial punishments' to be implemented - the withholding from local authorities who refuse to discharge the obligations imposed upon them by Statute, financial grants which otherwise would be payable to them from public funds and for the application of the grants so withheld to the discharge of the obligations which the local authority has failed to fulfill, for the holding of sittings of courts elsewhere than in ordinary courthouses, where these courthouses have been destroyed or otherwise made unavailable and '..although the Regulations are not, in terms, restricted to any particular part or parts of Ireland, it is the Government's intention that they shall not be applied in substitution for the provisions of the ordinary law in places where the judicial and administrative machinery of the ordinary law are available, and are not obstructed in their operations by the methods of violence and intimidation above mentioned...for instance, under the Regulations an ordinary crime can only be tried by a Courts Martial or by a specially constituted Civil Court, if the case is referred to the Competent Naval or Military Authority.
Instructions will be issued by the Irish Executive to ensure that such cases will not be referred to the Competent Naval or Military Authority except where the prevalence of actual threatened violence or intimidation has produced conditions rendering it impracticable for them to be dealt with by due process of ordinary law...'
Greenwood stated the above, as mentioned, on Tuesday, 19th October 1920 - 102 years ago on this date - and, the following day, a young (19 years old) IRA Volunteer, from Fleet Street in Dublin, Kevin Barry (pictured), became the first person to be tried by court martial under the new 'Restoration of Order in Ireland Act 1920' which,among its other trappings, allowed for the suspension of the courts system in Ireland (bad and all as that system was) and the establishment of military courts with powers to enforce the death penalty and internment without trial.
On the 10th December 1920 martial law was proclaimed in counties Cork, Kerry, Limerick, and Tipperary and, in January 1921, this order was extended to include Clare and Waterford. The 'ROIA' was widely used by the British against Irish republicans and, indeed, was used as a 'tool' to impose censorship on the media of the day, an imposition which was challenged, sometimes succesfully so - in 1921, a ROIA court-martial convicted the proprietors and editor of a Dublin newspaper for violating ROIA press regulations. At the end of the trial, a military detachment acting without a written order from the military court arrested the defendants and conveyed them to a civil prison.
The prisoners petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus on the ground that a transfer from military to civil custody based merely on oral statements of anonymous soldiers was unlawful.
The Crown argued that since the defendants were subject to military law, they could be moved from military to civil confinement without a written order. Finding this contention to be "quite untenable," the King's Bench put on record its desire "in the clearest way possible to repudiate" the doctrine that a civil prison could detain a king's subject without proper written authority : "To sanction such a course would be to strike a deadly blow at the doctrine of personal liberty, which is part of the first rudiments of the constitution." Moreover, the court-martial's failure to issue an order left the civil jailer "without the protection of any written mandate" and therefore exposed to the risk of a lawsuit.
Declaring that there was "no vinculum or bond of union between the military and the civil custody," the King's Bench issued the writ of habeas corpus. Ostensibly protecting the liberty of civilians against overreaching by the British Army, the court equally protected a civil institution from subordination to military command.
Today, the British and their political colleagues in Stormont and Leinster House are still attempting to use 'laws' of that nature, and media censorship, to destroy Irish republicanism. But it didn't work then and won't work for them today, either - we are in this for the long haul!
ON THIS DATE (19TH OCTOBER) 21 YEARS AGO : FINAL ARRANGEMENTS MADE FOR FREE STATERS TO 'HONOUR' AN IRISH REPUBLICAN.
"Fight on, struggle on, for the honour, glory and freedom of dear old Ireland. Our hearts go out to all our dear old friends. Our souls go to God at 7 o'clock in the morning and our bodies, when Ireland is free, shall go to Galbally.
Our blood shall not be shed in vain for Ireland, and we have a strong presentiment, going to our God, that Ireland will soon be free and we gladly give our lives that a smile may brighten the face of 'Dear Dark Rosaleen'.
Farewell! Farewell! Farewell!"
- the last words of Limerick (Ballylanders) IRA man Patrick Maher, 32 years of age (pictured), to his comrades.
