Showing posts with label John Denton Pinkstone French. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Denton Pinkstone French. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

1919 - "THE IRISH ARE NOT A DEEP-THINKING PEOPLE..."





















On the 18th December, 1919, Irish and British newspapers reported that, during a Q+A session in the 'House of Commons' in London, which took place the previous day, a Mr Winston Churchill (pictured), the British 'Secretary of State for War and Secretary of State for Air' (!) stated that there was 43,000 British soldiers in Ireland, costing the British taxpayer £860,000 per month.

Those same newspapers rarely mentioned it at the time or later but, between 1919 and the spring of 1921, the unemployment level in Britain rose from 3.9% to over 20% and, in May of 1921, that level actually showed an increase to 23.4%.

That £860,000 could have been put to a worthwhile purpose each month - should have been spent at home on their own social services rather than on maintaining military and political control on a country foreign to them.





















On the same day (17th December 1919) that his colleague, Mr Churchill, admitted to wasting £860,000 a month, a British 'Field Marshal', a Mr John French ('Sir John Denton Pinkstone French, 1st Earl of Ypres and Lord Lieutenant of Ireland') wrote the following memo for his diary-

"The Irish are an impulsive and quick-witted, but not a deep-thinking, people.

Their real feeling was never in favour of a Republic, or indeed, of any form of complete separation..."

Mr French was born in Kent, in England, but always considered himself an 'Irishman' due to his family's Anglo-Irish roots in County Roscommon.

He should have thought deeper about it...



















As Mr French was feeling his Irishness, an accident occured in the Sinn Féin Hall in an area known as Briosc-Choill ('Briskil') Newtown Forbes, in Clongesh Civil Parish, Barony, County Longford.

IRA Volunteer John Mahon was hit in the accidental discharge of a weapon by a comrade, Volunteer Peter Nolan, and died from his wound.

RIP Volunteer John Mahon.

==========================







61 YEARS AGO THIS MONTH : CHE GUEVARA LANDS IN IRELAND.

Che Guevara being interviewed in Dublin Airport by RTE's Seán Egan : the result was first aired on RTE television on the 18th December in 1964. He was travelling to Algeria from New York when the plane he was on was redirected from Shannon to Dublin due to bad weather.

On the 14th June 1928, Celia de la Serna y Llosa, from Rosario in Argentina, gave birth to her fifth child, a boy, who her and her husband, Ernesto Guevara Lynch, named as Ernesto Rafael Guevara de la Serna, better known to the world as Che Guevara.

Celia's mother was from Galway and moved to South America where she married into the Guevara family.

Having Irish roots, Guevara visited this country a number of times and it was during one such visit in the early 1960's, to Kilkeel, in British-occupied County Down, that Irish artist Jim Fitzpatrick encountered the man.

The young artist, then a teenager and a student at Gormanstown College, was helping to pay his way through college by working part-time in the Marine Hotel pub in Kilkeel, where his mother was from.

Jim happened to be on the premises on the same morning that Che Guevara and two of his colleagues walked in and ordered glasses of Irish whiskey.

He recognised Guevara immediately and got chatting to him about his Irish roots, and was told by Guevara that he had an Irish grandmother and that her mother, his great-grandmother, a woman named Isabel, was from Galway, and that he had other family connections with the Cork area.

However, now, perhaps, more so than in the 1960's, 'money talks' and local politicians listen : to destroy a Jim Fitzpatrick work of art for such short-term gain is the very mindset that Che Guevara tried to overcome and, unfortunately, there are not enough Che Guevara types left in this world to do that.







GAS LADS...

















The massive finds of oil and gas on our western seaboard could ensure Ireland's financial security for generations.

Wealth approximating that of the Arab countries is within our grasp, but the Irish government seems content to sell off our birthright for a handful of votes and a few dollars.

In a special 'Magill' report, Sandra Mara investigates just what we are giving away, and why.

From 'Magill' magazine, March 2002.

For its part, 'Enterprise Energy Ireland' claims that the capital cost of bringing Corrib gas ashore will be in the region of €634 million between 2000 and 2005, with estimated additional costs of €152 million to connect up to the main Galway ring later this year.

While much of this will represent outlay in respect of equipment - which can be off-set against taxation - it states that there will be "a significant number of workers involved, around 500 for two seasons on the off-shore pipeline and terminal, and 1,000 for one season on the pipeline to Galway."

They admit, however, that "..while many of these workers would not be local residents, they will be based in the area during construction.

The local spend generated by these workers will exceed €25 million over two seasons of construction and, in addition, significant sums will be spent on local supplies for the construction sites.

While it is difficult to be precise about how many temporary jobs might be created, it is reasonable to estimate that it could run into hundreds..."

(MORE LATER.)



























On the 17th December, 1920, an RIC member, a 'District Inspector' in that grouping, Mr Philip O'Sullivan, met his fiancé, a Miss Moore, at the GPO in O'Connell Street in Dublin, as arranged, and the pair of them went for a ramble down nearby Henry Street.

Days previously, the young lady had been advised to have nothing to do with him, as he was a marked man because of his membership of that paramilitary organisation and because he used his position within that organisation to assist the Black and Tans, but she dismissed that advice.

Volunteer Ned Kelliher had been monitoring Mr O'Sullivan's movements for about a week and had told his comrade, Volunteer Joseph Byrne, that the RIC member would be on Henry Street between 6pm and 7pm on the 17th, with Miss Moore, and Volunteer Byrne and three other Volunteers patrolled the street, looking for him.

When they seen him, they approched and one of the Volunteers shot him in the head ; Miss Moore grabbed the revolver before he could fire a second shot but a second shot was fired into Mr O'Sullivan by one of the other Volunteers.

There was panic in the street, enabling the Volunteers to leave the scene and return safely to base.

The RIC man was rushed to Jervis Street Hospital and died there an hour later.



Two or three hours later, on that same day, about 155km (97 miles) up the road, in Swanlinbar, County Cavan, an RIC 'Sergeant', a Mr Charles Morahan ('Service Number 57996'), left Swanlinbar RIC Barracks on foot patrol with three other RIC members - Mr Peter Shannon ('62069'), Mr John Collins ('60999') and a Mr William Francis Joseph Halligan ('66590').

