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THE IRISH STORY
An online publisher of Irish History articles, interviews, ebooks andpodcasts.
EPIDEMICS IN IRELAND THE DEAD OF THE BELFAST POGROM USING THE GLOVES TO TURN A SHILLING OR A CROWN: GLOVED The restoration of royal patronage to boxing in England coincided with the championships of Dan Mendoza and Tom Johnson. The tavern owners and innkeepers provided the infrastructure for prize fighting to make it a successful enterprise. This contrasted with Ireland were the sport of boxing was underdeveloped and found little support outside ofthe artisan class.
MONAGHAN | THE IRISH STORY July 1935: ‘Remember Belfast – Boycott the Orangemen!’. July 1935 saw vicious sectarian rioting in Belfast. Here in a follow up to his article on the riot in Limerick, Brian . ‘The distinction is a fine but real one.’-. Sectarianism in County Clare during the War of Independence. Padraig Óg Ó’Ruairc looks atTHE 1798 REBELLION
The united Irish crest. An overview of the insurrection of 1798, by John Dorney. The 1798 rebellion was an insurrection launched by the United Irishmen, an underground republican society, aimed at overthrowing the Kingdom of Ireland, severing the connection with Great Britain and establishing an Irish Republic based on the principles of the French Revolution. THE BOYS OF THE OLD BRIGADE TODAY IN IRISH HISTORY, THE BURNING OF THE CUSTOM HOUSE The Irish Bulletin, organ of the Irish separatist movement described the Custom House, a grand Georgian, building whose green dome rose above the Dublin quays, as, “The seat of an alien tyranny”.But a job in the civil service in Ireland was considered a real mark of social advancement, regardless of national views, and one of the clerks who arrived for work that morning was Patrick TODAY IN IRISH HISTORY THE TAILTEANN GAMES, 1924-1936THE IRISH STORY
An online publisher of Irish History articles, interviews, ebooks andpodcasts.
EPIDEMICS IN IRELAND THE DEAD OF THE BELFAST POGROM USING THE GLOVES TO TURN A SHILLING OR A CROWN: GLOVED The restoration of royal patronage to boxing in England coincided with the championships of Dan Mendoza and Tom Johnson. The tavern owners and innkeepers provided the infrastructure for prize fighting to make it a successful enterprise. This contrasted with Ireland were the sport of boxing was underdeveloped and found little support outside ofthe artisan class.
MONAGHAN | THE IRISH STORY July 1935: ‘Remember Belfast – Boycott the Orangemen!’. July 1935 saw vicious sectarian rioting in Belfast. Here in a follow up to his article on the riot in Limerick, Brian . ‘The distinction is a fine but real one.’-. Sectarianism in County Clare during the War of Independence. Padraig Óg Ó’Ruairc looks atTHE 1798 REBELLION
The united Irish crest. An overview of the insurrection of 1798, by John Dorney. The 1798 rebellion was an insurrection launched by the United Irishmen, an underground republican society, aimed at overthrowing the Kingdom of Ireland, severing the connection with Great Britain and establishing an Irish Republic based on the principles of the French Revolution. THE BOYS OF THE OLD BRIGADE TODAY IN IRISH HISTORY, THE BURNING OF THE CUSTOM HOUSE The Irish Bulletin, organ of the Irish separatist movement described the Custom House, a grand Georgian, building whose green dome rose above the Dublin quays, as, “The seat of an alien tyranny”.But a job in the civil service in Ireland was considered a real mark of social advancement, regardless of national views, and one of the clerks who arrived for work that morning was Patrick TODAY IN IRISH HISTORY THE TAILTEANN GAMES, 1924-1936FIRST POLE RAISED
