Showing posts with label Owen Harold. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Owen Harold. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 07, 2024

TURF, PEOPLE, LAND AND BEING "A TEAM PLAYER".

"OUR OWN TURF FOR OUR OWN PEOPLE."

Cathal Brugha described Fr. Michael O'Flanagan as "the staunchest priest who ever lived in Ireland." This 'turbulent priest' died, aged 66, on this date (7th August) in 1942 - 82 years ago on this date.

Born to Irish speakers and into a clan of Fenians in Roscommon in 1876, Michael O'Flanagan was only 18 years young when he went to Maynooth College to study for the priesthood. He returned to his old alma mater , Summerhill College in Sligo and, at 24 years of age (in 1900), he was appointed 'Professor of Irish' in the college, from where he continued his involvement in Conradh na Gaeilge, through which he befriended Pádraig Mac Piarais and Douglas Hyde.

His church at first considered him to be a valuable asset and repeatedly sent him abroad on assignments, but less so over the years as he had a social conscience which took precedence over his church's need for him to be a 'team player' and, indeed, he embarrassed his church hierarchy when, at 37 years of age, he fully supported the Sligo dockers in their trade dispute in 1913 (even though he was working in Rome at the time, which is where he was based between 1912 and 1914) as, then as now, his religious 'betters' had more in common with the owners and bosses rather than the poorer workers.

In 1914 he was allocated to the parish of Ahamlish (North Sligo) before moving to Cliffoney, in that same county, and quickly became a true friend to the small farming community he now lived and worked with, and assisted them in their battle with the 'Congested Districts Board' who were trying to dictate the manner in which turf bogs could be used by the locals, an occasion that became known as the "Cloonerco Bog Fight".







During that 'turf war', Fr. O'Flanagan helped to organise the funeral of O'Donovan Rossa (pictured, who died on the 29th June 1915) and he spoke in Dublin City Hall when Rossa was lying in state there, which seemed to be 'the straw which broke the camel's back', as far as his Bishop (Coyne) was concerned - in October 1915, the church hierarchy attempted to transfer him to a new parish.

However, his friends and supporters in Cliffoney objected and physically prevented the new parish priest from taking up his priestly duties, a situation which lasted until Christmas Day.

Eventually, Fr. O'Flanagan was moved to Crossna, near Boyle, in County Roscommon, from where he continued to spread his own 'gospel' and that of Irish republicanism - he was vocally in favour of land reform and was strongly against Ireland taking any part in 'the First World War', 'forced' (by Westminster) or not to do so.

He worked in the background for Irish republicans during the 1916 Rising and became more politically involved in the years following same and, in October 1917, he was elected the vice-president of the then Sinn Féin organisation.

In May 1918, he condemned the English and German 'Establishments' for their encouragement to young men to join what they called "the war effort" :

"Those royal cousins who rule England and Germany will come together and clink their champagne glasses over the graves of millions of the flower of the manhood of Germany and England...", and, no sooner had he delivered those words to an appreciative audience when Bishop Coyne banned him from saying Mass in public or administering the sacraments and it would be 1938 before those duties were restored to him.

He played an active part in Sinn Féin's political victories that same year and was given the honour of opening the public session of the First Dáil Éireann in 1919 and was practically employed full-time in the 'Republican Courts' and in the development of the Dáil's land policy.





He stayed true to his political principles in 1921 and opposed the 'Treaty of Surrender', being barred from America and Australia for doing so.

He was elected president of Sinn Féin in 1933, a position which he held until 1935, but he was expelled from the organisation the following year because he breached the abstentionist policy.



He supported the Spanish Republic in its fight against Franco fascism from 1936 to 1939, which again put him at odds with his religious hierarchy, and undertook a number of speaking tours abroad in support of that fight.

Father Michael O' Flanagan, 66 years of age, died in Dublin on 7th August 1942 - 82 years ago on this date - and was buried in Glasnevin Cemetery on the 10th August. Fittingly, his graveside oration was delivered by John Joseph O'Kelly ('Sceilg') , an action that that 'turbulent priest' would have appreciated.

('1169' comment ; a headline/title like that above - 'Our Own Turf For Our Own People' - would definitely get us labelled as 'fascists/racists/far-right/ner-do-wells [!!?] etc in todays 'Woke'-infested climate and the three of us actually had a meeting about whether to change the title to 'Ireland For The Irish' instead, but sure we decided to keep the latter title for another piece later on...!)











'SINN FÉIN STATEMENT...'

From 'The United Irishman' newspaper, April 1955.









