Friday 27 September 2013

Tony O’Hara and the 1981 General Election in Dublin West

When the government of the Twenty Six County state collapsed in May 1981, the National H-Block/ Armagh Committee decided to seize the opportunity it presented. The resulting general election would provide a much needed platform to highlight the realities faced by republican prisoners on a daily basis in Long Kesh and Armagh prison.

The election would give the voting public an opportunity to actively support the on- going republican hunger strike and the prisoner’s ‘Five Demands’. It would attract the attention of the national and international media, shinning a light on the plight of the protesting republican prisoners.

Nine candidates, eight of them current republican prisoners, were selected to contest constituencies across the state on an abstentionist basis. The Anti- H- Block/ Armagh candidates were, Kieran Doherty, IRA, (Cavan/Monaghan), Tom McAllister, INLA, (Clare), Mairéad Farrell, IRA, (Cork North Central,) Seán McKenna, IRA, (Kerry North), Martin Hurson, IRA, (Longford/ Westmeath), Paddy Agnew, IRA, (Louth), Joe McDonnell, IRA, (Sligo/ Leitrim), Kevin Lynch, INLA, (Waterford) and Tony O’Hara, INLA, (Dublin West).

During the 1981 election large parts of the current Dublin South Central constituency, including Ballyfermot, were part of Dublin West.

Tony O’Hara, the candidate in Dublin West, was at this time an INLA Blanket man in Long Kesh. O’Hara was born in 1954 in Bishop Street, Derry City, where his family lived over their small pub. The O’Hara’s were a republican family. Tony’s Grandfather had been involved in the IRA since the early 1920’s. 

Tony became politically active in 1968 when, at just 12 years of age, he joined the Derry Housing Action Committee.  Tony also became involved in the Civil Rights marches which were spreading across the Six Counties. His brother, Seán Seamus, who was also a member of the Derry Housing Action Committee, was interned in Long Kesh in 1971.

Later that year, the British Army shot Tony’s fourteen year old younger brother, Na Fianna Éireann member, Patsy. He was seriously injured in the leg.

Tony joined the Irish Republican Socialist Movement and actively confronted British Imperialism. In 1976 when aged just 20, he was arrested in relation to an armed raid and sentenced to five years in the H-Blocks. Tony was convicted by a juryless Diplock court, on the sole evidence of a witness statement. His election manifesto for the 1981 election stated he was innocent and had been framed by the RUC.

Once in the H-Blocks, Tony refused to wear a prison uniform and joined the Blanket protest, refusing to allow himself or the republican struggle be criminalised.

In 1980, Tony was joined on the protest by his younger brother Patsy. Patsy, who had been a member of the Ard Chomhairle of the Irish Republican Socialist Party (IRSP), would soon become Officer Commanding of the INLA prisoners and would volunteer to take part in the second republican hunger Strike in 1981. Patsy O’Hara would give his life, bravely fighting the British policy of criminalisation, on May 21, 1981 after 61 days on hunger strike.

This was the context of the general election in 1981.

With Tony O’Hara imprisoned the election campaign was run by republicans on the ground. The campaign, as with those of the other Anti- H block/ Armagh candidates, was built around gaining support for the hunger strikers and for the prisoner’s ‘Five Demands’.

The Five Demands were:

1. The right not to wear a prison uniform;

2. The right not to do prison work;

3. The right of free association with other prisoners, and to organise educational and recreational pursuits;

4. The right to one visit, one letter and one parcel per week;

5. Full restoration of remission lost through the protest.

The campaign was very well received in the working class communities in Dublin West, with republicans, socialists, trade unionists and other progressives coming from all over to support the election of O’Hara. There were some differences in the campaign on the ground, centring on a petty reluctance by some members of the Provisional Movement to work with members of the IRSP.

Other candidates in the Dublin West constituency included, Mary Robinson (Labour Party), Jim Mitchell (Fine Gael), Brian Lenihan Snr. and Liam Lawlor (Fianna Fáil), Tomas Mac Giolla and Michael Finnegan (Sinn Féin- The Workers Party) and John Montgomery (Communist Party of Ireland).

The election took place in June 1981.

O’Hara polled an impressive 3,034 votes, wiping the floor with the Labour Party and the ‘Stickies’. Much of that support came from working class voters in Ballyfermot. O’Hara also gained transfers, particularly from Mac Giolla, leaving many to wonder what could have been if the ‘Stickies’ had given O’Hara a free run and if petty differences in the local campaign had been put to one side.

Elsewhere the election continued to be successful for republicans. The nine Anti- H Block/ Armagh candidates between them, received just short of 43,000 votes across the state. Kieran Doherty (Cavan/ Monaghan) and Paddy Agnew (Louth) were elected, while Joe Mc Donnell (Sligo/ Leitrim) and Martin Hurson (Lonford/ Westmeath) came very close to taking seats.

Tony O’Hara was released a couple of months later and continued to be an active member of the Irish Republican Socialist Movement.

The people of Ballyfermot stood behind the republican prisoners when it mattered, proudly entering a new chapter into the long tradition of Dublin South Central’s Fighting Story.