Recent Comments. John Donovan on A Black and Tan Executed – The life and death of William Mitchell; John Kinsella on Ireland and the Spanish Armada 1588; WILLIAM E. GREEN on The life and death of Black Jack Adair, the mastermind of the Derryveagh Evictions; Our regular historical round-up – West Cork History Festival on Using the gloves to turn a shilling or a crown: gloved sparring in the AND THEN THERE WAS LIGHT: ELECTRIFICATION IN RURAL IRELAND A town promotes the rural electrification drive. By John Joe McGinley. Daily life in rural Ireland before the onset of electrification was best described as a constant struggle just to complete the mundane tasks that we all take for granted today. RURAL ELECTRIFICATION Recent Comments. John Donovan on A Black and Tan Executed – The life and death of William Mitchell; John Kinsella on Ireland and the Spanish Armada 1588; WILLIAM E. GREEN on The life and death of Black Jack Adair, the mastermind of the Derryveagh Evictions; Our regular historical round-up – West Cork History Festival on Using the gloves to turn a shilling or a crown: gloved sparring in the TODAY IN IRISH HISTORY, 22 JUNE 1922 The assassination. On June 22, 1922, Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson arrived back, by taxi, at his home on Eaton Square London. The 58 year old had been at the unveiling of a war memorial to the fallen of the Great War at Liverpool Street station. Unknown to him he had been followed home by two Irish veterans of that war, Joe O’Sullivan and THE MAKING OF THE IRISH BORDER, 1912-1925, A SHORT HISTORY Edward Carson signs the Ulster Covenant, 1912. While the divisions in Ireland between the north and the south and between Catholics and Protestants can be dated back, at least, to the seventeenth century, the story of the Irish border begins, in essence with the Home Rule crisis of 1912 to 1914. Northern Unionists, overwhelming Protestantand
IRELAND AND THE ANGLO-ZULU WAR, 1879 A romantic Victorian rendering of the last stand of the British troops at Isandlwana By John Dorney. On January 22, 1879, under a mountain named Isandlwana, a Zulu force, some 20,000 strong attacked a British military encampment containing about 1,700 men; British regulars, colonial volunteers and native levies, part of a column that had invaded Zululand only twelve days earlier. TODAY IN IRISH HISTORY, THE BURNING OF THE CUSTOM HOUSE The Irish Bulletin, organ of the Irish separatist movement described the Custom House, a grand Georgian, building whose green dome rose above the Dublin quays, as, “The seat of an alien tyranny”.But a job in the civil service in Ireland was considered a real mark of social advancement, regardless of national views, and one of the clerks who arrived for work that morning was Patrick ‘TAKING MATTERS INTO THEIR OWN HANDS’ The Special Constabulary (after 1922 generally known as the ‘Ulster Special Constabulary’) were individuals sworn in as temporary RIC constables in different parts of Ireland. Leading unionists got sanction from the British cabinet for a scheme involving a massive intake of special constables to serve directly with the RIC. THE FREE STATE’S FORGOTTEN SOLDIERS: THE NATIONAL ARMY The Free State dead were awkward, too difficult to place politically. The graves of National Army soldiers at Glasnevin were unmarked for many years, the monument only being erected in 1967. As Anne Dolan wrote, ‘How does a mother, a father, a wife remember their Private, their brigadier, their general, their son or husband killed in the THE MUNSTER PLANTATION AND THE MACCARTHYS, 1583-1597 The Munster plantation was the product of the Second Desmond Rebellion, which broke out in 1579 and raged until 1583. It was a revolt by Gerald Fitzgerald, the Earl of Desmond against the English state’s interference in his territory but also, to different participants, a Catholic crusade assisted by Papal troops and a rebellion by elementsTHE IRISH STORY
An online publisher of Irish History articles, interviews, ebooks andpodcasts.
EPIDEMICS IN IRELAND THE DEAD OF THE BELFAST POGROM USING THE GLOVES TO TURN A SHILLING OR A CROWN: GLOVED The restoration of royal patronage to boxing in England coincided with the championships of Dan Mendoza and Tom Johnson. The tavern owners and innkeepers provided the infrastructure for prize fighting to make it a successful enterprise. This contrasted with Ireland were the sport of boxing was underdeveloped and found little support outside ofthe artisan class.
