November is the month we remember
the dead, not only those of a recent generation but even more particularly the
dead of World War 1. The war which
started in August 1914 and was expected to end by Christmas saw nearly 10
million soldiers die before the 52 months of conflict ended at eleven o’clock on
the morning of the eleventh day of the eleventh month 1918. It was a war which brought untold pain,
suffering and loss to many families and here in Athy brought news of death to
many households.
While research is continuing into
the casualties suffered amongst the reservists and enlisted men of South
Kildare the current list of Athy men killed in battle numbers 122. These men, so many of whose bodies were never
recovered and so have no known grave, were part of the town’s population of
approximately 3,500 people. Their loss
created immense social and financial problems for families left without
husbands, fathers, sons and brothers.
Added to the grief of those left
behind was the awful realisation that the country which had sent these men into
battle turned against them on their return to Ireland. They had been cheered by family and friends
as they paraded to the railway station to join up but on being demobbed they
found that all had utterly changed. The
church and civic leaders who had encouraged their enlistment were silenced by
the emerging nationalist majority. The
surviving men of the war-torn battlefields of France and Flanders found
themselves ignored and sidelined in their home town.
Amongst those who returned home from
the war were Patrick Berry of Kilmead and Jack ‘Skurt’ Doyle of Athy, both of whom survived years spent in the
prisoner of war camp in Limburg. Not so
lucky were Athy men Michael Bowden, John Byrne and Martin Maher who were also
prisoners in Limburg. All these men had
taken part in the Battle of Mons which opened on 23rd August 1914
and were captured by the Germans.
Bowden, Byrne and Maher died in Limburg before the war ended. John Byrne who was a gardener employed by
John Holland of Model Farm died on 27th September 1918 just weeks
before the Armistice. His sister was
married to Michael Bowden, an Athy postman who died in Limburg on 27th
May 1918.
The surviving soldiers of World War
I had memories which they did not share on their return home. For them remembrance of times spent in rat
infested and muddied trenches in France or Flanders must have included
recurring themes of death and suffering.
It is difficult for a generation far removed from the savagery of war to
understand the hardships endured by these men.
Recent research by local military
historian Clem Roche has identified a number of men from landlocked Athy who
served in the British Merchant Navy during the Great War. This discovery is an interesting addition to
our knowledge of Athy men’s participation in World War I. Theirs is an untold story of bravery on the
high seas in the North Atlantic, Mediterranean and the Southern Oceans. Of those identified to date all appear to
have survived the war.
The men who died during World War I
were overlooked by the Irish public for many decades. It was 25 or so years ago that John MacKenna
and some friends got together to honour the Athy men who died in war. The simple ceremony of remembrance was held
in St. Michael’s Cemetery and has continued each year since on Remembrance
Sunday. On Sunday next 9th
November at 3.00 p.m. local people will again gather in St. Michael’s Cemetery
to pay a deserved tribute to the men from Athy and district who died not only
in World War I but in all wars. We will
remember young men such as the three Kelly brothers, Denis, John and Owen of
Chapel Lane, the three Curtis brothers of Rockfield, John, Lawrence and Patrick
and the three Byrne brothers, Anthony, James and Joseph from Chapel Lane, all
of whom died during the 1914/18 war.
This year also the oratorio ‘Still and Distant Voices’ written by John
MacKenna with music composed by Mairead O’Flynn which was first performed almost
15 years ago will be again performed in the Arts Centre in Woodstock Street on Thurs.
6th, Friday 7th and Sat. 8th November, 2014 at
8.00 p.m. each evening.
Remembrance Sunday is a day to honour
and respect the memory of those young men from Athy and district who died in
the 1914-18 war. In this the centenary
year of the start of the war it is perhaps more important than ever that we
remember a lost generation. Do come to
St. Michael’s Cemetery on Sunday at 3.00 p.m. and if you can attend the
performance in the Arts Centre during the week.
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