The four of them were walking towards the Enniskillen Road in the north of the town when shots were fired at them.

RIC member Mr Peter Shannon was hit three times as he ran for cover, which he found behind a low wall, where he died from his wounds.

RIC member Morahan was hit in the head with shotgun pellets, but lived to tell the tale.

The Volunteers, about 20 of them, were attached to the Corlough Battalion, West Cavan Brigade IRA and, at the same time as they were withdrawing from the scene of the ambush, some of their comrades called to the house of another RIC member, a Mr Patrick Mulligan, but left on discovering that he wasn't there.

Other Battalion Volunteers called to the house where RIC member Francis Byrne lived and shot him - he fell to the floor, his wife screamed, the Volunteers left - they returned shortly afterwards to ensure he was dead but his distraught wife went to attack them ; they let her be and left the house.

Mr Byrne survived, living to tell the tale.















"Any war, to be just and lawful, must be backed by a well-grounded hope of success.

What hope of success have you against the mighty forces of the British Empire?

None!

None whatever.

And, if it's unlawful, as it is, every life taken in pursuance of it is murder..."

Catholic Bishop Patrick Finegan, in a statement he released on the 17th December 1920.

Mr Finegan was known, apparently, for his 'piety, scholarship and patriotism' and had, earlier in that same year (summer, 1920, addressing an audience in Cootehill, County Cavan), gone on record for assuring those listening that "..it was true that God forgave even the murderer (sic)...".

Then, as now, Catholic priests with Irish republican leanings existed but - again, then as now - their pastoral letters etc can be (and were) misrepresented and/or outright censored, as mentioned here (see, for instance, the notifications for the 10th and 13th December, 1920, on that link).

The bottom line, however, in our opinion, is to 'put not your trust in princes' : if something is so wrong (such as British military and political interference in Irish affairs and/or the literal and purpose swamping of this State and Country with 'asylum seekers/refugees/migrants/vagrants', for example) then that wrong must be righted, by any means possible.

==========================













THE MONTH UNSPUN...

The stories that hit the headlines.

From Magill magazine, August 2002.



What unionists say they want is positive action from the IRA to advance the peace process, and not statements that they feel are politically motivated.

David Trimble, in particular, has been forceful on this point - issuing an ultimatum to Tony Blair that the Prime Minister must expel Sinn Féin from the Executive if the IRA refuses to abandon all paramilitary activity, Tony Blair, in turn, has said the IRA must abide by strict ceasefire criteria laid down in the past week.

Given that it is difficult to see this happening, the onus could be put back on Tony Blair very quickly...

(MORE LATER.)























On the 17th December, 1921, the pro-British newspaper 'The Belfast Newsletter', in an Editorial on the Treaty of Surrender, described that Treaty as "a betrayal of Ulster(sic)..." but, as the saying goes - 'It's hard to tell who has your back, from who has it long enough just to stab you in it'.

Weeks after that Treaty had come into operation (ie on the 23rd January 1922 ; it was signed and accepted by the Staters on the 6th December 1921 but it only came into full effect and 'formally established' the Irish Free State on the 6th December, 1922, one year later) that same newspaper said that if the Leinster House administration is prepared to take an attitude of goodwill to the Stormont administration "then the Treaty is likely to turn out a blessing to the whole of Ireland..."!

Same as it always was and always will be until the 'Irish Issue' is finally settled : pro-British supporters in Ireland will always warm to anything which has the welcome effect, as they see it, of dividing their opponents.

















"The English have made a greater concession than we. They have given up their age-long attempt to dominate us..."

- Michael Collins, in a letter he wrote on the 17th December 1921, to his fiancée, Kitty Kiernan (pictured).

Well - Mr Collins was right about one thing : M/s Kiernan was his fiancée.

"The British broke the Treaty of Limerick, and we'll break this Treaty too when it suits us, when we have our own army..."

When Mr Collins and other turncoats like him assembled their own army, they tasked it with upholding partition and hunting down and executing the brave men and women of the IRA that they had once fought alongside.

Their oath to the Irish Republic - that's what Mr Collins and his ilk 'broke' :

'I, (name), do solemnly swear that I will uphold and defend the Irish Republic and the Government of the Irish Republic which is Dáil Éireann against all enemies both foreign and domestic ; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same. That I take this obligation freely without mental reservation or purpose of evasion, so help me, God.'

Instead, the Staters took the following oath -

'I, (name), do solemnly swear true faith and allegiance to the Constitution of the Irish Free State as by law established, and that I will be faithful to H. M. King George V, his heirs and successors by law in virtue of the common citizenship of Ireland with Great Britain and her adherence to and membership of the group of nations forming the British Commonwealth of Nations.'

Don't know if Kitty took the same oath or not, but shame on those who did.

Incidentally, Francis Thomas Aiken, a republican-gamekeeper-turned-Free State-poacher, stated that Eoin O'Duffy, another republican-gamekeeper-turned-Free State-poacher, had told him that the signing of the Treaty (and, therefore, the taking of the 'loyal to the Commonwealth' oath) "was a trick. IRA GHQ had only approved the Treaty in order to get the arms to continue the fight...".

And trick it was - but it was those oath-takers who were being tricked...

















On the same day that Mr Michael Collins was whispering sweet nothings (literally) to his Kitty, the Third Session of the Second (Republican) Dáil (Day Four) was in session in Dublin -

"I know perfectly well I have charge of four thousand men. I do not here hesitate to say that number.

But of that four thousand I have a rifle for every fifty. Now that is the position as far as I am concerned and I may add that there is about as much ammunition as would last them about fifty minutes for that one rifle.

Now people talk lightly of when we are going to war. I hold they do not know a damn thing about it.

I hold further the Treaty is called a bird in the hand. I hold that that bird in the hand can be turned to Ireland's interests, not to put or to have only one rifle in the hands of every fifty men but to put one rifle in every man's hand..."

- Séan MacEoin (pictured), yet another republican-gamekeeper-turned Free State-poacher, speaking at that Dáil session.

