Showing posts with label Liam Early. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Liam Early. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 17, 2024

FROM 1922 - THE BLIND EYES OF "FAIR-MINDED BLAMELESS MEN".

ON THIS DATE (17TH JANUARY) 52 YEARS AGO - POW DEEP DIVE...!

52 years ago on this date (17th January 1972), seven IRA prisoners escaped from an 'escape proof' British prison ship, which was anchored in Irish waters : the ship had three decks, the top one of which was sometimes used as an 'exercise yard' for a few hours each day by the republican POW's, with the other two 'converted' into living quarters.

Approximately 850 people were present on the ship at any one time, consisting of around 700 British military personnel and 150 prisoners, including Provisional and Official IRA members and some others that were not involved with either group.

James Emerson Bryson, Tommy Tolan, Thomas Kane, Tommy Gorman, Peter Rodgers, Martin Taylor and Sean Convery, a group of Irish republicans that became known as 'The Magnificent Seven' because of the nature of their escape from the Maidstone prison ship (pictured) on January 17th, 1972, were determined that their 'stay' on the ship would be a short one.

Of the 226 men detained following the introduction of internment in August 1971, 124 were initially held in Crumlin Road Jail while the remainder were held on the Maidstone, a prison ship moored at the coalwharf in Belfast docks. The prison ship, used as an emergency billet for British troops who arrived in 1969, was totally unsuitable as a prison - it was cramped, stuffy and overcrowded, with the 'lock-up' section located at the stern below the deck, which was used twice a day for exercise.

On January 16th, 1972 , fifty men were transferred from the ship to the new camp at Magilligan : this sudden move spurred on some of the internees who were planning to escape.

One of the group had spotted a seal slip through a gap in the barbed-wire draped around the ship and it was decided that if the seal could come in, then they could go out!

The men used black boot polish to camouflage themselves and smeared each other in butter, to keep out the cold. They had already cut through a bar in a porthole which they now slipped through, and clambered down the Maidstone's steel hawser and entered the water.

Several of them were badly cut by the barbed-wire, but they all managed to get through it. In single file, they swam the 400 yards through the ice-cold floodlit water to the shore : it took them twenty minutes, as some of the men could not swim and had to be helped by the others. On the bank, Volunteers of the Andersonstown Unit of the IRA's Belfast Brigade were waiting with four cars to transport the escapees to safety, but the escapees landed at the wrong spot, approximately 500 yards away.

The men realised their mistake and made their way to Queen's Road bus terminus where they commandeered a bus and drove across the city to the Markets area. During the journey, the bus was spotted by a British Army Land Rover which attempted to stop the vehicle ; however, the British soldiers backed-off when the bus entered the staunchly republican Markets district, which was then quickly surrounded by British reinforcements.

A search of the area was carried out by the British Army and RUC, but none of the escapees were found - the 'Magnificent Seven' were long gone to a different part of Belfast and, days later, gave a press conference in Dublin.

That 'deep dive' by Irish republican POW's took place on the 17th January 1972 - 52 years ago on this date.









'On April 4th, 1919, Michael Collins’s motion to Dáil Éireann to approve a £250,000 Dáil loan was approved.

Nothing was left to chance by the newly appointed minister of finance to ensure the success of the first Dáil loan and to fund the counter-state government that had been set up when the first Dáil met in January 1919.

Two million promotional leaflets and 500,000 copies of the prospectus were printed and distributed. More than 50,000 letters were sent to high-net-worth individuals. Full-page newspaper advertisements were budgeted, and €30,000 in today’s money was spent on a promotional film...' (From here.)

On the 17th January, 1920, Mr Collins and his Dáil Loan team, aware that interference by the British had effected the true potential of the 'Loan' to raise funds, issued a public circular announcing that the scheme had been extended until the 1st May 1920 and, on that same date (17th January 1920), the initiative was launched in America by Éamon de Valera, where about $5.5m was raised and just under £400,000 was raised in Ireland.

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







'SINN FÉIN NOTES...'

From 'The United Irishman' newspaper, April 1955.



CORK...

CUMANN BRIAN DIOLUN.

The activities of the Brian Dillon Cumann, Cork, augur well for the future of the organisation in the St Patrick's Parish area of the city.

The Cumann is also contemplating the formation of a Dramatic Group to promote amateur dramatics of a national and cultural background among its members and the organisation in general.

