‘The remains of men who
fought in the war are still unearthed from time to time.’ That simple sentence, culled
from a newspaper article some months ago reminds us that so many of those
killed during the course of the 1914-18 war never had the dignity of a
Christian burial. How many lie in unrecognised
and unmarked graves is not known. The
fatality figures for Athy men which I have been compiling from different
sources has increased to 121, with the addition of Robert Bloomer, a local postman
from St. Michael’s Terrace. Bloomer, who
left a young wife and family, died in India and is buried in Poona.
Looking through the list of names of the men who left Athy to enlist
for the duration of the war it is obvious that few local families were not
represented on the battle fields of France and Flanders. Many families such as that of Mrs. M. Mulhall
of William Street had several family members involved. I have no information on the Mulhall family
other than that extracted from a report in the Nationalist newspaper of 19th
January 1918 which mentions Mrs. Mulhall’s three enlisted sons and the award
of a Parchment Certificate of the Irish
Brigade to one of them, Lance Corporal P. Mulhall. Was he, I wonder, a brother of John Mulhall,
a 20 year old Private in the Dublin Fusiliers who was killed in France on 23rd
October 1916?
Athy man, Frank Redmond, who is now living in London, has been
researching for some time past the World War I dead from Athy and County
Kildare and he recently sent me part of his findings. He has found that at least 39 of the Athy men
killed during the war have no known graves and their names are recorded on war
memorials at Thiepval, Arras, Helles, Tyne Cot, the Menin Gate in Ypres and
other similar memorial sites. Sadly their
mangled remains sank into the ground, never to be found and even if found in
later years were never identified.
Fellow soldiers and townsmen who died in battle and were buried in
known graves include Denis Kelly who was only 20 years old when he was laid to
rest in his grave at Poperinge in Belgium in October 1918. His brother John had also reached his 20th
birthday when he died in Netley Hospital, Hampshire in England three years
previously. He is buried in Netley Cemetery. Another brother Owen, who had enlisted at the
same time as John, was also killed in the second year of the war and he is
buried in Le Treport Military Cemetery.
Their parents, John and Mary Kelly, lived in 4 Chapel Lane. I have been trying for some time to get some
information on the Kelly family and I have found two memorials in St. Michael’s
Cemetery to Mary Kelly who died on 6th May 1964, aged 86 years and
John Kelly who died on 4th May 1940, aged 66 years. His memorial was erected by ‘his wife and sons’. Were they the parents of the three young Kellys
from Chapel Lane who were killed during the 1914-18 War?
The slaughter of the 1914-18 battlefields resulted in the death of almost
ten million soldiers, which with the
civilian losses of life during the same war give a total of over 19 million war
fatalities. The death of 219 men from
Athy and the neighbouring hinterland seems little in comparison. However, within the small close-knit
community of Athy the loss of so many in such a short period most certainly had
serious repercussions for the social fabric of the local community. Those difficulties were exacerbated by the
advent of other wars which this time was fought on Irish soil. The War of Independence and the subsequent
Civil War effectively kept the Irish countryside in a continuing state of
emergency for almost 9 years. Frank
Aiken’s call in May 1923 for anti-treaty forces to dump their arms brought an
end to the Civil War and to years of armed conflict which started with the
outbreak of hostilities on the Continent in August 1914.
The soldiers, demobbed after the ceasefire on 11th
November 1918, returned home to Athy where for a decade or so they felt able
each year to come together to remember their fallen comrades. The election of De Valera’s Fianna Fáil
government in 1932 coincided with a growing public disenchantment with the
annual old comrades parade on Remembrance Sundays in provincial towns such as
Athy. The parades ceased to be held from
the early 1930s and thereafter the events of 1914-18 and the men who had
participated in them were largely ignored.
For many local families however, especially those who had lost family
members in the Great War, the 11th of November held a special
meaning. It was a day set aside to
remember and grieve for the young men who had died in the war but for decades
that remembrance was held behind closed doors within close-knit family
circles. There was no public acknowledgement
and no public recognition of what a generation of Athy folk had suffered.
In recent years attitudes have changed. We can now pay a well deserved public tribute
to our neighbour’s children knowing that their participation in a foreign war,
irrespective of the uniform they wore, is a valued part of our shared Irish
history.
This year the usual Remembrance Sunday ceremony in St. Michael’s
Cemetery will not take place. This is
due solely to the absence on the day of a number of people who have organised
it in the past. Instead on Tuesday evening,
11th November at 8.00 p.m., the Heritage Centre will host a short
talk with poetry reading, music and the showing of a short video as part of the
90th anniversary of Armistice Day.
The performance under the title ‘In
Some Faithful Heart’ will be Athy’s contribution to that anniversary and admission
to the event is free.
Commemorating past events and remembering those people involved in
them is one of the ways in which we can pay tribute to past generations of
locals who once walked the same streets as we do today. It is particularly gratifying to acknowledge
the part played by Athy Town Council in putting up a plaque on the Town Hall to
the local men involved in the First World War.
Less pleasing however is the failure of the same Council to erect in
Emily Square a memorial to the Athy men and women who suffered during the 1798 Rebellion. I am at a loss to understand the Council’s
neglect in this regard and fail to see why the Memorial designed and sculpted
by Brid Ni Rinn cannot be erected. Ten
years have passed since Brid Ni Rinn completed the commission given to her by
the Council and her finished work still languishes in the Council yard. Is there a possibility it might be put in
position before the local election next June?
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