TODAY IN IRISH HISTORY, 22 JUNE 1922 ‘AN UNNECESSARY NUMBER OF GRAVES?’ THE BORDER COUNTIES IN THE IRISH WAR OF INDEPENDENCE, 1918-21 An IRA unit at Ballybay, Co. Monaghan. By John Dorney. The Irish War of Independence, the guerrilla conflict that raged from 1919-21, varied hugely in intensity across the country.. The main centres of violence were in south Munster, particularly in counties Cork, Kerry Tipperary, Clare and Limerick where martial law was declared, and Dublin and Belfast cities. MONAGHAN | THE IRISH STORY July 1935: ‘Remember Belfast – Boycott the Orangemen!’. July 1935 saw vicious sectarian rioting in Belfast. Here in a follow up to his article on the riot in Limerick, Brian . ‘The distinction is a fine but real one.’-. Sectarianism in County Clare during the War of Independence. Padraig Óg Ó’Ruairc looks at THE BOYS OF THE OLD BRIGADETHE EMERGENCY
THE IRISH STORY
An online publisher of Irish History articles, interviews, ebooks andpodcasts.
EPIDEMICS IN IRELAND THE DEAD OF THE BELFAST POGROM USING THE GLOVES TO TURN A SHILLING OR A CROWN: GLOVED The restoration of royal patronage to boxing in England coincided with the championships of Dan Mendoza and Tom Johnson. The tavern owners and innkeepers provided the infrastructure for prize fighting to make it a successful enterprise. This contrasted with Ireland were the sport of boxing was underdeveloped and found little support outside ofthe artisan class.
TODAY IN IRISH HISTORY, 22 JUNE 1922 ‘AN UNNECESSARY NUMBER OF GRAVES?’ THE BORDER COUNTIES IN THE IRISH WAR OF INDEPENDENCE, 1918-21 An IRA unit at Ballybay, Co. Monaghan. By John Dorney. The Irish War of Independence, the guerrilla conflict that raged from 1919-21, varied hugely in intensity across the country.. The main centres of violence were in south Munster, particularly in counties Cork, Kerry Tipperary, Clare and Limerick where martial law was declared, and Dublin and Belfast cities. MONAGHAN | THE IRISH STORY July 1935: ‘Remember Belfast – Boycott the Orangemen!’. July 1935 saw vicious sectarian rioting in Belfast. Here in a follow up to his article on the riot in Limerick, Brian . ‘The distinction is a fine but real one.’-. Sectarianism in County Clare during the War of Independence. Padraig Óg Ó’Ruairc looks at THE BOYS OF THE OLD BRIGADETHE EMERGENCY
LIGHTING UP IRELAND
Recent Comments. John Donovan on A Black and Tan Executed – The life and death of William Mitchell; John Kinsella on Ireland and the Spanish Armada 1588; WILLIAM E. GREEN on The life and death of Black Jack Adair, the mastermind of the Derryveagh Evictions; Our regular historical round-up – West Cork History Festival on Using the gloves to turn a shilling or a crown: gloved sparring in the AND THEN THERE WAS LIGHT: ELECTRIFICATION IN RURAL IRELAND A town promotes the rural electrification drive. By John Joe McGinley. Daily life in rural Ireland before the onset of electrification was best described as a constant struggle just to complete the mundane tasks that we all take for granted today. MILITARISM | THE IRISH STORY Recent Comments. John Donovan on A Black and Tan Executed – The life and death of William Mitchell; John Kinsella on Ireland and the Spanish Armada 1588; WILLIAM E. GREEN on The life and death of Black Jack Adair, the mastermind of the Derryveagh Evictions; Our regular historical round-up – West Cork History Festival on Using the gloves to turn a shilling or a crown: gloved sparring in the TODAY IN IRISH HISTORY, 22 JUNE 1922 The assassination. On June 22, 1922, Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson arrived back, by taxi, at his home on Eaton Square London. The 58 year old had been at the unveiling of a war memorial to the fallen of the Great War at Liverpool Street station. Unknown to him he had been followed home by two Irish veterans of that war, Joe O’Sullivan andTHE EMERGENCY
Ireland did not join the war, but declared neutrality. Indeed the world war, in Ireland, was not referred to as a war at all, but as ‘The Emergency’. In staying neutral, despite British and latterly American pleas to join the war, Ireland, under Eamon de Valera, successfully asserted theTHE 1798 REBELLION