He was hanged by the British administration in Ireland on the 7th June 1921 for his alleged involvement in the rescue of Tipperary IRA man Seán Hogan, even though he was not involved in that operation.
Thousands of people (including his mother and sister) had gathered outside Mountjoy Jail in Dublin in protest against his execution, but to no avail (it should be noted that at the time, Munster and a small part of Leinster were under British 'martial law' and those executed there were shot as soldiers, but Dublin was under civilian law and that is why those executed in Mountjoy were hanged).
Patrick Maher and his comrade Edmond Foley were executed in Mountjoy jail, Dublin, on the 7th of June 1921, after being charged with the 'murder' of two RIC men (Peter Wallace and Michael Enright) - he strongly protested his innocence but, even though two juries failed to reach a verdict, he was convicted (by a military court martial) and sentenced to death.
He was one of 'The Forgotten Ten' IRA Volunteers (Kevin Barry, Patrick Moran, Frank Flood, Thomas Whelan, Thomas Traynor, Patrick Doyle, Thomas Bryan, Bernard Ryan, Edmond Foley, and Patrick Maher) - Kevin Barry was executed in 1920 by the British and the other nine men were put to death in 1921. All ten were buried in the grounds of Mountjoy Jail in Dublin, where six of them were placed in the same grave.
On Sunday, 14th October 2001, nine of those men were reinterred in Glasnevin Cemetery in Dublin by representatives of a 26-county state in an 'official' ceremony and, on Friday, 19th October 2001 - 21 years ago on this date - this state made the final arrangements to do the same for the tenth man, Patrick Maher, who was reburied in his home parish of Glenbrohane in Limerick (at the request of his family) on Saturday, 20th October 2001.
Both reinterments were carried out by a state which none of the ten men were fighting for - a 26-county free state - as the objective of the republican campaign - then (1920/1921) and now (2022)- was and is for a free Ireland, not a partially-free Ireland.
And, to add insult to injury, the then Free State 'minister for justice', John O'Donoghue, was the 'official figurehead' present, on both occasions, during which he delivered the graveside orations.
Irish republicans are looking forward to the day when those moral and political misappropriations can be corrected, in much the same manner that an English 'queens' presence and aura in the Garden of Remembrance in Dublin was corrected by Irish republicans in 2011.
'THE BRITISH STORY...'
Roy Foster (pictured) in the British media.
By Barra Ó Séaghdha.
From 'Magill' Annual, 2002.
Jonathan Freedland on Roy Foster - "To make his point, he merely has to walk to the pub at the end of the street. It's Auntie Annie's Porter House, Irish-themed from the Celtic typeface sign above the door to the Guinness served behind the bar, and the perfect illustration of Professor Roy Foster's latest bugbear ; the reduction of Irish history to theme-park kitsch."
Freedland explains that 'The Irish Story' is not another history of Ireland but a history of Irish history, before formally introducing his interviewee ;
"Roy Foster, the Carroll Professor of Irish history at Oxford and constantly cited as the greatest Irish historian of his generation, is ittitated at a trend he's noticed in the last decade, a lapse back into an old Irish habit - reducing the complexity of history to a cosy fairytale."
Foster's irritation at pseudo-Irish pubs, tacky theme-parks and sentimentalised autobiography (Frank McCourt and Gerry Adams are prime targets in his new book) will be shared by readers right across the spectrum of cultural politics. Because such irritation is shared by many of us, however, we will not - unlike his interviewers in 'The Times' and 'The Guardian' - be reeling in admiration at Foster's apparently lonely stance on these matters...
(MORE LATER.)
ON THIS DATE (19TH OCTOBER) 109 YEARS AGO : DEATH OF A GREEN-HEARTED LOYALIST.
Emily Lawless, pictured (aka 'Emily Lytton'), the writer and poet, was born on the 17th of June, 1845, in Ardclough, County Kildare and was educated privately.
War battered dogs are we
Fighters in every clime;
Fillers of trench and of grave,
Mockers bemocked by time.
War dogs hungry and grey,
Gnawing a naked bone,
Fighters in every clime -
Every cause but our own. (Emily Lawless, 1902 ; "With the Wild Geese".)