During the last few weeks the Cumann has had the pleasure to listen to two well-delivered lectures, one on John Mitchel, by Domhnall O Cathain, in which he dealt with the life of Mitchel and the part he played in the struggle for complete separation from England.

The other lecturer, Liam Early, gave a detailed and concise lecture on 'The Primary Objectives Of Sinn Féin', in which he traced the objectives of Sinn Féin since its inception up to the present day, and all members joined in the subsequent discussions.

Various and interesting motions have been forwarded to the next meeting of the Comhairle Ceanntair, covering a wide range of activities which include the forthcoming Local Government Elections, house-to-house collections, the Sinn Féin social and economic programme and the invitation of speakers from the Ard Comhairle to speak to the Cumann...

(MORE LATER.)









On the 17th January, 1921, the British Labour Party launched its campaign for 'Peace in Ireland' at a meeting in Manchester, which was just one such meeting in a series of about 500 overall, in various cities in England, Scotland and Wales.



One of the organisers, Arthur Greenwood, at the Manchester meeting, told the audience that "Manchester under German rule would be like Cork or Dublin under British rule today", but that level of support was absent from the higher level in British politics ; Llyod George jeered at the "Bolshevists and Sinn Féiners and faddists and cranks..." who were organising and attending those meetings.

However, within months of his jeer, Mr George himself was negotiating with those same "Bolshevists and Sinn Féiners and faddists and cranks..."!

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



During the on-going campaign against Westminster interference in Irish political affairs, the fort on Spike Island in County Cork was the largest British military run prison for republican prisoners and internees in the 'Martial Law' area.

During 1921‚ approximately 300 prisoners and 900 internees were imprisoned there and a headcount carried out by the British, on the 17th January, 1921, gave a figure of 1,478 internees altogether at that point in time.

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



On the 17th January, 1921, 25-year-old RIC member Robert Boyd ('Enlisted Number 708233'), from Banbridge, in County Down, was drinking a glass of stout in Margaret Moran's pub in Cappawhite, in County Tipperary.

The political atmosphere 'on the ground' was tense, as the death of Cork republican Terence James MacSwiney (Toirdhealbhach Mac Suibhne), a well-respected political and military activist, had occurred, at the hands of the British, on the 25th October 1920.

Four IRA Volunteers - P. English ('B' Company), J. Fitzpatrick ('C' Company) J. Ryan and O. Aherne (both from 'D' Company) entered the pub, approached the RIC man and shot him dead.

Mrs Moran's niece was hit in the leg by a ricochet.

Later that day, the RIC and their colleagues in the British Army burned down two business premises in Cappawhite.

Also on that same date (17th January 1921), an RIC car coming from the direction of Sixmilebridge was ambushed at Clonloun Cross, in County Clare.

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



British Army Private Alfred John Blitchford Williams (aged 18, 'Enlistment Number' 5373728) of the First Battalion, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry Regiment, based at Ballyvonare Military Camp, Buttevant, County Cork, died as the result of a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the abdomen, on the 17th January, 1921, while he was said to be "temporarily insane".

He is buried in St John's Churchyard at Buttevant.

He was born in 1903 in Cornwall, England, and died, with no family member present, in a foreign country, as a teenager, in 1921. Sad.



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







ON THIS DATE (17TH JANUARY) 193 YEARS AGO : 'SLAP-DOWN' SCRIPT FOR IRISH 'PET REBEL' APPROVED.

Daniel O'Connell ('The Liberator', pictured) never claimed to be an Irish republican despite involving himself in an issue which, then as now, required a republican solution in order to obtain a just resolution.

Although he campaigned on behalf of those who suffered as a result of injustices inflicted by Westminster, he made it clear that it was his desire that Ireland should remain as a unit governed by the British 'Monarchy' - saying, if you like - 'stay if you want, just treat us better'.

He had publicly and repeatedly vowed to work within 'the law' - British 'law'.

The only force to be used, he stated, was "moral force", but even this was too much of a demand for Westminster - 'Sir' Robert Peel (the then British Prime Minister) replied that to 'grant' O'Connell his way "would not merely mean the repeal of an Act of (British) Parliament, but dismemberment of a great Empire. Deprecating as I do all war but above all, civil war, yet there is no alternative which I do not think preferable to the dismemberment of Empire.." In other words - 'thus far, O'Connell, but no further'.