The united Irish crest. An overview of the insurrection of 1798, by John Dorney. The 1798 rebellion was an insurrection launched by the United Irishmen, an underground republican society, aimed at overthrowing the Kingdom of Ireland, severing the connection with Great Britain and establishing an Irish Republic based on the principles of the French Revolution. IRELAND AND THE ANGLO-ZULU WAR, 1879 A romantic Victorian rendering of the last stand of the British troops at Isandlwana By John Dorney. On January 22, 1879, under a mountain named Isandlwana, a Zulu force, some 20,000 strong attacked a British military encampment containing about 1,700 men; British regulars, colonial volunteers and native levies, part of a column that had invaded Zululand only twelve days earlier.BELFAST RIOTS
Belfast rioters gather ammunition in the 1920s. In recent articles on the Irish Story, Brian Hanley has looked the effects of the 1935 Belfast riots on southern Ireland. This is a short introduction into the history of civil strife in Belfast. By John Dorney. The riot has played a significant role in Irish history and nowhere more than in the northern city of Belfast. TODAY IN IRISH HISTORY, THE BURNING OF THE CUSTOM HOUSE The Irish Bulletin, organ of the Irish separatist movement described the Custom House, a grand Georgian, building whose green dome rose above the Dublin quays, as, “The seat of an alien tyranny”.But a job in the civil service in Ireland was considered a real mark of social advancement, regardless of national views, and one of the clerks who arrived for work that morning was Patrick THE TAILTEANN GAMES, 1924-1936 Cathal Brennan looks at the Irish Free State’s answer to the Olympics – The Tailteann Games of 1924-1932. The advent of mass sporting events was one of the phenomena of the 20 th century. For the first time, sport could be brought to a nationwide or international audience through theTHE IRISH STORY
An online publisher of Irish History articles, interviews, ebooks andpodcasts.
OVERVIEW | THE IRISH STORY Ireland and the First World War – A Brief Overview. By John Dorney Ireland throughout the First World War of 1914-1918 was an integral part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain . EPIDEMICS IN IRELANDIRISH CONFEDERATION
July 2018 marks the 170th anniversary of the 1848 Young Ireland Rising. This article explores Irish Confederate activism in southUlster, 1848, .
MONAGHAN | THE IRISH STORY July 1935: ‘Remember Belfast – Boycott the Orangemen!’. July 1935 saw vicious sectarian rioting in Belfast. Here in a follow up to his article on the riot in Limerick, Brian . ‘The distinction is a fine but real one.’-. Sectarianism in County Clare during the War of Independence. Padraig Óg Ó’Ruairc looks at THE MAKING OF THE IRISH BORDER, 1912-1925, A SHORT HISTORYSEE MORE ONTHEIRISHSTORY.COM
JOHN DORNEY
John Dorney is an independent historian and chief editor and writer of the Irish Story website. He was born in Dublin in August 1980 and grew up in the southern suburb of Rathfarnham.He studied history and politics in University College Dublin and completed a Masters Thesis on the 16th century Irish chieftain Florence McCarthy entitled, Florence MacCarthy and the conquest of Gaelic Munster THE ARMY MUTINY OF 1924 AND THE OPENING OF THE ARMY The Military Archives has released the papers of the Army Inquiry of 1924. They also demanded that the Army be purged of former British Army officers and that progress be made towards Michael Collins’ ideal of an all-Ireland Republic. Some contacts were made with interned anti-Treaty IRA prisoners to make common cause against theFree State
TODAY IN IRISH HISTORY THE TAILTEANN GAMES, 1924-1936THE IRISH STORY
An online publisher of Irish History articles, interviews, ebooks andpodcasts.
OVERVIEW | THE IRISH STORY Ireland and the First World War – A Brief Overview. By John Dorney Ireland throughout the First World War of 1914-1918 was an integral part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain . EPIDEMICS IN IRELANDIRISH CONFEDERATION
July 2018 marks the 170th anniversary of the 1848 Young Ireland Rising. This article explores Irish Confederate activism in southUlster, 1848, .
