Martin Brennan is an Athy
man whose story mirrors in so many ways the story of so many other folk born in
this town in the years preceding and during the Second World War. His is a story tinged with sadness. His mother died when Martin was a month short
of his second birthday. She was Esther
Territt from Meeting Lane before she married Michael Brennan after he returned
from the 1914-18 war. Martin was the
youngest of eight children and he has no memories of his mother and no photograph
of the young Athy woman who passed away when she was just 32 years old. Esther’s brother Michael Territt was killed
during the First World War and by a strange coincidence his death plaque
bearing the name Michael Joseph Territt is on my desk as I write this article.
Martin’s father was one of
the fortunate men who survived the war, even if he was never again to enjoy the
good health which was his before he travelled overseas with the British
Expeditionary Force. Michael Brennan
suffered for the remaining 42 years of his life from the after effects of gas
poisoning.
Three of the Brennan
children died at a young age. Infant
mortality amongst Irish families in the 1930s was very high and it would take
another decade or so before advances in medical science and care stemmed the
unacceptable loss of young lives. When
Esther Brennan passed away on 10th October 1938 to join her three
infant children who were buried in St. Michael’s Cemetery the rearing of the
young Brennan family passed to Martin’s only sister Mona. She reared the Brennan children after their
father emigrated to England. It would be
many years before he returned to Athy and it was with his daughter Mona, then
married and living in Pairc Bhride, that he found a home in his final years. Michael died on 6th January 1960
and as the old soldier was laid to rest with his wife and infant children his
military medals, the only tangible reminder of his connection with the dreadful
slaughter of 1914-18 were buried with him.
Like his father before him
Martin on reaching manhood took the emigrant boat to England where he joined
three of his brothers. He worked with
McAlpine for many years, traversing the English countryside in common with the
Irish labourers who built and rebuilt the highways of that country. He lived for a while in Lincoln where the ‘Lincolnshire Echo’ of 22nd
July 1961 carried under the headline ‘Irish
man rescues mother child’, the story of how Irish labourer Martin Brennan
dived into the River Witham to rescue a mother and her four year old son from
almost certain drowning. Martin later
returned to Ireland where he worked on the construction of the new Dominican
Church which was opened on St. Patrick’s Day 1965.
His brothers Michael,
Joseph and Timmy who had emigrated to England before Martin, all eventually
took up residence in Lincoln. Timmy died
there in the 1970s, survived by his wife and family, while Michael died last
year, aged 84 years. Joseph still lives
in the city of Lincoln where his two brothers have their last resting
place. Lincoln City is also home to a
number of other Athy men, including Dom and Jim Kelly and members of the Maher
family.
Martin who has been
unemployed for many years was widowed last year when his wife Brigid passed
away. I have known Martin for many years
and his story in so many ways is a story common to many other men living in
Athy. The loss of his mother at such a
young age was a fate shared with many other locals, whether due to death or involuntary
emigration. Many families of the 1940s
and beyond never enjoyed the security and comfort of a family group where both
parents were present. Deprivation and
hardship was apparently an accepted part of life for many, yet the uneven
struggle to survive did not appear to blunt the good nature so common to Athy
folk.
Martin will be 76 years
old on 11th November next, the anniversary of the armistice of 1918,
the day his father Michael realised for the first time in four years that he
was no longer required to put his life at risk for the ‘cause of small nations’.
There are many instances
of local families brought together by marriage where connections already
existed by virtue of brothers, sons or fathers who soldiered together through
the dreadful years of the 1914-18 war. A
Brennan and a Territt soldiered together in France and Flanders and the
survivor Michael Brennan would return to his home town of Athy to marry Esther
Territt, whose brother Michael lies buried in Mailly – Maillet Communal
Cemetery, Flanders. Michael Brennan lies
in St. Michael’s cemetery with his wife Esther and infant children and the
gravestone marking their grave also recalls the memory of their sons Tim and
Michael who died in England.