Twenty nine years ago I interviewed Paddy Keogh at his home in
Churchtown. He was then 85 years of age
and he talked to me of his involvement in, and his memories of, the Irish War
of Independence. Paddy had been a member
of the A company 5th Battalion Carlow Kildare Brigade which was
centered in Athy. Much of the detail he
gave me confirmed information previously given to me by Mrs. Hester May whom I
had interviewed a year previously. Now
old I.R.A. pension records have just been released and those records add
further names to those previously known to me.
The pension records give two lists of names for A company, one of I.R.A.
membership on 11th July 1921, the day of the truce and the other for
the 28th of June 1922 after the Civil War had started.
Unfortunately there can never be total confidence in compiling a
comprehensive list of old I.R.A. members in this area of South Kildare. All those involved are now dead and
understandably record keeping during the War of Independence was minimal. I have previously identified the men from
this area who were imprisoned for republican activities. Joe May and Bapty Maher spent almost a year
in Ballykinlar Prisoner of War camp.
Others incarcerated included John Hayden of Offaly Street and J.J.
O’Byrne, a secondary school teacher in the local Christian Brothers School,
both of whom were imprisoned in Portlaoise Prison.
Republican activity in this area during the War of Independence was
quite limited. Felling trees, trenching
roads and cutting telegraph wires were a substantial part of that activity,
although the burning of vacant R.I.C. barracks in this area was also
recorded. The company, according to
Paddy Keogh, had only one rifle and about twenty revolvers, yet it was involved
in an attack on the R.I.C. barracks in Athy, six days after Connor and Lacey
were killed in the Barrowhouse ambush on 22nd May 1921.
The chairman of the local Sinn Fein Club which emerged following the
Easter Rising of 1916 was local shopkeeper and farmer Michael Dooley of 41 Duke
Street. Michael Dooley was married to
Julia Bradley and the two families, Dooleys and Bradleys, were prominent
members of the local republican movement.
Two other families whose involvement was noted on the I.R.A. membership
list and confirmed in my interviews with Paddy Keogh and Hester May were the
O’Rourkes of the Packing Stables and the Lambes of Upper William Street. Peter and Frank Lambe I am told operated a
petrol shop in Upper William Street.
Frank was one of several I.R.A. men who had to emigrate to America and was
helped to do so by Michael Dooley’s wife Julia.
Julia Dooley came to the financial assistance of several I.R.A. men who
had to leave Ireland for the U.S.A., including Dick Candy of Leinster Street
and John Hayden of Offaly Street. Her
involvement with the local I.R.A. company during the War of Independence and
its immediate aftermath merited well earned praise in later years.
The O’Rourke brothers from the Packing Stables on the Grand Canal
gave perhaps more family members to the I.R.A. than any other local
family. Brothers Michael, Thomas, James
and Frank were in the I.R.A. company with the company captaincy held by Michael
who was a Grand Canal company employee with an address at the Fifth Lock, Grand
Canal, Dublin.
Brothers John and Paddy Hayden of No. 7 Offaly Street were I.R.A.
members and Paddy, a baker in Paddy Dooley’s bakery in Leinster Street, was an
officer in A company. There were a
number of members from the Kilcrow area including James O’Brien, Daniel Murphy
and Joseph Donnelly, while their near neighbour Mick Curtis of Rockfield was, I
believe, the longest surviving member of A company. Mick’s three brothers who had enlisted at the
start of the 1914-18 war were killed in that war.
Michael Dooley and John Dooley, sons of Michael and Julia Dooley of
Duke Street were also members, as were the Brown brothers William and Jimmy of
Ardreigh. Another Brown from Ardreigh,
Tom, the brother of Miss Brown the teacher and no relation of the Brown brothers,
was an I.R.A. member who later emigrated to Canada.
Barrack Street, despite the often held belief that it was a fruitful
source of recruits for the British Army, had four men in the A company, Thomas
Germaine, William and John Hoare and Patrick Day. Bapty Maher was another member and it was his
bicycle shop in Duke Street which was trashed by ex British soldiers during
riots in the town.
There are many other names given to me during interviews with Paddy
Keogh and Hester May so many years ago.
It is not always possible to verify the accuracy of that information and
I am particularly conscious of this having heard some of those described by one
informant as ‘truce men’, meaning
that they joined the I.R.A. only after the ending of hostilities.
I am delighted to read last week that Athy Town Council intends to
erect a memorial plaque to honour the local men and women who played their part
in the War of Independence. It is a
tribute which is long overdue and hopefully the opportunity will be taken to
honour those men who were killed in and around the south Kildare area during
the Civil War.
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