And Mr MacEoin and his type did indeed "put one rifle in every man's hand", but those rifles were turned against their old comrades, not against the British.





















Speaking at that same Dáil session, Mary MacSwiney (pictured), who lived as she died (in 1942) - a true Irish republican - knew that the majority of the public would grasp any straw if they were led to believe that, in doing so, the war would end and a fitting political solution would ensue :

She said that the people were not in a position, a frame of mind, to decide, because they "had been in slavery for 120 years and longer" and that, because they would be unable to decide as a free people, it was up to the members of the Dáil to decide for them, stating - "We cannot compromise but I ask you to vote in the name of the dead to unite against this Treaty and let us take the consequence".

She continued -

"This ratification must go to the people not yet trained out of the slavery which the last 100 years have put into these souls. As to whether the majority of the people would take it, what would the majority in 1916 have taken?

Somebody quoting Pádraig Pearse said 'We have lost this battle but we have saved the soul of the nation', and if you tomorrow ratify this Treaty you would have done the best you could to undo Pádraig Pearse's work and to lose the soul of the nation, for we have to face the fact that our people are only gradually coming out of the slavehood.

It was the minority in 1916 that made 1918 possible ; it was that minority all along that made it possible to have this offer today..."

That was the start of the Dáil debates on the Treaty of Surrender and, just over one year later, the assembly unfortunately voted 64 to 57 to accept the Treaty.

For shame, in our opinion.



On that same date (17th December 1921), about 170km (107 miles) up the road in Belfast, that same issue - the British military and political presence in Ireland - was also causing trouble.

Three men - Mr Walter Pritchard (30), Mr John McMeekin (41) and Mr Edward Brennan (22) - were shot by snipers, and a shopkeeper, a M/s Frances Donnolly(/Donnelly) was shot and wounded by a member of the USC.

The poor woman died from her wound two days later.

















"We shall be a free people.

Some say that our freedom is limited, but if we look around and examine the small nations of the world, we will realise that we will have to bow in this wicked world to the forces of might..."

- Mr James Nicholas Dolan (pictured), in one of his pro-Treaty speeches, 17th December 1921.

A republican-gamekeeper-turned-Free State-poacher who knew, like the other wannabe Staters, that Westminster was not willing to move on the question of partition, but could live with that - 'we will be a free people...well..not really..'



As Mr Dolan was being economical with the truth, about 170km (107 miles) up the road in Belfast, some of those that he allegedly supported were facing reality.

An IRA ASU were in the process of carrying out an arms raid in Balmoral Military Camp in Belfast but they were caught by the British soldiers there, and six Volunteers were captured.



As those Irishmen were looking for equipment with which to free Ireland, newspapers reported that Englishmen in the political administration in London had, the previous day, tightened the noose on that desire.

They were voting on the Treaty of Surrender and those Englishmen in the so-called 'British House of Commons' voted 401 to 58 in support of that vile document and their colleagues in the 'House of Lords' voted 166 to 47 in favour.

Voting to decide the fate and fortune of their neighbours...

==========================







DEATH IN THE MEDITERRANEAN...















Desmond Boomer, a Belfast engineer working in the Libyan oil-fields, disappeared seven years ago.

Officially, the plane on which he was a passenger crashed as a result of mechanical failure and pilot error.

But is that the real story?

Or were the Irishman and his fellow passengers unwitting victims of the shady war between Islamic fundamentalism and Mossad, Israel's intelligence network?

A special 'Magill' investigation by Don Mullan, author of 'Eyewitness Bloody Sunday'.

From 'Magill' magazine, January 2003.

Paul Lehman was heard saying to his lawyer "I have no difficulty in answering that", to which his lawyer responded "Okay".

Mr Lehman then said "Yes sir, I believe that to be the case", and he was then asked if he could be certain that the aircraft crashed on the night in question, to which he replied "No sir, I can't say that for sure."

In August, 1999, Dr. Christian Farrugia, a Maltese lawyer, wrote to the chairman of the Maltese Board of Inquiry criticising its failure to properly investigate the disappearance of the aircraft -

"The Board did not manage to procure the very best evidence available (and) opted to rely on incomplete testimony and procedurally defective documentation when other alternative routes existed.

This will impinge on the integrity of the Board's final conclusions..."

(MORE LATER.)























On the 17th December, 1922, thousands of Irish people took to the streets of Dublin to wave goodbye (!) to British soldiers who had been ordered by Westminster to vacate the newly-spawned Irish Free State, as per the Treaty of Surrender stipulation.

The politicians in Westminster were comfortable in doing this because they were handing control of their then newest acquisition from actual British political and military forces to pro-British political and military forces.

The last 3,500 British troops in Dublin marched from their various barracks (including the former British General Headquarters at Parkgate Street and the 'Royal Barracks', now Collins Barracks) to the North Wall area of Dublin Port.

They boarded ships, including the SS Arvonia, and sailed for home, in England.

A British Army Captain, a Mr Henry Robinson, was said to be the very last soldier to board his ship at 3:45pm, on that date, the 17th December 1922.

So here's to you, Mr Robinson, but there are still about 2,000 armed British soldiers in Ireland, in our six north-eastern counties ; hopefully their ship will sail soon...

















As Mr Robinson and his grouping were waving goodbye to Dublin, and it to him, I'm sure, about 165km (103 miles) down the road a train was brought to a sudden stop.

Volunteer Captain Thomas Keating was in command of a column of rebels (who were headquartered in the Comeragh Mountains) and they had removed a section of track on the Mallow to Waterford railway line, forcing the train to come to a stop outside the town of Cill Mhíodáin (Kilmeaden/Kilmeadan).

The IRA then boarded it and, as a section of the men removed the mailbags, other rebels removed the passengers.

The mailbags were put carefully to one side, a distance away from the train, and the passengers were told to walk the five mile distance back to the station where they had got on.

The mailbags usually contained information of use to the rebels, and destroying traintrack infrastructure etc disrupted the Stater army and its transport and communication lines.