She was born into a politically mixed background, the eldest daughter and one of eight children ('Sir' Horace Plunkett was her cousin).
Her father was 'Titled' by Westminster (he was a 'Baron') even though his father (Emily's grandfather) was a member of the 'United Irishmen'.
Her brother, Edward, seems to have taken his direction from his father rather than his grandfather - he held and voiced strong unionist opinions, wouldn't have a catholic about the place and was in a leadership position within the anti-Irish so-called 'Property Defence Association'.
Perhaps this 'in-house' political confusion, mixed between staunch unionism and unionism with sympathies for Irish nationalism/republicanism, coupled with the 'whisperings of shame' that Emily was a lesbian and was having an affair with one of the 'titled' Spencer women, was the reason why her father and two of his daughters committed suicide.
She wrote a full range of books, from fiction to history to poetry, and is best remembered for her 'Wild Geese' works, although some of her writings were criticised by journalists for its 'grossly exaggerated violence, its embarrassing dialect and staid characters..' - 'The Nation' newspaper stated that 'she looked down on peasantry from the pinnacle of her three-generation nobility..' and none other than William Butler Yeats declared that she had "an imperfect sympathy with the Celtic nature.." and that she favoured "theory invented by political journalists and forensic historians."
But she had a great talent :
After Aughrim :
She said, "They gave me of their best,
They lived, they gave their lives for me ;
I tossed them to the howling waste
And flung them to the foaming sea."
She said, "I never gave them aught,
Not mine the power, if mine the will ;
I let them starve, I let them bleed,
they bled and starved, and loved me still."
She said, "Ten times they fought for me,
Ten times they strove with might and main,
Ten times I saw them beaten down,
Ten times they rose, and fought again."
She said, "I stayed alone at home,
A dreary woman, grey and cold ;
I never asked them how they fared,
Yet still they loved me as of old."
She said, "I never called them sons,
I almost ceased to breathe their name,
then caught it echoing down the wind
blown backwards, from the lips of fame."
She said, "Not mine, not mine that fame ;
Far over sea, far over land,
cast forth like rubbish from my shores
they won it yonder, sword in hand."
She said, "God knows they owe me nought,
I tossed them to the foaming sea,
I tossed them to the howling waste,
Yet still their love comes home to me."
She considered herself to be a Unionist although, unlike her brother, she appreciated and acknowledged Irish culture (or, in her own words - "I am not anti-Gaelic at all, as long as it is only Gaelic enthuse and does not include politics..") and, despite being 'entitled' to call herself 'The Honourable Emily Lawless', it was a 'title' she only used occasionally.
She spent a lot of her younger days in Galway, with her mother's family, but it is thought that family tragedies drove her to live in England, where she died, on the 19th of October 1913 - 109 years ago on this date - at the age of 68, having become addicted to heroin. She is buried in Surrey.
Emily Lawless, 1845-1913.
'FORTH HIS BANNERS GO...'
Jer O'Leary (pictured) has become bannermaker to the radical and labour movement. Brian Trench reports on the growing recognition of his art.
From 'Magill' magazine, May 1987.
It was in John Arden's and Margaretta D'Arcy's 'Non-Stop Connolly Show' in Liberty Hall in 1974 that Jer O'Leary first took up his imposing Jim Larkin stance. Since 1977, he has done it in half-a-dozen productions of James Plunkett's 'The Risen People'.
Jer O'Leary had also been painting as well as acting, winning two art competitions organised by the ITGWU. Encouraged by the union's late general secretary, Michael Mullen, O'Leary applied his skills to posters and then to banners. Union banners which usually spend very long periods in storage had been much in evidence in the tax marches of the late 1970's.
Jer O'Leary approached his banners with the demands of the street in mind - "I always felt that the old union banners were too intricate for the street ; I purposely used stark black and white images on a colour background to make more impact..."
(MORE LATER.)
ON THIS DATE (19TH OCTOBER) 33 YEARS AGO : BRITISH ESTABLISHMENT AGREE THAT 'THE CONVICTIONS ARE UNSAFE AND UNSATISFACTORY...OUR POLICE OFFICERS MUST HAVE LIED...' (Page 22, here.)