Mr McAteer assured the annual convention of the Anti-Partition League that there were happy improvements in the relationship between the "Irish Government" and the Anti-Partition League -

"We are reasonably satisfied with the new arrangements for co-operation, and we are moderately confident that it will lead to an intensification of the Anti-Partition drive, not only here but throughout the world."

At the same time, he informed the convention that the Anti-Partition League had... "..no master plan to solve partition."

It is possible that the results of the recent conference between political leaders in the twenty-six counties and representatives of the Anti-Partition League is an all-out effort to prevent Sinn Féin from succeeding where all others, on their own admission, have failed?

Issued by the Standing Committee, Sinn Féin.

(END of 'Sinn Féin Statement' and, actually, the 'end' of our 'The United Irishman' newspaper collection!

Next week [14th August 2024] we'll be re-posting articles from a 22-year-old Irish magazine [which was a great magazine once, 1980's/1990's, but went 'Woke' since then, unfortunately] and the first article is particularly timely, as it's to do with ethnicity in this State at that time which, today - 2024 - is, in our opinion, a characteristic that has changed for the worse, as far as the indigenous Irish are concerned.)























Thirty Pieces Of Silver...







On the 7th August, 1919, the British 'Chief Secretary for Ireland' (and also the '1st Baron Strathcarron'!), a Mr Ian James MacPherson, introduced a Bill in Westminster to increase the wages and improve the working conditions for their 'police force' in Ireland, the RIC.

Unemployed men were somewhat reluctant to join that semi-paramilitary grouping because the IRA were hitting back against it with some success and other Irish men and women were shunning it ; the wages were increased with fanfare to attract new recruits and to compensate for increased hardship and cost of living increases due to the fact that many shopkeepers were refusing to serve them, forcing them to obtain, usually with subterfuge, any food and other necessities from miles away.

It worked, and recruitment levels increased, as about 10,000 new members joined between January 1920 and August 1922, when the outfit was disbanded.

But their casualty rate also increased, as there were more of them presenting as targets and they were rushed into 'service' without suitable training ; between 1919 and 1922, more than 500 pro-British 'police casualties' (comprising the 'Dublin Metropolitan Police', the Auxiliaries, Black and Tans and 'Ulster Special Constabulary') were recorded ; in January 1919, the RIC claimed to have about 9,500 uniformed members and some 1,300 operational barracks in the country.

Swings and roundabouts...

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







SO, FAREWELL THEN, CELTIC TIGER....



It had to happen, sooner or later.

Most of the pundits and economists were too busy singing the Celtic Tiger's praises to notice, but a few critical observers worried all along about the weaknesses of a boom economy that depended so much on a few companies from one place - the United States.

By Denis O'Hearn.

From 'Magill' Annual 2002.

A populist social housing regime that provided affordable and reasonable housing to successive generations of low-income households broke down ; Irish citizens no longer have assured access to affordable housing.

In health, Ireland reduced spending as a proportion of GDP by 20 per cent between 1980 and 1996 and, even after an increase in health spending in 1998, Ireland still ranked 20th in a survey of 27 OECD countries.

Between 1970 and 1975 and 1995 and 2000, our global ranking with respect to life expectancy at birth fell by seven places - hospital waiting lists are still unacceptably long and may be on the way back up.

In education, we have performed poorly, in spite of the public image that growth is due to a highly educated population...

(MORE LATER.)



























On the 7th August, 1920, IRA Volunteers attached to the Cork Number 1 Brigade were getting into position to attack a better-armed force of RIC members in their barracks in Innishannon, County Cork, when one of the rebels discharged his weapon accidentally, thus alerting the enemy ; the operation was postponed, and the Volunteers withdrew from the area.

The same IRA Brigade had, between April and July that year, rendered inoperable RIC Barracks in Blarney, Farran, Inchigeela, Clondrohid and in Cork City (MacCurtain Street).

By the end of 1920, nearly half of the 1500 RIC barracks in the country had been abandoned, and most were burned by the IRA within days of their evacuation.

Indeed, purposely, hundreds of those were rendered inoperable by the IRA on the night of the start of the fourth anniversary of the Easter Rising in 1916 - 24th April 1920!

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











Between thirty and forty Irish republican operatives were said to be involved in the planning etc of the overall IRA operation, but the actual ambush itself involved only about between eleven and fourteen armed IRA Volunteers from the Castletownroche Battalion, Cork Number 2 Brigade (under Tom Barry, Battalion Officer Commanding/Column Commander) and the IRA East Limerick Brigade Column (led by Donnchadh O'Hannigan and Tadhg Crowley).

The movement of a six-man RIC grouping had been monitored and an ambush position established, on the 7th August, 1920, at the townland of Scart, near the village of Cill Dairbhre (Kildorrery, the 'Church of the Oakwood'), in North County Cork.