MONAGHAN | THE IRISH STORY July 1935: ‘Remember Belfast – Boycott the Orangemen!’. July 1935 saw vicious sectarian rioting in Belfast. Here in a follow up to his article on the riot in Limerick, Brian . ‘The distinction is a fine but real one.’-. Sectarianism in County Clare during the War of Independence. Padraig Óg Ó’Ruairc looks at THE MAKING OF THE IRISH BORDER, 1912-1925, A SHORT HISTORYSEE MORE ONTHEIRISHSTORY.COM
JOHN DORNEY
John Dorney is an independent historian and chief editor and writer of the Irish Story website. He was born in Dublin in August 1980 and grew up in the southern suburb of Rathfarnham.He studied history and politics in University College Dublin and completed a Masters Thesis on the 16th century Irish chieftain Florence McCarthy entitled, Florence MacCarthy and the conquest of Gaelic Munster THE ARMY MUTINY OF 1924 AND THE OPENING OF THE ARMY The Military Archives has released the papers of the Army Inquiry of 1924. They also demanded that the Army be purged of former British Army officers and that progress be made towards Michael Collins’ ideal of an all-Ireland Republic. Some contacts were made with interned anti-Treaty IRA prisoners to make common cause against theFree State
TODAY IN IRISH HISTORY THE TAILTEANN GAMES, 1924-1936THE IRISH STORY
An online publisher of Irish History articles, interviews, ebooks andpodcasts.
AND THEN THERE WAS LIGHT: ELECTRIFICATION IN RURAL IRELAND A town promotes the rural electrification drive. By John Joe McGinley. Daily life in rural Ireland before the onset of electrification was best described as a constant struggle just to complete the mundane tasks that we all take for granted today. STREN GANG – THE IRISH STORY Recent Comments. The assassination of Walter Edward Guinness -Lord Moyne – 1944 – The Irish Story on ‘Worthy successor of Tone andCasement’?
THE FENIANS: AN OVERVIEW The core Irish component of the Fenians was the Irish Republican Brotherhood, which was founded in Paris in 1858 by James Stephens and John O’Mahoney, veterans of the Young Ireland movement of the 1840s.. With the aid of charismatic recruiters such as Stephens (popularly nicknamed ‘the wandering hawk’) who also built on the previous structure of the Young Ireland movement and the JEW | THE IRISH STORY Recent Comments. The assassination of Walter Edward Guinness -Lord Moyne – 1944 – The Irish Story on ‘Worthy successor of Tone and Casement’? Seán Russell and the IRA, (Part Two, 1931-40) IRELAND AND THE FIRST WORLD WAR Ireland throughout the First World War of 1914-1918 was an integral part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. But its experience of the Great War was quite different from that of England, Scotland or Wales. In Ireland, engagement with the war was less and casualties were lighter, but the war was also much more divisive and ‘TAKING MATTERS INTO THEIR OWN HANDS’ The Special Constabulary (after 1922 generally known as the ‘Ulster Special Constabulary’) were individuals sworn in as temporary RIC constables in different parts of Ireland. Leading unionists got sanction from the British cabinet for a scheme involving a massive intake of special constables to serve directly with the RIC. THE TAILTEANN GAMES, 1924-1936 Cathal Brennan looks at the Irish Free State’s answer to the Olympics – The Tailteann Games of 1924-1932. The advent of mass sporting events was one of the phenomena of the 20 th century. For the first time, sport could be brought to a nationwide or international audience through the MICHAEL COLLINS, NORTHERN IRELAND AND THE NORTHERN The Northern Offensive of May 1922 was Michael Collins’ plan to end partition. That event was known as the ‘Northern Offensive’ and is still so shrouded in mystery and intrigue that it is difficult to unravel. Its instigator was none other than the Provisional Government leader and (from June 1922) National Army Commander in Chief THE KILLURIN AMBUSH 1922 AND THE CIVIL WAR IN WEXFORD The Killurin train ambush, July 1922 and the outbreak of civil war in County Wexford. By Aaron Ó Maonaigh. The Irish Civil War broke out when pro-Treaty forces opened fire on the Four Courts on June 28 1922. As full-scale civil war developed in late June, the Republican campaign of destruction against the infrastructure of the nascentTHE IRISH STORY
An online publisher of Irish History articles, interviews, ebooks andpodcasts.