On the 19th October 1989 - 33 years ago on this date (after serving 15 years in prison)- the 'Guildford Four' - Gerard Conlon, Patrick Armstrong, Carole Richardson and Paul Hill - are released from prison in what is considered to be one of the biggest-ever miscarriages of justice in Britain.
Their convictions in 1974 for the Guildford pub bombings of that year were quashed at the Old Bailey in London on the 19th October 1989. All four had been falsely accused of the attacks on two pubs in which five people died and more than sixty people were injured. 'Confessions' were obtained by the use of torture and attempts to appeal the convictions were unsuccessful - the British establishment and its police force wanted 'those responsible' (and/or those whom it could somewhat plausibly present as being responsible) caught and for 'justice' to be done.
'After the incredulity and then the euphoria of release from jail, the four people who had served 15 years for the Guildford pub bombings in 1974 had to find a life. Three are now married with families but the years of adjustment have been painful...the only thing that mattered was when Lord Lane, the lord chief justice, pronounced those magic words: the convictions of Gerry Conlon, Carole Richardson, Paul Hill and Paddy Armstrong were unsafe and unsatisfactory..."
Gerry Conlon punched the air in defiance and ran the wrong way down the street. Just like a confused animal, his lawyer thought. Conlon was then 35...Richardson, 17 at the time of her arrest, was shocked and weak at the knees. She and her former boyfriend, Armstrong, disappeared separately out the back. She just wanted to hide. Hill was taken to Crumlin Road prison in Belfast and bailed two days later...theirs was the first of the momentous Irish miscarriage of justice cases which convulsed the criminal justice system and led to a rare royal commission.
The crisis of confidence was encapsulated in one of Lord Lane's concluding remarks: "The officers must have lied..." (from here.)
"Officers" of that same calibre (albeit in a different uniform), answerable to a similar political establishment as mentioned above, are still in a powerful position in the north-east of this country (and, indeed, are not confined to that area) and are still willing and able to frame innocent people for their objective of securing the British military and political presence in Ireland.
As we stated on this blog on the 5th October last - 'Westminster didn't care who was found 'guilty' once they satisfied the gutter press and it's readership that 'justice had been served', and they continue with that policy to this day - 'The Craigavon Two', Brendan McConville and John-Paul Wootton, are the 'Guildford/Birmingham' etc examples of 'British justice' in Ireland today.' The only long term solution is to end that presence and flush out the contaminants left behind.
ON THIS DATE (19TH OCTOBER) IN...
...1610 :
One of our English 'rulers' who was somewhat less cruel to us than others in his social circle was born on the 19th October 1610, in Clerkenwell, in London.
James Fitzthomas Butler was 51 years of age when he was announced as the '1st Duke of Ormond, KG, PC' and 'Lord High Steward' of England ; he was by then already a Lieutenant-General in the English Army and was a 'land owner' in Ireland.
He had spent a small fortune over the previous decades 'in royal service' and, now as a 'Duke' and 'High Steward', he was awarded large grants and a one-off payment of £30,000, all of which, apparently, kept him and 'his' estates in Ireland ticking-over but, overall, his losses still exceeded his gains!
During his political 'career' in Ireland he was in Office as 'Lord Lieutenant of Ireland' three times and, by the (anti-Irish) standards of the day, he was said to be somewhat less cruel than other 'Irish masters'.
He died in the Kingston Lacy mansion in Dorset, England, on the 21st July, 1688, and was buried on the 4th August in Westminster Abbey. Incidentally, his wife, Elizabeth, died four years earlier (in 1684) on the same date as her husband, the 21st July.
If this short piece wasn't about British imperialism in Ireland, that would almost be romantic!
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...1751 :
A boy born in Dublin on the 19th October 1751 - Charles Edward Saul Jennings (pictured) - took a leaf from his Da's book and took a title from his Da's heritage. Sort of!
His Da, Theobald, from Polaniran, in Tuam, County Galway, was a doctor, and his Ma, Eleonore (Jennings, née Saul, aka 'Lady Eleonore') was the daughter of a rich Dublin distiller and, indeed, that may have given her husband, Theobald, the notion that he, too, should be 'titled'.
