Welcome back to History Undressed, guest author Suzanne Barrett, with more fascinating facts about Ireland, and this time she's highlighted the Easter of 1916.
|
1916a: Liberty hall from a Valentine's Collectors Series Post Card |
Easter
1916: The Fight for Irish Freedom
by Suzanne Barrett
Just before noon on Easter Monday, April 24th, a
group of 150 men strode out of Liberty Hall, then marched toward Sackville
Street (now O'Connell Street) a few hundred yards away. About one fourth of the marchers wore the
dark-green uniform of the Irish Citizen Army, others wore the grey-green of the
Irish Volunteers. Still others--perhaps
most of them--wore no uniform. Armed
with an odd mixture of rifles, shotguns, and handguns, they moved in step,
heading straight for the General Post Office (GPO).
The Dublin citizenry took little notice. Such sights had become quite common over the
past three years--groups of men playing at soldiers. Today was different. When the men arrived at the post office,
their leader, James Connolly, gave the order to charge. The guards on duty were taken completely by surprise.
Once inside, the men took control of the
building, removing the British flag and replacing it with two others, a plain
green one with the words 'Irish Republic' and a green, white, and orange
tricolor. It was the first time that
flag had flown over Dublin. The man who
hoisted the flag was Skibbereen-born Gearoid O'Sullivan, later to become
Adjutant General of the Irish Free State.
O'Sullivan was a distant cousin to Michael Collins and a few years
later, would marry Kitty Kiernan's sister, Maud.
In addition to affiliation with Irish Volunteers
or the Irish Citizen Army, many of these men had connections to the Irish
Republican Brotherhood (IRB). This
secret society, sometimes called Fenians, was founded in 1858 and conspired to
overthrow British rule by force. Earlier
rebellions had failed, and by the turn of the century, the group had achieved
little. At this time, however, younger
men joined, men with new ideas and fire.
Within ten years, the revitalized IRB had planned the Easter Rising.
Two of the most active IRB men in the Dublin
area were Tom Clarke and Sean MacDiarmada (MacDermott). Clarke had served prison time for his part if
the dynamite plot of the 1880s; Leitrim-born MacDermott, a generation younger,
was a born organizer who traveled throughout the country on behalf of the
Brotherhood. Clarke, MacDiarmada and a
few others in the Brotherhood formed the military council and included Padraig
Pearse and Joseph Mary Plunkett. James
Connolly, the leader of the Irish Transport and General Workers' Union, was
planning a rising of his own. The IRB
wisely let him in on the plans. Connolly
proved to be their best commander in the field.
Michael Collins, adjutant to Plunkett, was also an IRB man.
The military council's greatest need was for
arms. Roger Casement, a British Foreign
Office employee, was a passionate nationalist.
At the outbreak of WWI, he went to Germany and arranged a shipment of
arms to arrive off the southwest coast of Ireland aboard the Aud.
Good Friday 1916 was the date set for the arms arrival.
Dublin Castle knew something was going on, but
they couldn't be sure what exactly. Then
came the news that the Aud had been
intercepted by a Royal navy ship. The
German captain scuttled the arms cache, and Casement was captured from an
accompanying German submarine.
|
1916d: Rebel Barricade from National Library of Ireland |
With the arms gone, everyone assumed the rising
was off. On Easter, the day originally
set for the encounter, the military council gathered and decided to plan the
action for the following day, despite the arms shortage and the fact that
Volunteer leader, Eoin MacNeill, ordered all activities canceled.
The men leading the charge on the GPO,
therefore, were the secret military council.
Once inside, they sandbagged and fortified their garrison against the
expected British counter-attack.
Barricades were set up in the streets, and snipers moved into position.
The counter-attack began on Tuesday
morning. Troops under the command of
General W. H. M. Lowe arrived from the Curragh, thirty-five miles away, and took
up positions in several areas. They
cordoned off Dublin from west to east which brought them into immediate
conflict with some rebels. A British
machine gun crew positioned themselves on the fourth floor of the Shelbourne
Hotel, the tallest building around St. Stephen's Green, and began shelling the
rebels who had retreated to the College of Surgeons. By seven o'clock, the rebels there had been
reduced to about 100 counting men, women, and boys. Their position hopeless, they would hold on
for five days until the surrender.