Thursday 26 September 2013

Liam Sutcliffe- Irish Republican Solider and Revolutionary


 
 
This important interview was conducted by Michael Healy of the Irish Republican and Marxist History Project with veteran republican, Liam Sutcliffe. More information on the Irish Republican and Marxist History Project can be found here: http://irishrepublicanmarxisthistoryproject.wordpress.com/
 
Liam Sutcliffe lives in Walkinstown in Dublin South Central. He joined the IRA in 1954, being 'sworn in' to the organisation in a house in Ballyfermot.
 
Months later Sutcliffe was an IRA agent, operating inside the British Army, planning the arms raid in Gough Barracks Armagh.

Liam was later involved in the 1966 republican operation which blew up Nelson's Pillar in Dublin. Sutcliffe joined Saor Éire in 1970, and continued to be involved in the fight for Irish freedom later working again with the IRA.
 
This is his story.


Wednesday 25 September 2013

A British Spy at James’s Gate

As the countdown to ‘Arthur’s Day’ continues, we take a look at the man that Diageo would like us to celebrate.

‘The Union Star’ was a militantly republican newspaper published by the United Irishmen in Dublin. The paper specialised in publishing the details of British spies, informers and other traitors operating in the capital.

Included in one recently unearthed edition from 1798, is the following very interesting entry:

 

Guinness- a brewer at James’s- gate, an active spy. United Irishmen will be cautious of dealing with any publican that sells his drink.’
 

The United Irishmen had reason to believe that Arthur Guinness, the ‘land agent’ come famous brewer, was a British spy. They further warned that republicans should be wary of any publican that did business with him, knowing that an informers work could be made much easier by 'pub talk' and the consumption of alcohol.

While we may never know exactly what role Arthur Guinness played on behalf of the British State in Ireland, we do know that the Guinness family have long been pro- British Loyalists, what would later become known as ‘Irish Unionists’. We also know that Arthur Guinness was ‘directly opposed to any movement towards Irish Independence’.

 It has always been known that he was hostile to the radical and progressive vision of the United Irishmen, and that openly he condemned the 1798 Rebellion. It now appears that not only was he opposed to Irish independence, he was actively working against it, gathering information on Dublin based revolutionaries on behalf of the British administration.

So if your raising a glass to Arthur this September 26, remember you will be toasting a man that the United Irishmen believed was an active British spy, who worked to undermine any possibility of Irish Independence.

To Arthur?

 I don’t think so.

Tuesday 24 September 2013

Saor Éire in Ballyfermot.

On October 3 1968, a four man unit, of the little known republican organisation Saor Éire, attempted to rob the Munster and Leinster Bank in Ballyfermot.

As the armed volunteers approached the Bank, they were spotted by members of the Gardaí and were forced to abandon the fundraising operation.

The Saor Éire unit managed to escape the scene in their getaway car but were followed by the Gardaí.

At Kylemore Road Ballyfermot, the republicans realised they were being followed and opened fire as a warning.

The Gardaí continued to give chase until the Saor Éire volunteers were forced to abandon their car following a crash at Cooley Road in Drimnagh.

As the unit attempted to escape on foot, they fired more shots into the air and shouted ‘This is political’ in an effort to get the Gardaí to give up the chase.

After escaped through back garden however, they were confronted on the next road by plain clothes Gardaí and arrested.

Thomas O’ Neill, Sean Doyle, Padraig Dwyer and Simon O’Donnell were charged as a result of this operation and were granted bail.

Padraig Dwyer and Simon O’Donnell reportedly then went ‘on the run’.

Following a number of more successful fundraising operations, Saor Éire stated they would ‘finance a movement which will strive for a workers republic’.  The organisation was later involved in providing training, funding and arms to the nationalist and republican community in the occupied six counties in an effort to strengthen defences against Loyalist death squads and the British Army.
 

Liam McGregor -Inchicore's Anti- Fascist fighter

Liam ‘Bill’ McGregor from Inchicore, was an Irish communist who fought in defence of the Spanish Republic against Fascism and who died fighting on the ‘Ebro Front’ in the last battle of the XV International Brigade on the 23rd September 1938.

McGregor came from a family steeped in the Irish socialist tradition. His mother, Ester McGregor from Crumlin, was a veteran communist and the president of the municipal tenants association.

Before going to Spain, Liam McGregor was the secretary of the Dublin branch of the Communist Party of Ireland. He was a graduate of the communist International’s Lenin International School in Moscow, a university for training communist cadre, combining academic courses with underground revolutionary techniques.

On his return from Moscow, McGregor volunteered to go and fight the fascist menace in Spain.

Soon recognised as a fearless volunteer, a very capable organiser and a keen political mind, McGregor rose quickly to Company Political Commissar.

To coincide with the Annual Wolfe Tone commemoration in June 1938, Irish members of the XV International Brigade organised a Wolfe Tone commemoration at ‘Chabola Valley near the Ebro River. Liam McGregor was a member of the organising committee.

