Christmas was not far away when posters appeared on the streets of
Athy advertising Fred Leo and his famous Irish concert party. The year was 1917 and Fred and his company
were to give performances on the 6th and 7th of December
in Athy’s Town Hall. The performers had
earlier showcased their talents in Kilbeggan and after Athy were scheduled to
travel to Goresbridge.
The detailed information we have today in relation to these wandering
troubadours comes to us courtesy of the Royal Irish Constabulary. The R.I.C. was enjoined to report on the
performances which the authorities felt bordered on the seditious. For that reason the Public Records Office
which holds the State’s archives has a range of interesting reports filed by local
R.I.C. Officers on the shows put on by Fred Leo and his players.
The advertising poster commandeered by the R.I.C. and forwarded to Police
headquarters with almost daily reports was headlined ‘We 6’. This was the number
of artists involved and included Carroll Malone, described as Dublin’s youngest
tenor, Miss Josie Dene, soubrette and dancer and Miss A.C. Sheehan, soprano and
pianiste. Fred Leo was described as a
comedian, with Miss Annie Tucker as a champion dancer, Feis Ceol medallist and
Oireachteas winner. It was the artist
whose name appeared at the end of the poster who most interested the
R.I.C. Seamus M’Donnell promoted himself
as ‘Ireland’s Lightning Cartoonist’,
with a promise to feature ‘your history
from Owen Roe O’Neill to de Valera’.
Admission prices varied from 8 pence to 2 shillings and 4 pence and
the advertised programme of ‘Irish –
Ireland Songs, recitations and skits’ was rounded off with the call ‘Éire óg Abú’.
Athy based R.I.C. Sergeant Thomas Traynor wrote a report on 10th
December 1917 for his superiors, following the performances on the 6th
and 7th of that month. He
attended both night’s performances with Constable James Power from the local
barracks and reported that the ‘most
objectionable part of the programme was the sketching and speeches by Seamus
M’Donnell which had a tendency to cause disaffection and to injure recruiting
for the Army’.
About 100 attended the show, mostly boys, on the night of the 6th
to see M’Donnell drawing a sketch of Countess Markievitz and commenting on her
role in the previous year’s rebellion in Dublin. Traynor reported M’Donnell as saying, ‘she was a dead shot and did for one
anyway. I would back her against anyone
in giving the peelers or men in khaki their medicine.’ M’Donnell was reported as praising the Irish
Rebellion for stopping conscription and threatening that ‘should John Bull attempt a dirty trick on us we would not leave a bit
of khaki in Ireland.’
Constable Power’s report confirmed that the most objectionable part
of the programme was the sketches and remarks of Seamus M’Donnell. Referring to the separation allowances then
payable to wives of soldiers fighting overseas M’Donnell was reported as
claiming that ‘the separation allowance
people were despicable wretches taking the blood money and they should be
ashamed of themselves for having anyone belonging to them fighting for John
Bull.’
For the audience whom Constable Power described as ‘young lads all having Sinn Fein tendencies’,
the cartoonist patter went down well and on the second night a larger audience
was in the hall. Interestingly Constable
Power noted in his report that ‘no
respectable people were present’.
The separation allowance women of the town were unlikely to be in
the audience on either night and if they were present the R.I.C. would undoubtedly
have had a riot on their hands. The same
women were often reported, particularly towards the latter end of the 1914-18
war, as being involved with altercations with local Sinn Feiners whose
anti-recruiting meetings in Emily Square they sought to disrupt. I can recall reading a local newspaper report
of the time which described the wives of soldiers fighting overseas shaking
their ‘ring’ papers at the Sinn
Feiners, while loudly shouting down the platform speakers. The ‘ring’
papers were the separation allowance books, so called because of the circular
stamp embossed each time the weekly allowance was paid to the local women.
The National Archives hold a vast treasure of documents which
sometimes helped to provide an insight into life in provincial Ireland of
generations past. The report so
carefully prepared by Sergeant Traynor and Constable Power in their barracks at
the end of Barrack Lane, Athy in December 1917 gives an interesting account of
a time when Irish Nationalism was becoming more prominent in the South Kildare
area. The Easter Rising and the release
of the Irish prisoners in December 1916 created a momentum which would gather
pace, culminating in the start of the War of Independence in January 1919. What part Seamus M’Donnell played in whipping
up support for the Nationalist cause as he toured the country with Fred Leo’s
concert party we will never know.
No comments:
Post a Comment