So when the family moved to Tonnay-Charente in the south of France in the mid-to-late 1700's, the Da continued to practice as a doctor and, in order to improve his customer base (!) declared himself to all and sundry to be the 'Baron of Kilmaine', and was accepted in posh French society as such!
Charles Edward had a rebellious streak about him and soon found an outlet for it in the French Army, where he rose to the rank of General - he supported the revolutionaries in France and Ireland (he was a devoted friend to Theobald Wolfe Tone and a close confidant of Napoleon I, and was described as the only officer Bonaparte ever trusted completely) and had, by then, already accepted his Da's 'title' and was known among his military comrades as the 'Baron of Kilmaine' and/or 'Brave Kilmaine'.
He helped to secure the financial well-being of Matilda Tone and her children after her husband was killed by the British and, such was his standing in France, he was appointed military governor of Switzerland in 1799, when he was only 48 years of age, but had to resign from the position because of health issues.
He died in Paris on the 11th of December, 1799, and was buried with full military honours, leaving behind his wife, Susanne (née Kirchmeyer) - the couple had no children, so the 'title' died with him.
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...1919 :
At about 2am on Sunday morning, 19th October 1919, 23-year-old 'Dublin Metropolitan Police Constable' Michael Downing (pictured), a farmer's son from Adrigole on the Beara Peninsula in County Cork, was 'on patrol' and crossing a road near High Street in the Liberties area of Dublin, walking towards a group of men on that side of the street.
As he got nearer to the men, one of them pulled out a revolver and shot him dead.
The men were IRA Volunteers and were tending to an arms dump that the 'Constable' was (inadvertently) walking towards. He was in the wrong place at the wrong time.
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...1920 :
On the 19th October, 1920, British Crown Forces stormed into a pub in Turloughmore, in County Galway and dragged a number of men out of the premises and flogged them by the side of the road, and in the nearby villages of Corofin and Cummer, on consecutive nights, men were taken from their beds, stripped and flogged by the roadside.
This issue was raised in Westminster on the 21st October but, as expected, British politicians attempted to cover-up for the offenders, their military colleagues in Ireland, by claiming that republicans in stolen British Army uniforms were responsible! -
'Mr. T. P. O'CONNOR (by Private Notice) asked the Chief Secretary for Ireland whether his attention has been called to the statements in several newspapers that on Saturday night last two lorries of uniformed men seized Thomas and Martin Feeney at the village of Corbally and flogged them with a rope, and assaulted one of them in addition with a rifle; whether on the same night at the town of Corofin Patrick Raferty was also flogged; whether on Sunday evening a number of young men were stripped and were whipped and otherwise assaulted on the road; whether a young man named Michael Welby and a young woman named Miss Glynn were shot and wounded at the village of Cummer by the police on the same occasion; and whether an inquiry will be immediately instituted and the persons guilty of these floggings and other assaults will be brought to justice...?'
The pathetic 'they-flogged-themselves-Sir!!' absurdity can re read here, if you can stomach it.
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...1921 :
In the run-up/ prep work for the signing of the 'Treaty of Surrender' (which was signed by the Free Staters and the British on the 6th December 1921) a number of meetings were held between the Staters and Westminster political and military representatives.
One such meeting was held on the 19th October, 1921, to discuss financial issues regarding 'repatriable financial assets' ie 'because of your actions we spent this amount and you have to pay us back'. The British reps stated that the fledging Free State entity 'owed' Westminster £153 million sterling for "debt and pension charges" incurred during the British visit to the State (!!) but the Staters - masters at fumbling in greasy tills - replied that, on the basis of past over-taxation "since the Union" (!!) and retardation of the Free State's industrial and commercial development, the charge to Westminster should be about £3 billion sterling!
That was of course a bluff by the Staters, and it was called by the British (who knew the 'strength' of their new allies) - a 'compromise' arrived at was that 'Article 5' of that Treaty would contain an agreement that '...the Free State was required to pay a fair and equitable share of the UK public debt and war pensions..' and that 'settlement' was worked through by both entities involved.