OVERVIEW | THE IRISH STORY By John Dorney Ireland throughout the First World War of 1914-1918 was an integral part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain EPIDEMICS IN IRELAND MONAGHAN | THE IRISH STORY By Patrick Mulroe Published by Irish Academic Press, 2017. Reviewer: Gerard Madden. Since June 2016, Brexit has dominated public discoursein both
IRISH CONFEDERATION
July 2018 marks the 170th anniversary of the 1848 Young Ireland Rising. This article explores Irish Confederate activism in southUlster, 1848,
JOHN DORNEY
John Dorney is an independent historian and chief editor and writer of the Irish Story website. He was born in Dublin in August 1980 and grew up in the southern suburb of Rathfarnham.He studied history and politics in University College Dublin and completed a Masters Thesis on the 16th century Irish chieftain Florence McCarthy entitled, Florence MacCarthy and the conquest of Gaelic Munster THE ARMY MUTINY OF 1924 AND THE OPENING OF THE ARMY In the Civil War they were again to the forefront in bloody work, leading the open combat against the ‘Irregulars’ (as they termed the anti-Treaty IRA) and many were also implicated in atrocities such as the killing of prisoners in Dublin, Cork and Kerry.. Diarmuid Ferriter, writing in the Irish Times, has voiced the opinion that the mutineers, due to be demobilised on Chief of Staff THE MAKING OF THE IRISH BORDER, 1912-1925, A SHORT HISTORYSEE MORE ON THEIRISHSTORY.COMCANADA BORDER TROOPSMEXICAN TROOPS ON BORDERMEXICO PUTS TROOPS ON BORDERUS TROOPS ON BORDERBRITISH BORDER AGENCYBRITISHBORDER CONTROL
THE TAILTEANN GAMES, 1924-1936 TODAY IN IRISH HISTORYTHE IRISH STORY
An online publisher of Irish History articles, interviews, ebooks andpodcasts.
OVERVIEW | THE IRISH STORY By John Dorney Ireland throughout the First World War of 1914-1918 was an integral part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain EPIDEMICS IN IRELAND MONAGHAN | THE IRISH STORY By Patrick Mulroe Published by Irish Academic Press, 2017. Reviewer: Gerard Madden. Since June 2016, Brexit has dominated public discoursein both
IRISH CONFEDERATION
July 2018 marks the 170th anniversary of the 1848 Young Ireland Rising. This article explores Irish Confederate activism in southUlster, 1848,
JOHN DORNEY
John Dorney is an independent historian and chief editor and writer of the Irish Story website. He was born in Dublin in August 1980 and grew up in the southern suburb of Rathfarnham.He studied history and politics in University College Dublin and completed a Masters Thesis on the 16th century Irish chieftain Florence McCarthy entitled, Florence MacCarthy and the conquest of Gaelic Munster THE ARMY MUTINY OF 1924 AND THE OPENING OF THE ARMY In the Civil War they were again to the forefront in bloody work, leading the open combat against the ‘Irregulars’ (as they termed the anti-Treaty IRA) and many were also implicated in atrocities such as the killing of prisoners in Dublin, Cork and Kerry.. Diarmuid Ferriter, writing in the Irish Times, has voiced the opinion that the mutineers, due to be demobilised on Chief of Staff THE MAKING OF THE IRISH BORDER, 1912-1925, A SHORT HISTORYSEE MORE ON THEIRISHSTORY.COMCANADA BORDER TROOPSMEXICAN TROOPS ON BORDERMEXICO PUTS TROOPS ON BORDERUS TROOPS ON BORDERBRITISH BORDER AGENCYBRITISHBORDER CONTROL
THE TAILTEANN GAMES, 1924-1936 TODAY IN IRISH HISTORYTHE IRISH STORY
An online publisher of Irish History articles, interviews, ebooks andpodcasts.