His subservience to British 'law' could have been used against him at any time and, in December 1830, that's what happened : he was one of a group of 'troublemakers' that were rounded-up for questioning in connection with meetings/assemblage of a type which had been forbidden by the British 'Lord Lieutenant of Ireland' - Westminster was 'jittery' regarding its political position in Ireland due, in the main, to four issues : corn (availability and price of), currency devaluations, the overall banking system and the 'catholic problem' ; this period in our history witnessed the beginning of 'an Cogadh na nDeachúna' - the 'Tithe War', and also heralded in catholic unrest in Belgium and Poland.

Westminster would not allow such actions to gather pace here, if it could help it, and so it was that, on the 17th January, 1831, the final 'Charge Sheet' against Mr O'Connell was presented to, and approved by, British 'legal eagles'.

The following day (18th January 1831), Daniel O'Connell was charged on 31 counts (14 of which were for 'violating the Suppression Act of 10 George IV 1829', to which O'Connell pleaded guilty) including 'conspiracy', and was arrested, fined 2,000 pounds and imprisoned for one year.

He served three months, mostly because the '1829 Acts' expired in April that year and those imprisoned under it were released by default. Westminster had 'boxed clever' - it had been seen to 'punish offenders' but not to the extent where the offender would become radicalised due to the severity of the punishment, a trick it performs to this day on those Irish people who consider themself to be 'radicals'!









In a report to Winston Churchill's 'Provisional Government of Ireland Committee' regarding the 'Ulster Special Constabulary', presented on the 17th January, 1922, it was recommended to stop funding the 'Specials' "at the earliest date that is legal or possible".



That advice wasn't given because Westminster was suddenly concerned that the vicious actions of their 'Special' forces in Ireland was bringing them into further disrepute, but rather because the 'buck' could now be passed.

On the 9th November, 1921, responsibility for 'security measures' (!) in the Occupied Six Counties had been transferred from Westminster to the puppet/Stormont regime in Belfast, and they were being told that it was now also their responsibility to finance their own 'security'!

'Mammy Bear' was hacking at the apron strings, and is still hacking at them...

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



On the 17th January, 1922, British Army General 'Sir' Cecil Frederick Nevil Macready (pictured), 1st Baronet, GCMG, KCB, PC ETC ETC (!) issued a 'Special Order of the Day' to all under his command -

"While I feel there is no desire on the part of the army to rake up past animosities or bitterness, you have been called upon to perform a duty in many respects repugnant to our traditions, and devoid of all the glamour of war, though in many ways entailing greater strain and greater individual danger...the Government having decided that the time has arrived to commence withdrawing troops from Ireland...you, officers and men, have accomplished the most difficult task that any soldier can be called upon to undertake and you have emerged with your discipline unshaken and your conduct in the eyes of all fair-minded men blameless.

When history is written you will find that by your pluck, vigilance and discipline, you have contributed no inconsiderable share towards what we hope may prove eventually to be the settled peace and prosperity of Ireland..."

The arrogance of the man, and of that which he represented ; his upper lip was so stiff that it evidently covered his eyes and his ears.

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







IRELAND ON THE COUCH...



A Psychiatrist Writes.

'Magill' commissioned Professor Patricia Casey to compile an assessment of Irish society at what may emerge as the end of a period of unprecedented growth and change.

This is her report.

From 'Magill Magazine' Annual, 2002.



Stating that life is sacred from conception until natural death will stimulate chants of "hypocrisy" or "misogyny", as it recently did in Dail Éireann (sic).

Comments by Cardinal Connell about the theological prowess of one of his Church of Ireland colleagues reported in a book led to exhaustive media coverage, and comments in the same book by a senator - an icon of liberal Ireland - that the Pope was "an instrument for evil" received scarcely a mention from our national broadcaster, nor from the 'paper of record' (The Irish Times), even though his view could be interpreted as insulting at best and possibly sectarian.

So in modern Ireland, certain issues are deemed out of bounds for public discussion by our politically correct elite, and those who attempt to raise them are branded, often, as fundamentalists...

(MORE LATER.)







ON THIS DATE (17TH JANUARY) 102 YEARS AGO : DUBLIN UNEMPLOYED GROUP PREPARE TO OCCUPY LANDMARK BUILDING.