Incidentally, the Staters continue to believe that they owe various British 'Lords' and 'Dukes' money, and they continue to pay them!
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...1921 :
While the Staters were capitulating, politically and militarily, to Westminster - see above - on the 19th October, 1921, religious capitulation was also taking place.
It was on that same date that Pope Benedict XV sent a telegram to the English 'king' George V rejoicing at the resumption of the 'Treaty of Surrender' discussions, instead of telling him that he and his ilk should get the hell out of Ireland, politically and militarily.
The English 'king', delighted to have received such a 'thumbs-up' from that Pope, wrote back saying that he hoped that "...a settlement may initiate a new era of peace and happiness for my people..". That "new era", your kingship, won't materialise in Ireland until the British military and political presence has left the country for good.
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...1922 :
Two Free State soldiers died on the 19th October 1922 ; Private Michael M Bailey, 20 years of age, was born in Wales and was stationed in Portobello Barracks in Dublin, in the Transport Division of the FSA.
He was in a convoy which was travelling to Naas in County Kildare when a sniper shot him dead.
Two State troopers, a Sergeant Clarke and a Sergeant-Major Sean O'Suillivan (who was only 17 years of age) came across a crowd of people outside a shop on Corporation Street, in Dublin city centre.
They wanted to disperse the crowd but they wouldn't move anywhere so Sergeant Clarke fired a warning shot into the air, but the bullet rebounded off a wall and hit the young Sergeant-Major, killing him. We presume the crowd then left the scene.
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...1922 :
On Thursday, 19th October 1922, Aghadoe House (pictured) in Killarney, County Kerry, was burned down by the IRA, to ensure that it would not be used as a base by the Free Staters. It was rebuilt three years later.
In 1870, 97% of the 32 Counties of Ireland was 'owned' by English 'landlords' and the 'big house on the hill' (the 'landlords' residence)was availed of by English troops and militia as a base from which to secure their presence, and those vermin were welcomed in by the owners. When he was the IRA Chief of Staff, Liam Lynch issued a directive that "all Free State supporters are traitors and deserve the latter's stark fate, therefore their houses must be destroyed at once...", and that order was followed with gusto by the rebels, as the 'landlords' were hated in their community by the majority.
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...1923 :
On the 19th October, 1923, a State 'Criminal Investigation Department' (CID) operative named Thomas Fitzgerald was killed, following an armed robbery in a factory in Castleknock, Dublin. A Free State soldier, William Downes, was later hanged for killing Fitzgerald -
'At 8am on Monday, 29 November 1923, William Downes climbed the scaffold in Mountjoy and became the first man executed by the Irish Free State... it is ironic then that the first man to climb the scaffold would not be an 'irregular' or opponent of the new State. Downes was in fact a pro-Treaty soldier.
At 5pm on 19 October 1923, Superintendent F O'Driscoll of the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) received a phone call from the Castleknock Candle Factory. The CID was an armed police force which dealt with crime during the Civil War period and the panicked caller told him that his premises had just been robbed by armed raiders...' -More here.
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Only back after our absence last week [...bet ya never even noticed..] and we have to excuse ourselves again for next Wednesday, 26th October 2022 ; we have a christening and a funeral to attend over the weekend and early next week and, although one event is obviously more sombre than the other, both will end up in a pub, where we'll reacquaint ourselves with old friends, colleagues and comrades, and make new ones, as ya do!
We'll be back 'on air' on Wednesday, 2nd November 2022 and, if ya want, you can catch-me-if-you-can on 'Facebook' and 'Twitter'.
Oh, and by the way - we sourced three cabins in Waterford for the now-37 of us that are heading off on a ten-day break in November. The six of us that'll be sleeping in the vans and cars at night are the lucky ones...!
Thanks for the visit, and for reading!
See y'all on the 2nd November next.
Sharon and the team.
Labels:
Bernard Ryan,
Charles Edward Saul Jennings.,
Edmond Foley,
Hamar Greenwood,
John Arden,
Jonathan Freedland,
Jonathan Swift,
Margaretta D'Arcy,
Patrick Doyle,
Peter Wallace,
Thomas Bryan,
Thomas Traynor
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