AND THEN THERE WAS LIGHT: ELECTRIFICATION IN RURAL IRELAND A town promotes the rural electrification drive. By John Joe McGinley. Daily life in rural Ireland before the onset of electrification was best described as a constant struggle just to complete the mundane tasks that we all take for granted today. CAIRO | THE IRISH STORY Recent Comments. The assassination of Walter Edward Guinness -Lord Moyne – 1944 – The Irish Story on ‘Worthy successor of Tone and Casement’? Seán Russell and the IRA, (Part Two, 1931-40) THE FENIANS: AN OVERVIEW The core Irish component of the Fenians was the Irish Republican Brotherhood, which was founded in Paris in 1858 by James Stephens and John O’Mahoney, veterans of the Young Ireland movement of the 1840s.. With the aid of charismatic recruiters such as Stephens (popularly nicknamed ‘the wandering hawk’) who also built on the previous structure of the Young Ireland movement and the STREN GANG – THE IRISH STORY Recent Comments. The assassination of Walter Edward Guinness -Lord Moyne – 1944 – The Irish Story on ‘Worthy successor of Tone andCasement’?
THE DUBLIN BRIGADE IRA 1917-1921 Two Clare IRA Volunteers demonstrate the Thompson submachine gun, it was first used in action in Dublin in 1921. The evolution of the Irish Volunteers in Dublin during the Irish War of Independence.By JohnDorney.
IRELAND AND THE FIRST WORLD WAR The victory parade for the Great War in Dublin in 1919. By John Dorney. Ireland throughout the First World War of 1914-1918 was an integral part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.THE EASTER RISING
John Dorney lays out the need-to-know facts of the Easter Rising. See also our overview series. The Easter Rising was an insurrection, mostly in Dublin city, that lasted from April 24 th until April 30 th 1916.. The insurgents in Dublin amounted to 1,200 men and women from the nationalist militia the Irish Volunteers, the socialist trade union group Irish Citizen Army and the women’s group THE TAILTEANN GAMES, 1924-1936 Cathal Brennan looks at the Irish Free State’s answer to the Olympics – The Tailteann Games of 1924-1932. The advent of mass sporting events was one of the phenomena of the 20 th century. For the first time, sport could be brought to a nationwide or international audience through theMARGARET KEOGH
Margaret was a member of Cumann na mBan the republican women’s organisation which supported the IRA during the War of Independence. She was also active in political circles as a suffragette and as a member of the Irish Clerical Workers Union.THE IRISH STORY
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THE ASSASSINATION OF WALTER EDWARD GUINNESS -LORD MOYNE – 1944SaveShare26
By Ray Esten The foundation stone of a building at Trinity College Dublin was laid by the Hon. Grania Guinness of the philanthropic brewing family in February of 1950. Grania named the Institute of Preventative Medicine ‘Moyne’ in memorial to her late father Baron Moyne. Dublin-born Walter Edward Guinness, late …Publisher 3 June,
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‘AN UNNECESSARY NUMBER OF GRAVES?’ – THE ROAD TO THE TRUCE OFJULY 1921
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The triumphs and failures of diplomacy that led to the end of the Irish War of Independence. By John Dorney Reflecting on … PODCAST: BRIAN HANLEY ON THE ARMS CRISIS OF 1970SaveShare8
Cathal Brennan and John Dorney interview Brian Hanley on the Arms Crisis of 1970. First Broadcast on the Irish History Show. In … ALBERT CASHIER, THE WOMAN WHO FOUGHT AS A MAN FOR THE UNION.SaveShare14
By John Joe McGinley There are over 400 documented cases of women disguising themselves as men to fight for both the Union … PODCAST: CORMAC MOORE ON THE PARTITION OF IRELANDSaveShare9
Cathal Brennan and John Dorney interview Cormac Moore on the partition of Ireland, 100 years ago. First broadcast on The Irish History … PODCAST: JAMES HOBAN – IRISH ARCHITECT OF THE WHITE HOUSESaveShare7
Cathal Brennan and John Dorney interview Stewart McLauren of the White House Historical Association about James Hoban the Irishman whodesigned the …
THE SINKING OF HMS WASP, 1884 – A CURSE, SABOTAGE OR HUMAN ERROR?SaveShare19
By John Joe McGinley In September 1884, a royal navy gunboat, on route to carry out an eviction sunk off the coast … Read all Articles →RECENT COMMENTS
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