On Tuesday 29th March the second lecture in the 1916
series will be given by Dr. Des Marnane in the Community Arts Centre at 8.00
p.m. The subject ‘Saving the Honour of Tipp – Tipperary 1916’ promises to be an
interesting insight into a provincial county’s reaction to the events of Easter
1916. Admission to the lecture is free.
Last week I gave the background to the development of the Irish
Nationalist movement in Athy in the years following the Easter Rising. While the first branch of the Irish
Volunteers in County Kildare was formed in Athy on 9th May 1914 the Volunteers
were divided when later in the year John Redmond sought to encourage the Volunteers
to enlist in the British Army. The vast majority of the Volunteers here in Athy
and elsewhere throughout the country followed Redmond who named the new group
which split from the Irish Volunteers as the National Volunteers. It would be some time before the now smaller
group which retained the name Irish Volunteers could reassert itself.
A military council comprising Tom Clarke, Padraic Pearse and others,
all members of the Irish Republican Brotherhood, while at the same time leaders
of the Irish Volunteers, planned the Easter Rising. This was done without the knowledge and
consent of many of those with whom they shared leadership of the Irish
Volunteers and in the ensuing confusion over countermanding orders, fewer Volunteers
than expected turned out on Easter Monday 1916.
Two men who did turn out were Mark Wilson and Francis Lawler. Mark Wilson was born in Russelstown, Athy in
1891 to Robert Wilson, a native of County Wicklow and Julianna Heffernan,
formerly of Leinster Street, Athy. By
1901 the Wilson family had moved to Dublin.
Mark, the eldest of five children, married Annie Stanley of Summerhill,
Dublin on 3rd August 1913.
She was a sister of Joe Stanley, the man who in 1916 printed the
Proclamation, original copies of which are now selling for extraordinary sums
of money.
Mark joined the 1st Battalion Dublin Brigade Irish
Volunteers and during the Easter Rebellion he was part of the Four Courts
garrison under the command of Edward Daly.
Following the surrender of Edward Daly and his men Daly was tried and
executed, while Wilson and his colleagues were detained in Richmond
Barracks. In a statement made in 1953
for the Bureau of Military History Patrick Cogan of Maynooth, referring to the
Athy man while they were in custody, said ‘in
the ranks in front of me was a volunteer in uniform. When people shouted at us to keep our heads
up he answered that they were never down.
He was a source of great encouragement ..... that volunteer was Mark
Wilson, a native of Athy.’
The Athy man was later transferred to Stafford Detention Barracks in
England where he was detained until December 1916. On his release Wilson rejoined the Irish
Volunteers and following the Treaty enlisted in the National Army. He attained the rank of Captain before
resigning from the Defence Forces in February 1929. Mark Wilson died in December 1971 and is
buried in Glasnevin Cemetery.
The other man with connections in South Kildare who fought in the
1916 Rising was Francis Lawler who lived in Castleroe, Maganey between 1918 and
1925. Like Mark Wilson, Lawler joined
the Irish Volunteers and was attached to the 1st Battalion Dublin
Brigade. He was also a member of the
Four Courts Garrison and was also imprisoned following the surrender of the
Volunteers. I have been unable to
confirm if Lawler had connections with Castleroe, Maganey prior to 1916. Following his release from prison in December
1916 Francis Lawler rejoined the Irish Volunteers and played a very active part
while living in Castleroe in the War of Independence and the subsequent Civil
War.
He served as an instructor/training officer at the I.R.A. camp in
Ducketts Grove in 1921. He joined the
National Army in February 1922 and reached the rank of Captain. It was while he was a Captain that he was
involved in an unfortunate incident in Castledermot on 16th June
1922. That Friday morning four irregular
troops took over the Sinn Fein hall in Castledermot which was the polling
station for the general election agreed between Collins and De Valera in an
attempt to ward off civil war. Three
Free State officers, Vice Comdt. Cosgrove, Adj. J. Lillis and Captain F. Lawler
entered the building to find it occupied by John Dempsey, Thomas Dunne, Peter
Brien and William Kinsella. Captain
Lawler in his evidence at the Coroner’s inquest claimed ‘I was the first to enter. I had
my revolver in my hand and was about to cock it when my thumb slipped off the
cocking piece and the revolver went off.’
Thomas Dunne was mortally wounded.
Dr. Francis Brannan of Castledermot described the deceased whom he knew
well as ‘a hard working respectable young
fellow.’ The Coroner in summing up
found that the shot which killed Thomas Dunne was not fired maliciously,
despite evidence that Captain Lawler had fired three shots.
When we remember
the men of 1916 we should not forget that tragedy often marked their activities
not only during the Easter Rebellion but long afterwards.
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