The train engine, two carriages and the guards van were set on fire and, before the fires had fully caught, the train driver was told to start the engine and drive the train forward, onto the missing track - he refused, was put off the train and a rebel hand done the job instead.

The train derailed, toppled over and burned itself into a state of uselessness.

The rebel fighters returned safely to base.

(RIP Volunteer Captain Thomas Keating.)

==========================







55 YEARS AGO TODAY (17TH DECEMBER 1970) : EVE OF THE FORMATION OF A LOYALIST DEATH-SQUAD.



The 'Ulster Defence Regiment', a pro-British loyalist paramilitary gang, was established by Westminster on the 18th December 1970 and continued to uphold the British writ, as the UDR, until 1992, when they were amalgamated with the 'Royal Irish Rangers' to form the 'Royal Irish Regiment'.

In every country it occupied (...and in every country it continues to either occupy or take an 'interest' in) Britain, like other imperialist forces, recruits a native 'workforce' which it uses to serve its interests.

In the mid-to-late 19th Century in Ireland, for instance, Westminster decreed that the then Irish police force be re-named the 'Royal Irish Constabulary', a move which the then British 'queen', Victoria, was strongly in favour of, as a 'reward' to them in payment for the cruel manner in which they dealt with the Fenian Rising.

In the early 1920's, after Britain had partitioned Ireland, the paramilitary RIC groupings in the Six Counties were re-classified as the 'RUC', 'U' for 'Ulster' ('1169...' comment : sic - Ulster has nine counties , not six) and a new pro-British death squad was also established - the 'USC' (or the 'B Specials', as they were better known) , comprised of native loyalist/unionist supporters, sharing a common hatred of all things Irish.

British military forces show proper respect for their flag.

'The Specials' were left with more or less a free rein by Westminster to 'maintain (English) law and order' in that part of Ireland but they dirtied their own doorstep so often that Westminster, long embarrassed by having to clean up after them so often, produced a report which, basically (much to the disgust of the local 'powers-that-be') , called for their reign to be brought to an end but, by coincidence (!) , a new pro-British murder gang was formed : the UDR.

This latest reincarnation of the RIC/RUC/USC/B Specials (which also 'traded' as the 'UVF') had, by 1992, ran out of doorsteps to dirty and, in that age-old British 'tradition', was 're-launched/re-named' as the 'Royal Irish Regiment' (RIR), on 1st July 1992.

But regardless of what name or uniform Westminster dresses them up as (or in) they will remain what they have always been - mercenary boot-boys in military garb, whether in Ireland or abroad.

And they will continue to meet the same response that their ilk so readily dish out to those that dare challenge the 'might of the British Empire'.



































One of the many problems that partitioning Ireland brought for Westminster, God help them, to be sure, was the subject of social welfare payments to, for instance, an unemployed man or woman in England compared to an unemployed man or woman in the British-occupied six north-eastern counties of Ireland.

It was with this in mind that the then British 'Under-Secretary for Ireland', a Mr John Anderson (' 'Sir' John Anderson, 1st Viscount Waverley') wrote to a colleague of his in the British Ministry of Labour on the 17th December, 1924.

Mr Anderson was concerned "that amalgamation of the British and Northern Ireland (sic) unemployment insurance would be an admission that the 'Government of Ireland Act 1920' was unworkable" because, under that Act, the Stormont administration were expected to fund all such social services from the tax they raised in the occupied zone but, the pool being smaller to draw from than the pool in England, a pound-for-pound payment match wasn't possible.













Oh, what a tangled web we weave...!

Unionists were insisting that an unemployed person in, say, Belfast, should be on the same welfare payment as an unemployed person in, say, Bristol, as that person was just as British, they claimed, and should be entitled to the same social payments.

But the smaller kitty wouldn't allow for that.

The issue was verbally pondered over and kicked down the road until March, 1925, when the Stormont 'Prime Minister', a Mr James Craig ('1st Viscount Craigavon PC NI DL' ETC ETC!) wrote to a Mr Churchill, the then 'Chancellor of the British Exchequer' in Westminster, demanding that the funds from which Westminster paid out, for instance, welfare payments, should be amalgamated with the funds which Stormont used for same - and he said he would resign if that was not done.

And, that same month, a Mr John Miller Andrews, the 'Stormont Minister for Labour', wrote to his political pal, a Mr Charles Vane-Tempest-Stewart ('Lord Londonderry, the 7th Marquess of Londonderry'!), telling him -

"The plain truth is that we cannot carry on as a Government here (ie the Occupied Zone in Ireland) unless our working classes enjoy the same social standards as their brother Trade Unionists in Great Britain..."

And t'was in that same month also (March 1925) that Mr Churchill recorded in his diary that the provision of social services depends on a "sufficiently large area and large numbers of trades" (ie a sufficiently big kitty) and that the Six County area, on its own, could obviously not match the kitty in England.

And, lo and behold, also in March, 1925, the Cabinet in London agreed that "on the grounds of equity" Britain should assist Stormont in its "difficulties" with its unemployment insurance fund issue, and authorised Mr Churchill to donate £650,000 to that Stormont fund.













But, again, questions were raised about giving that money as to do so "would be a departure from the spirit, if not the terms, of the Treaty...", as Mr Anderson again put it, and Mr Churchill agreed with him, saying that it would involve a substantial modification of the '1920 Government of Ireland Act' but that might not be such a bad thing, says he - doing so would gave "the southern Irish an object lesson in the value of the British connection...".

Put manners on them, so to speak...

However, it was a hot subject which politicians realised they could loose votes, support, pay and perks over, so they did what they always do, and what they continue to do : pass the buck - a committee of civil servants (not dependant on votes from the public ie 'the permanent government') was formed to deal with the issue!

That committee devised a complex arrangement which essentially gave a major financial underwriting, using British Exchequer funding, of Stormont's unemployment insurance fund (the 'Unemployment Insurance Act 1926 [Ireland]') and they also shortened parliamentary discussion time of the legislation as they were aware that their political bosses "would face a revolt from their own backbenchers who, despite economic hardship throughout Britain, were being told that prudence required continuing reductions in government spending..." yet here they were pumping much-needed money into their 'Irish project'!