On the 17th January, 1922, the Dublin-based 'Council of Unemployed' held a meeting to finalise their protest to highlight their grievances and the lack of address by the 'authorities' to same :

'On January 18th 1922, a group of unemployed Dublin workers seized the concert hall of the Rotunda. 'The Irish Times' of the following day noted that '..the unemployed in Dublin have seized the concert room at the Rotunda, and they declare that they will hold that part of the building until they are removed, as a protest against the apathy of the authorities...a 'garrison', divided into 'companies', each with its 'officers', has been formed, and from one of the windows the red flag flies..'

Liam O'Flaherty, as chairman of the 'Council of Unemployed', spoke to the paper about the refusal of the men to leave the premises, stating that no physical resistance would be put up against the police and that the protest was a peaceful one, yet they intended to stay where they were -"If we were taken to court, we would not recognise the court, because the Government that does not redress our grievances is not worth recognising.." O'Flaherty told the Times...' (more here.)

Rather than 'tackle' (occupy, in this case) symptoms of the disease (ie the Rotunda Hall and other 'Establishment' venues), the actual disease itself should be 'tackled', providing those doing so have no apparent embarrassing baggage.







ON THIS DATE (17TH JANUARY) 90 YEARS AGO : LAST FULL DAY ON EARTH FOR AN IRISH NATIONALIST LEADER.

In October of 1920, a Mr. John Robert Clynes of the British Labour Party voiced his concern, in Westminster, that the British Government were "..arming the Orangemen (to) police their Catholic neighbours..." in the Six County 'State', while Joe Devlin ('United Irish League' - UIL) [pictured] pointed out that 300 of the 'Special Constables' from the Lisburn area had already "resigned in protest" because their "fellow Constables" would not stop looting their (Catholic) neighbours!

Mr. Devlin stated - "The Protestants are to be armed. Their pogrom is to be made less difficult. Instead of paving stones and sticks they are to be given rifles."

Joe Devlin led a busy life - a barman and journalist at the start of his working life, he was elected as a 'Home Rule MP' (British Parliament) for North Kilkenny in 1902, at 31 years young, and held his seat until 1906, when he was elected again, this time for the West Belfast area.

He was that area's representative in Westminster until 1922 ; he acted as General Secretary for the 'United Irish League' (UIL)/Home Rule Party', from 1904 to 1920, and was also involved with the 'Ancient Order of Hibernians' when, at 34 years of age, he served as the 'National President' of that organisation, a position he held for 29 years (!), during which time he forged links between the 'AOH' and the 'United Irish League'.

He first took a seat in Stormont in 1921 (at 50 years of age, and stayed there until 1934) ; in 1928 he founded, and chaired, the 'National League of the North'. Incidentally, he was not related to Bernadette Devlin or Paddy Devlin.

The 'Irish News' newspaper wrote the following piece the day after Joe Devlin died -

"It is with feelings of the most profound sorrow that we record the death of Mr Joseph Devlin, MP...his own people, like many others, were driven from the country by the conditions of the times into the growing city of Belfast, and lived in humble circumstances in the West Division. A little household typical of thousands where life was a daily struggle to avert poverty, and where the youngest were expected to do their share, was the home of his early years...like the majority of the Catholic youth of Belfast at that period, he left school early to take his part in the battle of life...Speaking of him, Mr John Redmond M.P., said: "Mr Devlin's career has been a proud one for Ireland. It has been more than that – it has been a hopeful one for Ireland. Few public careers in the last century have been so rapid as the career of Mr Devlin. He today holds a foremost position in the public life of our country, and if I were asked to explain the reason, in my opinion, for the rapidity and success of his career, I would say that its success and rapidity have been due to the combination of several great qualities – superb debating power and dauntless courage, combined with a cautious mind and a cool judgement ; transparent honesty and enthusiasm combined with an absolutely untiring industry; perfect loyalty to his leader for the time being, to his comrades, and to his Party – combined, let me say, with a modest and lovable disposition...".

At the General Election of 1906 Mr Devlin was elected by a majority of 16...there was an indescribable outburst of enthusiasm when the figures were announced. Angered by the rout of the Tory, a mob of Unionists, who had been expecting the defeat of Mr Devlin and had come to the Courthouse on the Crumlin Road, where the votes were counted, with drums, bands and banners to celebrate the event, gave full expression in the usual manner to their chagrin.

