On 2nd
February 1918 there appeared in the Nationalist and Leinster Times the
following death notice.
“Somewhere in France my son
lies
Rolled in a Union Jack
Tears may flow, but still I
know
I can never bring him back
I never knew the pain he
bore
I never saw him die
I only know he passed away
And never said goodbye
Could I, his mother have
clasped his hands
The one I loved so well
To kiss his brow when death
was near
And whisper, Laurence
farewell.”
It had been
inserted by Mrs. Curtis of the Quarries, Athy in memory of her son Laurence, a
private in the British Army who was killed in action in France the previous
December. News of his death reached his
mother towards the end of January. She
had already lost two other sons in the same war, both of whom also died in
France. Her son Patrick was the first to
die, killed in action on 5th November 1914. His brother John died of wounds received in
battle on 9th January 1917.
The war in which
Britain, France and Belgium were allies fighting the combined forces of Germany
and the Austro Hungarian empire opened on 4th August 1914 in the
confident expectation of an allied victory before Christmas. Hundreds of young men from Athy and the
neighbouring countryside seized the opportunity to escape from the tedious
boredom of Irish country life by enlisting in the British Army. The prospect of overseas service coupled with
the generous wage packet on offer was sufficient inducement for most. Any doubts that might have lingered were
dispelled by John Redmond’s appeal to the Irish Volunteers in which many local
men had previously enlisted. Redmond
encouraged those same young men, who in their thousands had become members of
the Irish Volunteer Movement, to join the British Army in the fight against
Germany so as to copper fasten Ireland’s claim to Home Rule.
For them fighting
in the War was an extension of their commitment to the Volunteer movement and
when they enlisted they did so with the active encouragement of the local
clergy and with the support of the local Urban District Council and business
leaders of the town. It was a war for
which every proud young Irishman was encouraged to enlist and the men from the
town of Athy and its hinterland responded to that call in their hundreds. Recruits were cheered as they marched to the
Railway Station in Church Road to catch trains to the various regimental
depots. The Leinster Street Fife and
Drum Band often paraded before groups of new recruits as they took leave of
their family and friends. For many it
was their first time to travel outside of their home town and few, if any, had
ever before taken a trip outside Ireland.
Now after a short period of training they would embark for the Continent
and for many attached to the Dublin Fusiliers, to the Turkish Peninsula which
later generations of Irish men and women would readily identify by its name -
the Dardanelles.
The men who were
regarded as patriots as they marched through Athy to cheers and shouted good
wishes from the local townspeople knew little of what awaited them on the
battlefields and on their return home at the end of the war.
Dr. John Kilbride
whose father was the Medical Officer for Athy enlisted, as did Thomas Monks, a
Solicitor who practised in the town.
Dorothy Hayden’s two brothers, Patrick and Aloysius, also enlisted. They were from Churchtown House and as the
Hayden Brothers marched to war their sister entered the Brigadine Convent in
Tullow. She would be professed as Sr.
Vincent de Paul on 13th August 1918, but by then her brothers
Patrick and Aloysius were dead and buried in French soil.
John Malone,
youngest son of local Urban Councillor and Woodstock Street publican “Crutch” Malone also enlisted. He was one of the lucky survivors of the war
but would suffer serious injuries which required lengthy hospitalisation.
The first Athy man
to die in the war was William Corcoran who died on 1st September
1914. By 7th September 1914
seven Athy men had been killed in battle.
Recruitment was not apparently affected, due no doubt to the censorship
imposed by the British authorities.
Young men continued to enlist, encouraged by press reports such as that which appeared in the Kildare
Observer of 30th January 1915.
“There is at present no less than
5 sons of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas King of Narraghmore in active service”.
In February 1915
Athy UDC, still actively promoting the cause of the war effort , voted to equip
two beds to be known as “the Athy beds” in connection with the conversion of
State Departments in Dublin Castle for use as a Red Cross Hospital for wounded
soldiers. In June 1915 the Council
directed that a “Roll of Honour” be compiled of local men who enlisted to fight
in the war. Clearly those men still
retained the support of the local people and their public representatives but
that was to change as the war progressed and the Irish Republican Movement
mushroomed after the execution of the leaders of the 1916 Easter Rebellion.
Many of the men
who had been encouraged to enlist to fight the war would never know that those
who had once cheered and encouraged them would later reject the survivors of
the 1914-18 war. They never knew of this
rejection, dying as they did in the heat and noise of battle, unaware of the
change of direction taken by the newly emerging militant wing of Irish
Republicanism. They too had been
supporters of Irish Home Rule before embarking for the Continent. While they fought, some dying, some
surviving, those who stayed behind in Ireland seized the opportunity to
escalate the demand for Irish Independence.
The men on the continental battlefields were cut adrift from the cause
which they had supported.
The change in the
publics attitude which started with the Easter Rebellion would see the
survivors of the war returning to Athy without the cheers and public
acclamation which had greeted their departure.
Events in Ireland during the four years of the World War had created an
enormous shift in public opinion and the men who fought and survived the war
were no longer regarded, as they were at the start of the war, as patriots
whose participation guaranteed Home Rule for Ireland.
After the War of
Independence and the Civil War the Irish Free State held no place for the
survivors of World War I. Left in the
background, their sacrifices were forgotten until 14 years ago in Athy John
MacKenna with some friends started what is now the Annual Remembrance ceremony
in St. Michael’s Cemetery. St. Michael’s
holds the graves of six young Athy men who died during World War I and their
graves have been the focus of remembrance ceremonies in the intervening years.
Next Sunday, 14th
November at 3.00 p.m. an ecumenical service will be held in St. Michael’s
Cemetery to remember the war dead of all generations, but especially the
forgotten men of World War 1. Why not
come along and help to redress the shameful way in which the lost generation of
the 1914-18 War were, until recent years, erased from our history.
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