Last Sunday in St. Michael’s
Church of Ireland at the top of Offaly Street an ecumenical service was held to
remember the men from Athy and district who died in the 1914-18 war. This was the first time that the different
churches in Athy came together in a church setting to commemorate those men who
100 years ago enlisted in their hundreds to fight in France and further
afield. It was appropriate that the
centenary of the start of the 1st World War was marked in this way given
that the young men from Athy were encouraged by Church and civic leaders of
1914 and later years to join the English army.
The service, organised by
Reverend Olive Donohoe and Fr. Gerry Tanham, commenced with a hymn and was
followed by the following reflection on the war:
Those born in
times of peace do not recognise the true face of war. Similarly those of us born decades after the
war which shattered the lives of so many from our community do not perhaps
recognise those lives lost in the muddied battlefields of France and Flanders.
Encouraged by
Church and civic leaders young men from our town enlisted in their hundreds
during the 1914-18 war. Many did not
return. Many were never found – for they
lie today where they died.
In the public
domain acts of remembrance for those who died in the war were overtaken by
political instability and conflict. As a
result the grieving process for deceased fathers, sons, husbands and brothers
retreated into the privacy of family homes.
For decades the war dead were forgotten and overlooked by a people whose
lives were immersed in the War of Independence, the subsequent Civil War and an
emerging and developing statehood. They
were a forgotten generation – young men whose dreams were never realized. The great shame was that of later generations
who failed to recognise the sacrifices made by the young men of 1914-18 and who
failed to disentangle public acts of remembrance from the political legacy of
the new Irish State.
In this the decade
of centenaries we are remembering so many elements of our shared Irish history
– including the beginning of World War I, for we now accept that it was an
important part of Irish history and of a past which influenced and shaped our
local community. Athy lost at least 122
young men during the 1914-18 war. The
loss of life for the town and its hinterland was in excess of 220 men.
In 1966 the then
Taoiseach Sean Lemass, a one time critic of Remembrance ceremonies in Ireland,
acknowledged that Irish men who had enlisted during World War I were motivated
by the highest purpose and died in their tens of thousands believing that they
were giving their lives in the cause of human liberty everywhere not excluding
Ireland.
It is appropriate
that here in Athy some members of the local community took a lead almost 25
years ago to remember the local men who died in the 1914-18 war. Commemoration ceremonies have been held each
year since then and today in the centenary year of the start of the war we come
together for an ecumenical service in the Church which records on wall
memorials the sacrifices of the Hannon brothers and their cousins from Ardreigh
House.
The various
religious denominations here in Athy share a common heritage – a heritage of
loss and sacrifice endured by the men from Athy and district who fought in the
1914-18 war. Our collective remembrance
respects and acknowledges different traditions and loyalties and it is
appropriate that we come together to commemorate the men of Athy and district
irrespective of any underlying cultural or political differences.
The poet Lord Dunsany
was moved to write his poem ‘to the fallen Irish soldiers’ following the Irish
government’s refusal in 1928 to allow a war memorial to be built in the garden
of Merrion Square.
“Sleep on, forgot
a few more years, and then
The ages, that I
prophesy, shall see
Due honours paid
to you by juster men,
You standing
foremost in our history,”
Dunsany
prophesised that attitudes would in time change and that due honour would be
paid to the Irishmen who died in war. Today
we gather to pay that honour to a generation we did not know, but whom we
should always remember for sacrifices suffered on the battlefields of the Great
War.
Towards the end of the service the names of the 122 men from Athy
who died in the 1914-18 war were read out, starting with Frank Alcock’s name
and ending with that of Francis Verschoyle.
Amongst those names were William Corcoran of Offaly Street, the first
Athy man to die in the war. At 17 years
of age Christopher Gleeson of Upper William Street was the youngest Athy
fatality, while Christopher Power of 8 Plewman’s Terrace at 59 years of age was
the oldest. Three Athy families each
suffered the loss of three young sons.
The Byrnes, the Kelly’s and the Curtis families are forever linked to
the awful destruction of young life during the war.
The Sunday afternoon service was a unique event, bringing together
members of our local community in a common act of remembrance for a lost generation.
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