Around the city, other rebel commands maintained
as much pressure as they could on British troops, however, it was now clear
that MacNeill's orders canceling activity had taken its toll. Turnout was much lower than hoped, and Dublin
was virtually on its own.
By nightfall of the second day, General Lowe had
nearly 5,000 British troops at his disposal, vastly outnumbering the
rebels. Four pieces of artillery had
arrived earlier, and Lowe began to cordon off the northern suburbs which, with
the southern cordon already established, would trap the rebels' GPO and Four
Courts garrisons.
On Wednesday, the Helga, a grey fisheries patrol boat, sailed up the Liffey and tied
up on the south quays opposite the Custom House. Her duty: to shell the rebel positions. The first target--Liberty Hall.
By now, the fighting centered on the Mendicity
Institution. Twenty men, commanded by
rebel Sean Heuston, inflicted casualties on over one hundred British, but soon
the rebels were surrounded on all sides.
After the British forces lobbed hand grenades into the building, Heuston
was forced to surrender. The Helga sailed down the Liffey to begin shelling the rear of
Boland's Mills garrison, commanded by Eamon de Valera.
|
1916h: Pearce Surrender to Gen. Lowe from Weidenfield Archives |
Meanwhile, at the port of Kingstown (now Dun
Laoghaire), British troops landed and marched toward the Royal Hospital, some
nine miles away. En route, they marched
into the rebel forces at Mount Street Bridge, where twelve men held off the
British for the remainder of the day, inflicting over two hundred casualties.
Four of the rebels survived.
The Helga
now shelled the GPO, the British forces' main objective. By late afternoon, they added the boom of
artillery to the barrage.
Sackville Street burned on Thursday following a
10 am non-stop artillery attack. Inside
the GPO, the flames were so intense the rebels had to hose down the sacking on
the barricaded windows. By 10 pm, an oil
works directly opposite the GPO caught fire.
As sparks began to hit the roof, the rebels moved their explosives to
the basement.
The leaders knew their position was
hopeless--had known it from the start-- but felt the need for an armed
rebellion. National honor demanded it
and the IRB principle demanded it. The
rebels could now only delay the inevitable for as long as possible to get
public opinion on their side.
James Connolly was full of energy and directed
GPO operations in a brisk, no-nonsense way until that afternoon he was struck
just above the ankle by a ricocheting bullet.
The pain was intense, and greatly weakened by it and the loss of blood,
he was not the same afterward. Clarke
and MacDiarmada also took leading roles, Pearse busied himself with writing
proclamations and bulletins.
A furious gun battle ensued at the South Dublin
Union between British troops and the rebels under the command of Eamonn Ceannt
and his second in command, fiery Cathal Brugha.
On Friday, James Connolly was carried into the
public office of the GPO, in pain, but wanting to stay at the center of the
operation. He dictated a lengthy address
to his troops which was taken by his secretary, Winifred Carney. It spoke of victory, when in fact there was
defeat, of the entire country taking up arms, when in fact, it was just in
Dublin, of armed Volunteers marching on Dublin when there were none. Connolly knew the Rising was a gesture, but
the longer the gesture went on, the longer Irish patriots were seen to be
fighting the might of the British Empire, the greater the rebels' chance of
winning the hearts and minds of the Irish people.
By 4 pm on Friday, the roof of the GPO was on
fire and the Volunteers were forced to evacuate. Pearse and Connolly were the last to leave.
As the GPO was burning, Gen. Lowe ordered a
savage frontal attack on the North King Street rebels that lasted until
Saturday morning. The South
Staffordshire Regiment, unused to fighting men who didn't always wear uniforms,
took out their wrath on the civilian populace by murdering fifteen innocent
men.
