World
War I has got our attention over the past few weeks with the Irish media giving
plenty of attention to the subject which went largely unnoticed up to a decade
or so ago. Athy has more reasons than
any other Irish town to remember the 1914-18 war. In fact it has 122 reasons. For 122 Athy men, mostly young men, died in
that war. Their families mourn their
deaths, but for at least 40 of those who died there was to be no known last
resting place. Their names chiselled on
war memorials are the only reminder of short lives once lived in a small
provincial town in County Kildare. These
forgotten men are the reason why in this the centenary year of the start of the
Great War we commemorate their lives.
Men
like Christopher Power of 8 Plewman’s Row who was killed in action in France on
26th April 1915. At 59 years
of age he was the oldest Athy man to die in the war. Power was survived by his wife Esther and
three children. His namesake,
Christopher Power of William Street, was just 22 years old when he died of
wounds received in battle on 28th April, 1916. Both men served in the Royal Dublin
Fusiliers.
At
the other end of the age scale we find 17 year old Anthony Byrne of the
Leinster Regiment who was killed on 28th April 1915. Christopher Gleeson of Upper William Street
was also 17 years old when he died in France on 1st May 1916.
I
was reminded of these men and of the other World War I soldiers from Athy when
William Walsh of Lusk, County Dublin called on me during the week. William at 80 years of age is the son of an
Athy father whose name he proudly bears.
William Walsh, the father, lived with his father, brothers and sisters
at No. 5 Janeville Lane in 1911. The
head of the family at the time of the 1911 census was John Walsh, aged 55 years
of age, who in 1901 lived with his wife and family at 13 Offaly Street. That house, still standing, was next to the malt
house and in later years was occupied by the Keatleys.
John
Walsh was a tailor in Meeting Lane whose father Brian Walsh originated from
Kilkenny but came to live in Athy when he married. William Walsh, his grandson, enlisted in the
Leinster Regiment in November 1911 as a member of the 4th (Extra
Reserve) battalion based in Maryborough.
It was usual in 1911 to join the Special Reserve for an initial period
of six years, the first six months of which was spent in full time
training. Thereafter, unless called upon
for active service, the enlistee was required to attend training for three to
four weeks a year.
Called
up as a reservist on the declaration of War William Walsh landed in France on
25th October 1914 as a member of the Leinster Regiment 2nd
Battalion. He was present at the
Christmas truce in 1914 when German and English soldiers laid down their arms
on Christmas Day and mingled with each other before returning to the trenches.
William
Walsh, who survived the war, spoke of how he was fortunate to survive a German
artillery attack which killed four of his colleagues just after he had left the
trench where they had been resting. He
was also involved in the first battle of Ypres, which in October 1914 resulted
in heavy casualties for the Leinster Regiment.
The
Athy soldier who on demobilisation lived in Dublin, spent two years working with
the Dublin tram company driving the Tram 21 which travelled between College
Green and Inchicore, Dublin. He later
worked in Guinnesses. His brother Joseph
also joined the British Army during the 1914-18 war but took the wise decision
on returning home on leave not to return to the battle front. Joseph later lived at No. 2 Dooley’s
Terrace. A younger brother Edward was
the father of John, Eamonn, Helen and Myra Walsh, all of whom still are living
in Athy. The story of William Walsh,
World War I veteran, was told to me by his son William whom I had the pleasure
to meet with his daughter Ann-Marie and his son -in-law this week.
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