A programme about oily, slippery political toads and hucksters comes to mind...

==========================







THE LAST WEEK IN DECEMBER 229 YEARS AGO IN IRELAND...



Bad weather prevented French troops from landing in Bantry Bay , Cork, Ireland in 1796.

Near the end of December in 1796, Wolfe Tone arrived in Bantry Bay, Cork, with French General Hoche and a fleet of thirty-five ships, carrying about 15,000 troops, but fog and other bad weather prevented them from landing.

Some of the ships sank, and a despondent Wolfe Tone recorded the following in his journal at that time -

"This damned fog continues without interruption.

I asked General Cherin what we should do in case they did not rejoin us.

He said that he supposed General Grouchy would take the command with the troops we had with us, which, on examination, we found to amount to about 6,500 men.

The Captain has opened a packet containing instructions for his conduct in case of separation, which order him to cruise for five days off Mizen Head and, at the end of that time, proceed to the mouth of the Shannon, where he is to remain three more, at the end of which time, if he does not see the fleet or receive further orders by a frigate, he is to make the best of his way back to Brest....".

On 21st December, this entry was recorded in his journal -

"There cannot be imagined a situation more provokingly tantalising than mine at this moment, within view, almost within reach of my native land, and uncertain whether I shall ever set foot in it.

We were near enough to toss a biscuit ashore..."

On the 26th, he wrote -

"We have now been six days in Bantry Bay, within 500 yards of the shore, without being able to effect a landing.

All our hopes are now reduced to getting back safely to Brest...".

The French armada was forced, by the weather, to return to France and an opportunity to change the history of this country and, likely enough, the on-going political conflict here, went with it.



























In December 1923, the Free State administration enacted a new law which it called 'The Loans and Fund Acts' as part of its strategy to get its foul hands on Irish republican funds.

Under this new law, the Staters assembled a list of those who had contributed to the Republican Loan Fund and contacted them, telling them that it was their intention to repay them with a 40% return on their investment.

But it wasn't the Staters money to make deals over ; it was raised by Irish republicans with a 32-County Ireland in mind, not a 26-County Free State within Ireland and, to rub salt into the wound, the Free State Minister for Finance (who was also the FS Minister for Local Government), a Mr Ernest Blythe (a republican-gamekeeper-turned-Free State-poacher) stated, in Leinster House (on the 13th December 1923)-

"If it had not been for the generosity and faith of the people who subscribed to the Loan, there would be no Free State today..."

Mr Blythe was gaslighting the people - as an ex-republican, he would have been aware that, as we stated above, that money was raised by Irish republicans with a 32-County Ireland in mind, not a 26-County Free State within Ireland.

A legal battle over the proper ownership of that fund continued until the 17th December, 1925, when the Free State Supreme Court ruled against a Mr Stephen O'Mara (pictured, one of the three trustees of the fund) and unanimously upheld the decision of a lower State court that the Free State government had the right to appoint new trustees to the fund (which had about £1,100,000 in its kitty).

But the Staters were still locked out from accessing the money, as the three (original) trustees (Éamon de Valera, Dr Michael Fogarty and Stephen O'Mara) refused and/or neglected to co-operate with the Free State court decision.

The legal tussle continued until, in February 1927, the Free State Supreme Court appointed a Mr William Norman to replace Mr de Valera as one of the three trustees and the Staters finally 'legally' raided the funds held in the Dáil Loan accounts.

Drochrath ort le caoi a bheith ort!

==========================







UP THE REPUBLIC - OUR DAY WILL COME !
NOLLAIG SHONA DAR LEITHEOIRI !







Ar eagle an dearmaid...



Ba bhrea an rud e siocháin bhuan bunaithe ar an gceart a bheith againn in Éireann. Is i an bronntanas is fearr a d'fheadfaimis a thabhairt duinn fein agus dar gclann.

Coinniodh an ceart agus an tsiocháin uainn le breis agus ocht gcead bliain, de bharr ionradh, forghabhail agus miriaradh na Sasanach. Socrú ar bith a dheantar in ainm mhuintir na hÉireann agus a ghlacann le riail Shasana agus a dhaingnionn an chriochdheighilt, ni thig leis an ceart na an tsiocháin bhuann a bhunu.

Ni dheanfaidh se ach la na siochána buaine a chur ar an mhear fhada agus an bhunfhadb a thabhairt do ghluin eile. Tharla se seo cheana nuair a siniodh Conradh 1921 agus cuireadh siar ar mhuintir na hÉireann e in ainm na siochána.

Éire a bheith saor agus daonlathach, an cuspoir ceanna a bhi i gceist ag Wolfe Tone agus ag na Poblachtaigh uile anuas go dti 1916 agus an la ata inniu ann.

Rinne a lan fear agus ban croga iobairti mora, thug a mbeatha fiu, ar son na cuise uaisle seo.

CEART. SAOIRSE. DAONLATHAS.



A PEACEFUL CHRISTMAS TO OUR READERS!

Least we forget...



A just and permanent peace in Ireland is most desirable. It is the greatest gift we could give to ourselves and our children.

We have been denied justice and peace for more than eight centuries, because of English invasion, occupation and misrule of our country.

Any arrangement which, in the name of the Irish people, accepts English rule and copperfastens the Border will not bring justice and lasting peace. It will only postpone the day of permanent peace, handing over the basic problem to another generation.

This happened before when the Treaty of 1921 was signed and was forced on the Irish people in the name of peace.

Irish republicans cherishes the objective of a free, democratic Ireland, as envisaged by Wolfe Tone and all republicans down to 1916 and our own day. Many brave men and women sacrificed a lot, even their lives, for this noble Cause.

JUSTICE. FREEDOM. DEMOCRACY.



Thanks for the visit, and for reading - it's appreciated by us.

Hope yis all have the craic over the Christmas and New Year, 'cause we're sure gonna... ; )

Sharon and the team.

(We'll be back on Wednesday, 7th January 2026 - now get outta here, will ya ; ya must have parcels to wrap...!)