By 9 am Saturday morning it was over. The last headquarters of the Irish Republic
was established in the back parlor of Hanlon's fishmonger's shop at No. 16
Moore Street. No further retreat without
the possibility of high civilian casualties was possible. The military council decided to surrender.
Nurse Elizabeth O'Farrell made her way up Moore
Street wearing Red Cross markings and carrying the white flag of truce. She was taken to see Gen. Lowe who demanded
an unconditional surrender. She returned
to No. 16 and half an hour later, returned with Pearse. Pearse took off his sword and handed it over
to Lowe in a formal act of surrender.
The photo of Pearse surrendering to Gen. Lowe shows the general with his
son who served under him. Lowe's son
later became known as John Loder, a British actor of minor note.
Pearse was driven away to see General Maxwell at
army headquarters where he drafted the formal surrender document. Nurse O'Farrell then delivered this document
to the other rebel garrisons. Shortly
afterward, the wounded Connolly was taken to the Red Cross Hospital. The main body of Volunteers was marched under
military orders into Sackville Street where they laid down their arms before
the British. The Four Courts garrison
surrendered next and joined their comrades, now totaling about 400 men. They spent the night in the open, huddled
under guard in the gardens of the Rotunda Hospital at the top of Sackville
Street.
|
1916f: Street Barricade and Looters from National Library of Ireland |
On Sunday morning, they were marched off to
Richmond Barracks. As they passed
through some areas of the city, people hurled rotten fruit and vegetables at
them. On their return from imprisonment,
these same Volunteers would be hailed as heroes.
The leaders were court-martialed, and fifteen of
them were sentenced to execution by firing squad. On May 3, they shot Padraig Pearse, Thomas
MacDonagh, and Tom Clarke. The
executions continued until May 12 with the shooting that disgusted
everyone. There was little outcry at
first, but as the executions continued, public figures pleaded for
clemency. Maxwell refused. To him, they were traitors who had committed
treason and deserved to die.
On May 12, Sean MacDiarmada was executed,
followed by James Connolly, who was too ill to stand and had to be tied to a
chair. Countess Markievicz had her
sentence commuted to life imprisonment, as did Eamon de Valera--Markievicz
because she was a woman, de Valera because he was born in America.
The Rising was over, but it was not over. It has been called 'the triumph of failure'
because it made martyrs of its leaders and their deaths revived the spirit of
republican separatism. Within a year,
the Sinn Fein party which had nothing to do with the rebellion, would be taken
over by the republican survivors of the Rising and would win numerous
by-elections. The quest for freedom
became a national pursuit, run by IRB men, 1916 survivors and inmates of
Frongoch, the prisoner of war camp in Wales known as the 'University of
Revolution.'
There are many sites throughout Dublin that
visitors will find of interest, particularly at Easter when a number of
commemorative events take place. Some of
Dublin's most interesting sights are those associated with the Easter Rising.
Suzanne Barrett is the author of award-winning historical and contemporary romance. She currently writes for Turquoise Morning Press. In addition, Suzanne writes content for an Irish travel website ( www.irelandforvisitors.com) and is a wire jewelry artist ( www.bellerustique.com). Her novels are available at Barnes & Noble, Amazon and other fine retailers.
Find out more about Suzanne at www.suzannebarrett.com.
IN LOVE AND WAR
Embittered war correspondent Quinn Lawlor returns to his ancestral home in Ireland where he finds solace in the arms of Waterford dairy farmer Meaghann Power.Meaghann must separate her daytime life as farmer and daughter of Irish rebels from nights of blazing desire for the one man she shouldn't love.Will their passion prove strong enough to overcome a decades-old bitter struggle?
3 comments:
I know little about Ireland's history so thank you for this very informative post, Suzanne. I look forward to reading Quinn and Meaghann's story. Beautiful cover!
That was sooooooo interesting! I'm hoping to get to study abroad in Ireland next year, so thanks for the lesson! I'm trying to read as much as I can about it before I go. Do you have any recommended reads?
Post a Comment