As Mr Devlin MP was descending the steps of the Courthouse, surrounded by his friends, a police inspector advised him not to leave that way. Mr Devlin's response was characteristic. "I am not going to sneak out by the back way." He then proceeded down the steps in face of the mob, and one of the police, realising his undaunted courage, shouted for fair play for Mr Devlin. The West was truly awake that night ; it was Belfast's night of jubilation, in which old and young came out to expression to the joy they felt at the triumph of their fellow citizen – a man who later was destined to plead their cause all over the civilised world.

The historic division that night was ablaze with bonfires and illuminations, and the dawn had broken before the people retired to rest..."

Joe Devlin died young, at 63 years of age, on Thursday, the 18th January 1934 - 90 years ago tomorrow.







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.)

'WHY WE WANT RECRUITS'.

(Padraic H. Pearse, May 1915.)

"We want recruits because we have undertaken a service which we believe to be of vital importance to our country, and because that service needs whatever there is of manly stuff in Ireland in order to do its effective rendering.

We want recruits because we have a standard to rally them to.

It is not a new standard raised for the first time by the men of a new generation. It is an old standard which has been borne by many generations of Irish men, which has gone into many battles, which has looked down upon much glory and upon much sorrow ; which has been a sign to be contradicted, but which shall yet shine as a star.

There is no other standard in the world so august as the standard we bear ; and it is the only standard which the men of Ireland may bear without abandoning their ancient allegiance. Individual Irishmen have sometimes fought under other standards : Ireland as a whole has never fought under any other.

We want recruits because we have a faith to give them and a hope with which to inspire them. They are a faith and a hope which have been handed down from generation to generation of Irish men and women unto this last..."

(MORE LATER.)













"it is merely a question of whether at some stage of the descent of Ireland into anarchy and chaos the British Government will step in. If Ireland is to be left to its own devices, it is an ugly sore and in the end may poison the whole body of the Empire..."

That quote is taken from a letter that its author, Charles Stewart Henry Vane-Tempest-Stewart, 7th Marquess of Londonderry (sic), KG, MVO, PC, PC ETC ETC (!) - 'Lord Londonderry' (pictured) - sent to Winston Churchill, on the 17th January, 1923.

If Westminster had only left Ireland "to its own devices", and not interfered here, politically and militarily as, indeed, it continues to do in six of our counties, we wouldn't be such "an ugly sore".

The so-called 'British Empire' claimed jurisdictional control over at least 56 countries, all of which it "poisoned" in one form or another.

Mr Charles Stewart Henry Vane-Tempest-Stewart died, at the age of 70, in 1949, in County Down, from a stroke. His body, like his mind and morality, was 'poisoned', you could say...

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

Thanks for the visit, and for reading.

Sharon and the team.

We won't be here next Wednesday [24th] or the following week, or the...!

Myself and the rest of the Girl Gang were Christmas-gifted an all-expenses paid holiday to Spain by our families [including a few bob spending money!] and we'll be heading over there within the next week, and staying until mid-February. The two lads said they'd keep the blog going but the three of us then decided that we'd all take a break and get back to business here, refreshed, sometime in February.

I'll still be on 'X' and Facebook, and sure I might even post a few pics of the five of us on the beach...!

So take care, y'all - off now to do some packing ; sun-cream oil, bikinis, sun hats, sunglasses...all the stuff you won't need, y'know...!





Wednesday, April 21, 2021

THE FIRST CASUALTIES OF THE 1916 EASTER RISING.

ON THIS DATE (21ST APRIL) 146 YEARS AGO : IRISH HOME-RULER ELECTED TO WESTMINSTER.

Charles Stewart Parnell (pictured) was born on the 27th June, 1846, in Avondale, in County Wicklow, and became associated with the 'Irish Home Rule' organisation. He proved to be a thorn in the side of British injustice to the extent that he was once described in British political circles as "...combining in his person all the unlovable qualities of an Irish member with the absolute absence of their attractiveness...something really must be done about him...he is always at a white heat or rage and makes with savage earnestness fancifully ridiculous statements.."

On the 21st April, 1875 - 146 years ago on this date - the then 29-year-old C.S. Parnell was first elected to the British Parliament as MP for County Meath ; he kept his seat for that constituency for five years, and then moved to represent County Cork. He was generally 'well got' in political circles but was also looked at in a somewhat wary fashion by some of his own people as he was a Protestant 'Landlord' who 'owned' about 5,000 acres of land in County Wicklow and his parents were friends of and, indeed, in some cases, related to, the local Protestant 'gentry'.