It was just before Noon on the 7th that the RIC members came under gunfire attack, from both sides of the road they were on, and all six were wounded.

The IRA Volunteers moved-in on the wounded forces and removed rifles, six revolvers and 250 rounds of ammunition and any other military equipment from them, taking two of them as prisoners and, once safely out of the area, released the two of them.

The other wounded RIC members were rescued by their colleagues and rushed to Fermoy Military Hospital where all but one survived - a Mr Ernest S. Watkins (29, 'Service Number 71756/LDS 2093/074B'), who was born in Monmouth, in Wales, on the 26th February 1891, and had been an RIC member for just over one month and, prior to that, worked as an engineer, leaving that trade to join the British Army and, finally, the RIC.

The next night (8th August 1920), the Crown Forces attacked the village of Kildorrery, looting houses, getting drunk and stealing from shops.

And it didn't stop there - on the 23rd November that year, a civilian - Denis O'Donnell (37), from Meadstown, near Kildorrery - was shot dead by three RIC members named Wood, Coe and Gray who were seeking to avenge the death of their colleague Mr Watkins.

Had Mr Watkins stayed in his own country, Mr O'Donnell wouldn't have died in the manner he did.

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













On the 7th August, 1920, the British Army re-organised itself in Ireland and established its '1st Infantry Division', consisting of two military brigades – the '15th Infantry Brigade', with its Headquarters in Belfast, covering the counties of Antrim, Armagh, Louth, Down and Monaghan, and the Derry Brigade, with its Headquarters in Derry City, and covering the counties of Donegal, Derry, Tyrone, Cavan, Fermanagh, Sligo and North Leitrim.

They sought to militarily control all 9 Counties of Ulster yet, within a few months, were professing that the province of Ulster consisted only of Six Counties...!

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









On the 7th August, 1920, 'The Roscommon Herald' newspaper reported that -

'...(the boycott of the RIC continues)...throughout County Leitrim the boycotting of police (sic) is carried on and there is no outside intercourse with or assistance in any way given to members of that body..'

On the 23rd April 1919, the (Republican) Dáil Éireann secretary, a Mr Diarmuid O'Hegarty, wrote out a detailed description of the policy of 'social ostracisation’ of the RIC, which had been authorised by the Dáil earlier that month. The RIC, he wrote, was to...

'...receive no social recognition from the people ; that no intercourse, except such as is absolutely necessary for business, is permitted with them ; they should not be saluted nor spoken to in the streets nor their salutes returned ; that they should not be invited to nor received in private houses as friends or guests ; that they be debarred from participation in games, sports, dances and all social functions conducted by the people, that intermarriage with them be discouraged...treated as persons, who having been adjudged guilty of treason to their country, are regarded unworthy to enjoy any of the privileges or comforts which arise from cordial relations with the public...'

And so it was!

And, actually, so it should be today, too, for the RUC/PSNI in the Occupied Six Counties and for 'An Garda Síochána' (AGS) in the Free State.

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











On the 6th January, 1920, IRA Volunteers held a meeting in the home of a Mr Bartholomew (Bartelmew) Walsh in the village of Glashabee, in County Cork, and the '(North) Cork Number 2 Brigade' of the IRA was formed.





The Brigade was monitored closely by GHQ Staff in Dublin and, even thought it was considered to be a successful formation, a decision was made to establish a 'Flying Column' from within its ranks and, on the 7th August that year, it was formed at a meeting held in Mourneabbey, near the town of Mallow, in County Cork (commanded by Tom Barry) attended by, among others, Patrick McCarthy, Michael O'Sullivan, Dan Browne (Newmarket Battalion), Larry Condon, John O'Mahony, Daniel Daly, Matt Flood (Fermoy Battalion), Daniel Shinnick, Jeremiah Donovan, James O'Neill, Michael O'Halloran (Castletown Roche Battalion), Patrick O'Brien, Thomas Coughlan (Charville Battalion), Daniel Vaughan (Kanturk Battalion), John Healy, Patrick Healy (Millstreet Batallion), Tadgh Byrnes, Jack Cunningham, Paddy McCarthy (from Mourneabbey), Owen Harold and Jeremiah Daly (Mallow Battalion).

When the 'Treaty of Surrender' offered a 'truce', which came into effect on the 11th July, 1921, the strength of the Cork Number 2 Brigade was 2,407 Volunteers and, overall, the IRA fielded a total 65 brigades and 297 battalions, with a strength ('on paper') of 115,550 Volunteers.