Wednesday, May 28, 2025

RIC 'INSPECTOR GENERAL' - "MEMBERS UNFIT FOR SERVICE..."





















On the 28th May, 1919, the British Prime Minister, a Mr David Llyod George, opened a letter he had just received from a political colleague of his, a Mr Walter Hume Long (pictured, the '1st Viscount Long').

Mr Long expressed his opinion about on-going discussions in Westminster in relation to the pros and cons of declaring the then Sinn Féin organisation to be an illegal entity, and outlawing it.

Mr Long suggested strengthening the 'police force' (sic), the RIC, first, describing that outfit as "incompetent or worn out", especially, he said, the leadership of that grouping.

He specifically referenced the RIC 'Inspector General' (who was appointed in 1916), a Mr 'Sir' Joseph Aloysius Byrne who, he said, "...had lost his nerve and should be replaced.." (by a hardline RIC member from Belfast, a Mr TJ Smith) - Mr Byrne had initiated a policy of compulsory retirement of RIC members whom he considered "unfit for service", which didn't go down well in political or military circles in Westminster as it was precisely the "unfit for service" (ie 'the loose cannon')-types that they wanted to 'police' Ireland!

This issue was discussed between the politicians for a few months and, in early November (1919), the British 'Lord Lieutenant of Ireland', Field Marshal John Denton Pinkstone French ('1st Earl of Ypres, KP, GCB, OM, GCVO, KCMG, PC...' ETC ETC!) wrote to Mr 'Sir' Joseph Aloysius Byrne ordering him to take one month's leave "to rest himself" (Mr French could not actually sack the man, as that would require input from the British Treasury and there was no guarantee that Treasury management would agree with the move).

Mr Byrne assured all and sundry that he was grand (!) and sure he took the few weeks off anyway but, when he returned to work in early December, he found a Mr TJ Smith sitting behind his desk, the locks on which had been changed, as had Mr Byrne's career trajectory!

==========================







GAS LADS...















The massive finds of oil and gas on our western seaboard could ensure Ireland's financial security for generations.

Wealth approximating that of the Arab countries is within our grasp, but the Irish government seems content to sell off our birthright for a handful of votes and a few dollars.

In a special 'Magill' report, Sandra Mara investigates just what we are giving away, and why.

From 'Magill' magazine, March 2002.

Again, no one can blame the oil companies ; they are in the business of making profits and if a government facilitates them in this, they would be failing in their responsibilities to their shareholders not to take advantage of it.

Mike Cunningham is a former director of 'Statoil Exploration (Ireland) Ltd', and has wide experience in off-shore exploration and production and, in particular, the acreage off the western coast of Ireland.

A former chairman of the IOOA's Environmental Committee and former chair of its Labour Relations Committee, Mike Cunningham, now an independent oil and gas consultant, told 'Magill' magazine that no other country in the world has given such favourable terms as Ireland.

Following the 1992 concessions when royalties were abolished and oil and gas companies were given a 100% write-off against development and recovery costs, the tax rate was reduced from 35% to 25%...

(MORE LATER.)

























On the night of Saturday, 3rd April 1920, the IRA attacked the RIC barracks in Carbury, County Kildare but, although unsuccessful in their endeavours to destroy the building on the night, they did succeed in destroying the moral of the enemy forces who were housed there.

Between requested transfers and orders from their bosses in Dublin, the barracks was soon abandoned because, now that it was known to be 'of interest' to the IRA, the enemy forces knew that the rebels would be back.

And back they were - on the night of the 28th May/early morning of the 29th, the IRA returned and destroyed the building, making it uninhabitable, as they had done with British and other pro-British outposts in the Kildare area, in Maynooth, Rathangan, Castledermot and Ballinonlert (between Rathangan and Clonbullogue).

Destroying enemy outposts and enemy moral in the one operation - good tactics!

==========================







THE NUMBER'S UP...











How some famous gambling conspiracies came to light.

By Con Houlihan.

From 'Magill' Magazine Annual 2002.

At about the same time, another assault on the bookmakers hit the headlines - the 'Yellow Sam Affair'.

A horse of that name was backed in the betting shops to win a race in Bellewstown, County Meath, a course with no phoneline to the outside world.

There was a public phone a little distance away but it was manned and womanned so that no message could get through ; 'Yellow Sam' trotted up, and the bookies paid up.

The operation had the virtue of simplicity, it was a plot of a different colour, and the man at its centre had spent several years studying for the priesthood (his training wasn't wasted!).

He was a professional ; he didn't do it for the craic.

(END of 'The Number's Up' : NEXT - 'Cash No Excuse For RTE Putting Documentary To Death', from the same source.)

























In January 1916, while taking part in an 'Irish Volunteers' revolver practice class, Volunteer Thomas Wilmot was accidentally severely wounded and was brought to Drogheda Memorial Hospital (near the Curragh Camp) but the incident and the hospital visit were not 'officially' recorded, as the British 'authorities' would have shown an interest.

Volunteer Wilmot was attended to by a Dr. Laurence Rowan, who was a medical officer with the Republican Movement, and the rebel was soon back in action, in defence of his country.

He witnessed, in early 1921, the British military opening an internment camp (Rath Camp) for Irish republicans at the Curragh and, indeed, was one of the first Volunteers to see that dreadful structure from the inside - on the 28th May that year he was 'arrested' by the Crown Forces and imprisoned there.

Volunteer Wilmot was released (as were all the republican internees) in December (1921) after the 'Treaty of Surrender' was signed by Michael Collins and his people and was approached by the Staters to accept an 'Officer Commission' from them and, like all good Irishmen and women, refused the offer and continued his work on behalf of the Republican Movement.

Incidentally, Volunteer Thomas Wilmot was also a member of the GAA, the Gaelic League and the ITGWU, as were his near-neighbours Mr Matthew Cardiff and Mr John Lee, who were 'arrested' with him by the British on the same date (28th May 1921) and held in Rath Camp.

And on their way to detain the above-mentioned three Irishmen, the Crown Forces would have more than likely took timber planks from Rath Camp and loaded them into their trucks, as that material was required to drive over the trenches that the IRA had dug into roads in the Kildare area, to impede their ability to travel in and around the county.