He supported the 'Boycott' campaign and, in one of his many speeches, stated - "Now what are you to do with a tenant who bids for a farm from which his neighbour has been evicted? Now I think I heard somebody say 'Shoot him!', but I wish to point out a very much better way, a more Christian and more charitable way...when a man takes a farm from which another had been evicted you must shun him on the roadside when you meet him, you must shun him in the streets of the town, you must shun him in the shop, you must shun him in the fairgreen and in the marketplace, and even in the place of worship, by leaving him alone, by putting him in a moral Coventry, by isolating him from the rest of his country as if he were the leper of old, you must show your detestation of the crime he has committed..".

However, in his early 40's, he was brought down by a 'crime' he himself committed - he took-up with a married woman, Katherine O'Shea (whom he subsequently married, in a registry office, as their church had refused to participate) ; divorce proceedings were heard over two days in 1890, Parnell was not represented and Katherine did not contest the evidence. Indeed, her husband, Captain William O'Shea, was by all accounts a waster, a gambler, a drinker, and a figure of £20,000 was mentioned by him in regards to making the whole sorry mess disappear.

But the damage was done : Parnell's political career was all but over and, at only 45 years of age, he died in Katherine's arms, in Hove, in England, from pneumonia, on the 6th of October, 1891.







'CORK MUNICIPAL ELECTIONS.'

From 'The United Irishman' newspaper, June, 1955.



At a meeting of Comhairle Ceanntair Corcaighe the following candidates who had been selected by Sinn Féin Conventions in the different areas were ratified ;

Cork Corporation - Liam Early and Seán O Murchú.

Cork County Council - Owen Harold.

Mallow UDC - Owen Harold.

Skibbereen UDC - William O'Brien, Seán MacSwiney and CC O'Sullivan.

Passage Town Commissioners - J. O'Regan.

Liam Early is a member of the Ard Comhairle of Sinn Féin, and Seán O'Murchú is Secretary of the 'Irish Engineering and Electrical Trade Union' and Secretary of the Cork Council of Irish Unions.

Owen Harold, a veteran of the Republican Movement, is Chairman (sic) of Mallow Urban District Council, and J. O'Regan is an outgoing member of Passage West Town Commissioners. The candidates for Skibbereen were instrumental in the formation of the O'Donovan Rossa Cumann of Sinn Féin and have brought about a wonderful revival of republican spirit in that town of the Phoenix Clubs... (MORE LATER.)









ON THIS DATE (21ST APRIL) 105 YEARS AGO : THE AUD, CON KEATING, CHARLIE MONAHAN AND DONAL SHEEHAN.

The Aud (pictured) set sail from the Baltic port of Lubeck on the 9th of April, 1916, carrying 20,000 German rifles, one-million rounds of ammunition, ten machine guns and some explosives, for use by Irish republican forces in the Easter Rising.

The British were waiting for a German gun-running ship and, on Friday, 21st April 1916, they boarded the Aud in Tralee Bay but Captain Karl Spindler managed to convince the British raiders that they were actually on board a Norwegian ship, which, he told them, was anchored for repairs.

Nevertheless, the British insisted that one of their warships should 'accompany' the Aud to Cobh (then known as 'Queenstown') Harbour and, as they approached their destination, on Saturday, 22nd April, Spindler and his men scuttled their own ship, were 'arrested' by the British as POW's and, within days, were transferred to prison of war camps in England.

Roger Casement, who was following behind the Aud in a submarine, landed safely, but was later captured in Kerry and transported to London where he was charged with 'high treason' ; he was found guilty and sentenced to death by hanging, and the sentence was carried out in Pentonville Prison, London, on the 3rd August, 1916.

Irish republicans, meanwhile, had made arrangements to transport the German equipment to Cahirciveen, in County Kerry ; three republican Volunteers - Con Keating, from Kerry, Charlie Monahan, Belfast, and Limerick-born Donal Sheehan were sent from the Dublin Command to liaise with Roger Casement and Karl Spinder but, on Good Friday, the 21st April, 1916 - 105 years ago on this date - on their way there, all three men (the first casualties of the 1916 Easter Rising) drowned when their car plunged off the pier at Ballykissane.

'Too long a sacrifice

Can make a stone of the heart.

O when may it suffice?