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











In July, 1920, courthouses in Buncrana, Carndonagh and Burnfoot, in Donegal, were burned down by the IRA to hopefully prevent any further miscarriages of 'justice' by the British political administration in Ireland.

The courthouse in Donegal Town (pictured), which was designed by local architect Michael Priestley and built in 1746, was one of only two 'Bridewells' in the county (ie it was built with basement cells), was burnt to the ground on the 7th August, 1920, following a gunbattle between the IRA and the RIC.

A Mr Harold Swan applied for compensation for the burning of the courthouse furniture, for 60 legal texts, 12,000 printed forms, and a gold mounted fountain pen.

He lodged a claim for £100 and we're not sure if he won his case, but he doesn't appear to have lodged a claim for a leather or fur coat or 60" TV...!

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







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.)

REPUBLICANS AND THE STATE :

In a statement on December 8th, 1938, the surviving faithful members of the Second Dáil announced this decision...

"..confident, in delegating this sacred trust to the Army of the Republic that, in their every action towards its consummation, they will be inspired by the high ideals and the chivalry of our martyred comrades, we, as the Executive Council of Dáil Éireann, Government of the Republic, append our names.

Seán O' Ceallaigh, Ceann Comhairle,

George Count Plunkett,

Professor William Stockley,

Mary MacSwiney,

Brian Ó hUiginn,

Tom Maguire,

Cathal Ó Murchadha.

In December, 1969, following a split in the Republican Movement over the issue of the recognition of and participation in the Partition and Westminster parliaments, Thomas Maguire, as the sole surviving member of the Executive of the Second Dáil Éireann, recognised the Provisional Army Council, which remained true to the Irish Republic as the lawful Army of the Thirty-Two County Irish Republic...

(MORE LATER.)





















In August, 1921, the IRA had taken over policing duties in nationalist/republican areas of Belfast and were reporting to one of their own leadership figures, a Mr Eoin O'Duffy (a republican-gamekeeper-turned-Free State-poacher).



On the 6th August, Mr O'Duffy wrote to the RIC Commissioner in Belfast, a Mr John Fitzhugh Gelston, telling him that the IRA patrols on the streets had been able to "frustrate any behaviour which might lead to serious disturbances" (ironic, considering that it was the RIC and other pro-British forces that were causing the disturbances in Ireland in the first place).

On the 7th August, the unionist/loyalist leadership in Belfast contacted Mr John Fitzhugh Gelston to object 'to the legitimacy bestowed on the IRA by the RIC (which was) resented by the unionists especially as the Truce meant a delay in the transfer of executive powers to Stormont..'

But Mr John Fitzhugh Gelston obviously survived the ticking-off (!) from his unionist/loyalist colleagues and from their political pals in Westminster because, in the 'King's Birthday Honours List' of 1923, he was 'appointed' as a 'Commander of the Order of the British Empire' (a 'CBE') in the 'Civil Division' of said 'List'.

Good on ya, Johnny - neither the IRA or the RIC could get ya, but the CBE did...!

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





















On the 7th August, 1922, Michael Collins arrived in the Curragh, Kildare, to inspect and advise his troops stationed there, who were under the command of Commandant General John T. Prout.

He told them that "...the entire organisation and command is defective.." and placed a new Commandant-General in charge, a Mr Eamon Price.

Mr Price was the husband of Máire Nic Shiubhlaigh, an Irish actress and one-time republican activist, and was apparently not enamoured of some of his high-ranking comrades in the Free State Army - for instance, he described the FSA command staff in Kilkenny as being 'a dumping ground for cowardly, useless and otherwise buckshee officers...' ('1169' comment - WHAT?! Only the command staff...?)!

A few weeks after Mr Price's promotion (!), an FSA report on his predecessor, Mr Prout, was leaked, in which he was labelled as "..too weak as well as too guilless to handle traitorous or semi-mutinous incompetents.." - the "traitorous...semi-mutinous incompetents" was a reference to the Free State soldiers that comprised that army!

Two weeks and one day after his visit to the Curragh, Mr Collins was shot dead in Béal na Bláth, in Cork, by the IRA, but Mr Prout fared somewhat better - he was only mentally and morally wounded by being demobilised from the Free State Army in June 1924, at a time when he held the rank of Major General.

Incidentally, when Mr Collins was 'shuffling his deck' in the Curragh on the 7th August, the IRA demolished a railway bridge on the line between Kildare and Kildangan, not too far from where he was.

Sure it's just as well that he wasn't intending to get the train back to Dublin or Westminster or wherever he was going, as he might have been injured had he been on board...

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

Thanks for the visit, and for reading!

Sharon and the team.





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.