Also, on the 28th, telegraph poles were knocked down in the Gormanstown and Kilcullen areas, presenting enemy forces as targets as they attempted to remove the blockages ; indeed, according to ascertained British Military records, in the four weeks ending May 28th (1921), 76 of their operatives were killed, and 106 wounded.

Those records were later adjusted to show that, between the beginning of May that year and the middle of July, 114 RIC members and 48 British Army soldiers were shot dead in Ireland.

While the IRA were blocking roads in Kildare on the 28th, eight armed IRA Volunteers in Cork were knocking on the front door of the Fitzgerald house in the Ballysheehan area of Mallow, County Cork.

When the door was opened, two brothers - Thomas and Henry* - were told they had been tasked with 'trenching a road' and were instructed to leave now with the IRA ASU, which they did.

The two brothers didn't know it then, but the IRA Intelligence Department had linked them with the near-capture of Volunteer Thomas Hunter, from Castletownroche, near Fermoy, in County Cork, that same month, after which Henry Fitzgerald had somehow acquired £75 to purchase a horse and a car.

The bodies of both men were found shortly afterwards near the Cork village of Killavullen ; they had been executed as spies.

(* Henry Fitzgerald was an ex-member of the British Army 'Royal Fusiliers' Battalion, Service Number 102762)

















On that same date (the 28th May 1921), other Cork Volunteers (attached to the 'Flying Column' of the 3rd Cork Brigade IRA, pictured) maintained the ambush position they had secured on the 27th, which covered about 360 meters (four hundred yards in total) outside the village of Gloundaw (between Dunmanway and Drimoleague) on high ground, all of whom were armed with rifles.

It had been arranged that Volunteers from the Drimoleague Company would ambush the RIC in that village, in order to draw the British Auxiliaries and other military/paramilitary enemy forces out from Dunmanway and into the IRA ambush position, but no reinforcements were sent to aid their RIC colleagues.

The ambush squad withdrew from the area on the evening of the 28th.

The body of "a weak-minded drifter", a Mr Daniel McCarthy, was found near the Post Office in the Cork village of Ovens on the 28th ; he had been shot nine times and a notice was pinned to his body -

'Spies And Informers Beware.

IRA.'

Mr McCarthy had been observed, more than once, conversing with British military figures in the town of Ballincollig and, when 'arrested' by the RIC on a misdemeanour charge, was placed in detention with IRA prisoners in Ballincollig British Army Barracks.

The IRA POW's spent about three weeks in his company, in detention, before sending out word to their comrades that he was not to be trusted and, upon his release, he was arrested near the Lee Cinema in Patrick Street in Cork by Volunteers attached to the 3rd Battalion of the Cork No. 1 Brigade.

He was taken in a horse and cart to the village of Kilumney and handed over to Volunteers Leo Murphy, Dick Murphy and others, held and questioned for a few weeks and then taken from there to the village of Ovens where he was shot dead.

On the same date that Mr McCarthy's body was found in Cork, the IRA in Dublin staged an attack at the corner of Saint Stephens Green and Cuffe Street on two British military Crossely Tender trucks which were transporting enemy troops (attached to 'C Company').

An IRA Volunteer, Leonard Fox, was captured in Saint Stephen's Green and a civilian, a Mr Joseph Miller, was wounded in the ensuing gun battle ; he died from his wounds on the 3rd June.

RIP Joseph Miller.

















Back in Cork, on the 28th, Volunteer Diarmuid Hurley (pictured), Officer Commanding of the Active Service Unit attached to the Cork Number 1 Brigade, was shot dead in the townland of Carrigogna by the RIC "while trying to escape".

Volunteer Hurley was buried secretly by his comrades the next day in a tomb at North Churchtown Cemetery, about two miles east of Middleton, on the highway to Youghal, in County Cork.

RIP Volunteer Diarmuid Hurley.

On the same day that enemy forces executed Volunteer Hurley, an elderly Irish woman, a Mrs Mary Foley (aged in her late seventies), was shot dead by a foreign soldier in Waterford, about 80 miles (130km) away.

"A woman named Mrs Foley, aged nearly 80, was shot at Carriglea, near Dungarvan, by a man in a military or police lorry while she was gathering sticks by the riverside ; whether an inquiry has been held; and what reason is given for the killing of this woman...whether he is aware that a woman named Mrs. Foley, aged nearly 80, was shot at Carriglea, near Dungarvan, by a man in a military or police lorry while she was gathering sticks by the riverside ; whether an inquiry has been held ; and what reason is given for the killing of this inoffensive woman...?"

(From here.)

Mrs Mary Foley and two of her grandchildren were gathering firewood by the side of a river on the 28th May 1921 when a passing British military patrol opened fire on them.

The poor woman died shortly afterwards from her wounds but, thankfully, the children were not injured.

The inscription on Mrs Foley's memorial stone reads -

"Saighdúirí Sasana do lámaidh í agus í ag bailiúghadh brosna."

("English soldiers murdered her while she was gathering firewood.")















"The deceased was arrested while on Volunteer duty in May, 1921, and was ill treated, was sentenced to six months hard labour by Courtmartial while in Prison in Spike Island, health was neglected..."

The deceased mentioned above is Volunteer/Scout William Creedon, from Sleaveen West, Macroom, in County Cork.

Volunteer/Scout Creedon had been tasked by 'A Company' of the Macroom Battalion of the Cork Number 1 Brigade to monitor a bridge near the farm where he worked as a labourer, as the IRA were aware that at least two British soldiers would regularly meet-up with their girlfriends on the bridge, and the IRA also wanted to meet-up with the two armed thugs.

The British soldiers, however - living on their nerves, as usual - noticed William Creedon's presence and they 'arrested' him on the 28th May (1921) and forced him back to their base in Macroom Castle, where they battered him to the extent that his abdomen started swelling.

It might have been awkward for them had Volunteer/Scout Creedon died in their custody, so they transferred him to Spike Island Internment Camp, where his condition further deteriorated, prompting his removal to Cork Military Hospital in Victoria Barracks, where he died on the 2nd July 1921.