That is Heaven's part, our part

To murmur name upon name,

As a mother names her child

When sleep at last has come

On limbs that had run wild...'








NO RIGHT OF APPEAL...



Why the media consensus on a broad range of issues is increasingly disturbing.

By John Drennan.

From 'Magill' Annual, 2002.

We were soon back in business ; some mildly critical articles about the Flood Tribunal inspired Halloween-style levels of horror in Mr Dunphy, who surrounded himself with consoling cliques of 'Tribunalistas' who informed a remarkably calm nation that dark forces were stalking the land, conspiring to collapse Justice Flood's incubus. Happily, the absence of any response meant the 'debate' soon fizzled out and the media consensus returned to its normal uncritical adulation.

This was followed by another brief diversion as the discovery of some minor documentation on the Arms Trial saw the media again uniting to inform Dessie O'Malley that he had "serious questions to answer". The same journalists were equally unified in their pragmatic silence when it was revealed that O'Malley didn't have any "serious questions to answer" after all *. It's called 'vindication', but it happens awfully quietly here.

Indeed in most instances the silence was more eloquent that the clamour. The unity over the travails of the haemophiliacs was particularly touching ; bad news - bad for the advertising figures, that is - so it's best to get that sort of stuff off the front page. Similarly, when it came to the murder of Marty O'Hagan...well, he was only a tabloid hack, and what more do you expect up there in the badlands...? ('1169' comment * : Des O'Malley, and his colleagues in Leinster House, all have 'serious questions to answer', as they preside over a corrupt political system, operated from that institution, which financially benefits them at the expense of State citizens.) (MORE LATER.)





ON THIS DATE (21ST APRIL) 98 YEARS AGO : IRA CAPTAIN ABDUCTED AND KILLED IN DUBLIN.

20th April, 1923 : Frank Aiken is elected IRA Chief of Staff.

22nd April, 1923 : Free State troops surround Frank Aiken, Paidrag Quinn and Seán Quinn, the leaders of the Anti-Treaty forces in the Dundalk area, in a safe house in Castlebellingham. A firefight breaks out in which the two Quinns are wounded - Seán mortally - and subsequently captured. In the confusion, Frank Aiken manages to slip away...

Between the IRA election of Frank Aiken and the Castlebellingham incident (ie on the 21st April 1923 - 98 years ago on this date) 28-year-old IRA Captain Martin Hogan (pictured), from Dromineer in County Tipperary, was abducted from a Dublin street by the Staters, and shot to death. He was the fourth eldest son of Mr. Seamus Hogan, and was a member of the 1st. Tipperary Brigade, IRA. Seeking employment, he moved to Dublin and while there he joined the 1st Battalion of the Dublin City Brigade IRA.

He was out with his girlfriend in Dublin City Centre, at Eccles Place, Dorset Street, when they were surrounded by a group of about ten men from CID Headquarters, Oriel House. They bundled Captain Hogan away, leaving his girlfriend in a distraught state on the side of the road. When she regained her composure, she went looking for him, thinking that he had been kept in for an 'overnight stay' in a prison. The prison governor suggested she make her way to Oriel House and make inquiries there, which she did, only to be sneeringly told to "try the morgue".

His broken body was found the following morning, in an overgrown ditch on Grace Park Road in Drumcondra, Dublin ; he had been tortured before being shot, eleven times. No one was ever held responsible for his death. He is buried in the family grave in Killodiernan Graveyard, Puckane, County Tipperary.

(There are conflicting reports on where exactly Captain Mártan Ó hÓgáin was done to death by Free Staters : some reports have it that he was killed in action in Poulacapple, Tipperary, whilst others state that he was killed on the Gracepark Road in Whitehall, Dublin. It was common practice then for the Staters to 'lift' republicans off the street, torture and interrogate them before killing them and dumping their bodies in an area hundreds of miles away from where they were born and/or from the scene of the crime.)







ON THIS DATE (21ST APRIL) 27 YEARS AGO : PAUL HILL ('GUILDFORD FOUR') WINS HIS APPEAL.

On the 21st April, 1994 - 27 years ago on this date - Paul Hill (pictured) won his appeal against a conviction for an IRA shooting in the Occupied Six Counties.