RIP Volunteer/Scout William Creedon.

















"The Frocks are, I verily believe, going to allow me to send over all the troops that I have got in England to Ireland..."

- a note gleefully written by 'Sir' Henry Wilson (pictured), the British Army military commander in Ireland (and political advisor to Westminster), to the British military attaché in Paris, on the 28th May, 1921.

It took him about six weeks to organise it, but between the 14th June and the 7th July, 17 battalions of British troops were sent to Ireland bringing the number of British troops in this country to 60,000.

And today, 28th May 2025, there are at least 1,500 (acknowledged) British Army soldiers in our six north-eastern counties, assisting pro-British 'police forces' the RUC/PSNI and the Free State AGS, State army, politicians and judiciary to enforce and uphold the British claim of political and military jurisdictional control over those six Irish counties.

Ireland unfree shall never be at peace.

==========================







DEATH IN THE MEDITERRANEAN...















Desmond Boomer, a Belfast engineer working in the Libyan oil-fields, disappeared seven years ago.

Officially, the plane on which he was a passenger crashed as a result of mechanical failure and pilot error.

But is that the real story?

Or were the Irishman and his fellow passengers unwitting victims of the shady war between Islamic fundamentalism and Mossad, Israel's intelligence network?

A special 'Magill' investigation by Don Mullan, author of 'Eyewitness Bloody Sunday'.

From 'Magill' magazine, January 2003.

Desmond Boomer was en route home to Belfast for his Christmas holidays when he disappeared.

There are three possible explanations -

Firstly, that the light aircraft, which had experienced serious mechanical difficulties on its outbound flight from Malta, was irresponsibly flown into a raging Mediterranean storm by its experienced pilot and crashed off the coast of Tunisia, that Desmond Boomer and his travelling companions were abducted by Islamic fundamentalists and may still be alive or - and this possible explanation cannot be easily dismissed - all five passengers were in the wrong place at the wrong time when Islamic fundamentalists arrived to exact revenge on a marked man, the pilot, Carmelo Bartolo...

(MORE LATER.)





























In late May 1922 - after the Treaty of Surrender had been signed, and with the approval of Michael Collins, the chief signatory of that foul document - 55 Free State Army troops and 31 IRA Volunteer soldiers joined forces and 'put it up' to Westminster (and to the politicians in Leinster House) by 'occupying', as the British claimed to see it, two towns which straddled the border between the Free State and the Occupied Six Counties.

The 'incident' became know as 'The Battle of Pettigo And Belleek', which are the two towns referenced, and it's notable as the last time that both the Free State Army and IRA forces fought alongside each other against the invasive British military and political presence in Ireland.

The rebels held out for about two weeks against a better armed and supported enemy force, comprising military might and a vichy-type 'local civilian committee', and marked the first occasion since the signing of the Treaty Of Surrender when part of the so-called 'Free State' was occupied - without the consent of Leinster House - by an external power.

Today, 103 years later, Free State politicians are again occupied - financially, morally and spiritually - this time by a 'Woke' mindset favouring the EU, the WHO and the WEF, but with their own consent.

However, we digress : you can read more about this 'Irish military invasion of Ireland' here...

Meanwhile, about 100 miles (160 km) down the road in Dublin, on the 28th May (1922), the IRA caught up with an RIC member, a Mr William Leech, whose name had being brought to their attention in relation to the killings in Limerick of nationalist/republican political figures.

The RIC man's routine showed that he walked, with his girlfriend, down what was then Great Brunswick Street (now Pearse Street) in Dublin, towards Westland Row Railway Station, between 10pm and 10.30pm, on a Sunday and, on the last Sunday in May, 1922, he took his last walk along that route ; the IRA shot him dead.















On the 28th May, 1922, sixty-four members of the pro-British 'Special Constabulary' organisation found themselves under military siege by the IRA in their base at Magheramenagh Castle (pictured) near Belleek, in County Fermanagh.

Reinforcements were begged for by the trapped Crown Forces and a convoy of five Crossley Tender trucks, carrying 'A Specials', from the town of Garrison, in County Tyrone, was dispatched to their location.

As the convoy was passing through the town of Belleek, on the Donegal-Tyrone border, it was ambushed by the IRA and at least one 'A Special' paramilitary, a Mr Albert Thomas Rickerby, was shot dead during the gun battle, which lasted several hours.

The 'A Special' reinforcements then withdrew from the area, skedaddling back to their base, and their 'house arrested' (!) comrades in the castle loaded themselves on to a few boats and legged it (!) to Boa Island in Lough Erne.

While sheltering from the nasty rebels on Boa Island, about 100 'Special' reinforcements arrived to keep them company, least they should feel lonely and dejected...

On the same date that pro-British forces were comforting each other on Boa Island, a Mr James Kelly and his wife, Honoria, were standing outside their house in the village of Sonnagh, near Charlestown, in County Mayo, having a heated discussion about politics with their neighbour, a Mr Michael McIntyre, the son of an anti-Treaty County Councillor, a Mr John McIntyre.

Mr McIntyre aimed his shotgun at the couple and fired, hitting Mrs Kelly in the face, neck and chest.

The poor woman died within fifteen minutes.

RIP Mrs Honoria Kelly.

==========================





























"The dumping of arms does not mean that the usefulness of the IRA is past, or release any member of it from his duty to his country.

On the contrary, it is clearly our duty to maintain the Army Organisation intact.

Discipline must be maintained, reports returned, and officers must do their utmost to safeguard their men and get them back to their civilian work.

No man must leave Ireland unless ordered by GHQ to do so..."

-Mr Francis Thomas Aiken (pictured), the new IRA Chief of Staff (and a republican-gamekeeper-turned-Free State-poacher) in a memo he released to IRA Officers on the 28th May, 1923.

Three years after he wrote those words, he assisted in the foundation of the anti-republican 'Fianna Fáil' grouping ; so much for his 'duty to Irish republicanism...'

==========================

Thanks for reading - and have ya noticed that we're heading for 2 million hits?!

Sure you knew us when we had nuthin'...!

Sharon and the team.