'The story began in late 1974, following IRA bombs at pubs in Guildford in Surrey and Woolwich in London, which killed seven people and injured a hundred more. The British police picked-up two young Belfastmen, Gerry Conlon and Paul Hill, and interrogated them ; Conlon is said to have confessed to bombings, adding that Annie Maguire, his aunt, showed him and others how to make bombs in the kitchen of her London home. Paul Hill is said to have confirmed this.

The police raided the Maguire house, arrested the occupants and searched the place : nothing was found in the search and none of the people would admit to knowing anything about bombs. But forensic tests on the fingernails of six of the people, and on a pair of kitchen gloves used by Annie Maguire, were said to have yielded traces of nitroglycerine. On this 'evidence', the seven defendants were found guilty of handling explosives.

Patrick and Annie Maguire were sentenced to fourteen years, the judge remarking that he wished he could jail them for life. Annie's brother, Seán Smyth, also got fourteen years. Annie's sixteen year old son Vincent got five years, and her thirteen year old son Patrick got four years. Her brother-in-law, Guiseppe Conlon, and a family friend, Patrick O'Neill, both got twelve years. Closer examination of the facts surrounding the Guildford and Woolwich bombings raised enough doubts to lead even Sir John Biggs-Davidson, a 'Pillar of the Establishment' who does not lightly criticise the courts, to conclude that a miscarraige of justice took place.

Gerry Conlon and Paul Hill, who allegedly confessed to the Guildford and Woolwich bombings and implicated Conlon's Auntie Annie, were later jailed for sentences which stand in the 'Guinness Book Of Records' as the longest ever handed down in Britain - natural life and thirty-five years, respectively. Yet doubt was cast on this conviction too when, in January 1977, four admitted IRA men - on trial for other bombings and killings - said they had bombed Guildford and Woolwich too. This was clearly un-welcome news to the authorities, for when the IRA men were tried they were simply not charged with the Guildford and Woolwich killings...'

(The above is a shortened and edited version of a piece we posted here in 2005, and gives an indication of how British 'justice' impacted on Paul Hill, among many others. More about the 'Guildford Four' can be read here.)

It was while he was being questioned about the Guildford bombing that Paul Hill 'confessed' to the 1974 killing of Brian Shaw, a British Army soldier. The conviction stood for five years after he was released for the Guildford bombing, only for it to be quashed ("...unsafe and unsatisfactory..") by 'Sir' Brian Hutton, the then Six County 'Lord Chief Justice', on the 21st of April, 1994 - 27 years ago on this date.

"Upon my release I took some comfort from the thought that at least my misfortune would lessen the possibility of it happening to others. Alas it would appear that nothing has been gleaned from the many miscarriages of justice, especially those with political overtones. We now live in an age in which you can disappear into a black hole, be held without charge indefinitely and subject to torture, whilst Ivy League educated politicians play verbal gymnastics with the meaning of the word..." - Paul Hill. And how right he is.





'COMMENTS...'

From 'The United Irishman' newspaper, March, 1955.

Prisoners' Support ;

A unanimous decision of the GAA Convention sent a motion to Congress asking that the proceeds of the Railway Cup Finals on Saint Patrick's Day be devoted to the Irish Republican Army Prisoners' Dependents' Fund.

Pocket-Money for the Governor ;

"The financial position of the Six-County Governor has been steadily growing worse and he is now badly out of pocket", Major Lloyd George (the son of the man who created partition) told the British House of Commons recently, so the House stepped-up Wakehurst's pocket-money to £14,000 per annum. How much of it is danger money?

Churchill Cumann ;

No! It's not the name of a Conservative Club in London - it's the official title of a Fianna Fáil Cumann in Kerry. No wise-cracks allowed, but a recent notice in 'The Kerryman' newspaper was headed - 'Fianna Fáil (The Republican Party), Churchill Cumann.' Actually, Churchill is the name of a locality in Kerry! (MORE LATER.)

Thanks for reading,

Sharon.

We hope you'll check-in with us on Wednesday, 28th April 2021, when we'll be detailing the disgraceful events in a certain Irish county in Easter Week in 1916, when the local leadership of the 'Irish Volunteers' handed their members weapons over to the British military in the area in an attempt - 'successful', as it turned out - to 'keep the peace' in that county. Those 'Irish Volunteer' leaders were granted 'passports' by the British to travel throughout that county, and further afield, to call on other 'Irish Volunteer' branches not to take any military action during the Rising. Unbelievable, but it happened ; a very disturbing incident in our history.

See you on the 28th April 2021.