Writing in ‘Connolly Column- The story of the Irishmen who fought for the Spanish Republic 1936- 1939’ Michael O’Riordan describes the event:

‘The celebration was opened by a speech from Bob Cooney (Scotland), the Battallion Political Commissar. He emphasised the national and international aspects of Tone’s life and teachings, and proposed the toast to ‘The Father of Irish Republicanism’. Thereafter many toasts were drunk and a combined Spanish fiesta, Irish ceildhe and international folk song night developed. Jimmy Straney sang a favourite song of Belfast’s Falls Road, ‘The Four Flags of Ireland’, another sang about the ‘Boys of County Cork’ who ‘Beat the Black and Tans’, there were a number of flamencos and a noteworthy Cuban song by Domingo Morales who was to be killed the following month. Tone was honoured well into the night.’

On the September 21 1938, Dr. Juan Negrin, the Prime Minister of the Republican Government announced that the International Brigades were to be withdrawn. This news reached the XV International Brigade the next day as they lay in reserve.

Later that night however, news reached them that Fascist forces had broken through the front and that their Polish comrades of the XIII Brigade were under sustained attack.  For the final time, the XV International Brigade sprang into action:

‘What a day it was!’ was the entry in the diary of the British Battalion as it recorded the events of the last day of battle.  ‘Such artillery bombardments as I have never seen before. They literally churned up our positions. Under the cover of the artillery the Fascists advanced with infantry and tanks. They were on top of us before we were aware of their advance. Our lads were mown down.’

It was during this fateful encounter that Liam McGregor died heroically fighting Fascism. Fellow Dubliner Jack Nalty, was also killed in action that day.

Despite such an active life fighting for the liberation of the working class in Ireland and Internationally, Liam Mc Gregor was still in his twenties when he was ‘mown down’ by fascist guns.

On May 5, 2013 over 200 people attended a plaque unveiling in Inchicore in honour of Liam McGregor and five other local men, Tony Fox, Mick May, Joe Monks, Paddy McElroy and Bill Scott,   who fought against fascism in Spain. They are remembered with pride in the streets of their home town.

Liam Mc Gregor was killed in action against Fascism on September 23, 1938.

Fuar Sé Bás ar son Saorise na Lucht Oibre!

 

Sunday 22 September 2013

Sam Maguire

As Dublin holds its breath ahead of this afternoon's battle, take a moment to remember the man behind the coveted trophy, the real Sam Maguire.

Sam Maguire was a Protestant from County Cork who had a life long involvement with the GAA. A committed republican, after emigrating to London Maguire used his job in the British Civil Service to build a comprehensive intelligence network in behalf of the IRB allowing republicans to build the fight for national liberation in the belly of the beast.
 
He also recruited other Irish emigrants to the ranks of the republican movement including a young Michael Collins.

Maguire was also involved in arms smuggling operations and in drafting a list of British MPs as possible targets. A very capable Volunteer Maguire became the IRB Director of Intelligence in Britain.

Following the execution of the British general Sir Henry Wilson by the IRA in London on June 22nd 1922, Maguire learned that he was under suspicion and returned to Ireland.

He was opposed to the treaty of surrender and this led to him losing his job in the new free state civil service nearly as soon as he got it. Despite his long service to his country  Sam Maguire died, in cork on February 6th 1927, of TB and poverty, completely broken hearted by defeat of the republic. He was another victim of the counter revolution.

Saturday 21 September 2013

Inchicore- Crumlin No.3- Irish Citizen Army Membership Roll

 
The following are the names and address of the Inchicore- Crumlin No.3 Branch of the Irish Citizen Army. Where possible, the  republican garrison at which each served in 1916 is also listed.


 

(Commandant ) Mallin, Michael
Emmet Hall, Inchicore
St Stephen’s Green, College of Surgeons

Bradley, Patrick
1 St Mary’s Tce, Inchicore
 St Stephen’s Green, College of Surgeons

Kinsella, Peter
2 St James Place, Inchicore

Keogh, Edward
24 Park Street Inchicore
St Stephen’s Green, College of Surgeons

 Bradley, Luke
1 St Mary’s Tce, Sarsfield Rd, Inchicore
Guardroom, Upper Castle Yard

Conroy, John
40 Railway St
St Stephen’s Green, College of Surgeons

Conroy, Andrew
131 Inchicore Rd
GPO (also served at Hopkins and Hopkins, Eden Quay; wounded)

King, William
4 [address faded]

Daly, James
3 Labourers’ Cottages, Crumlin


Quinn, John
7 Windmill Lane, Crumlin


Kelly, James [check no.]
13 Barns Place, Old Kilmainham
St Stephen’s Green, College of Surgeons 

Woods, Patrick
15 Inchicore Rd

Our Fighting Story!

From the United Irishmen to the Fenians, from the Irish Citizen Army to the Republican Congress, Dublin South Central has a rich radical republican and socialist history.

Across Ballyfermot and Crumlin, the Liberties, Inchicore and Bluebell the streets of Dublin South Central are bursting with the heroic deeds of local republicans and socialists. Strikes, bombs, ammunition raids, gun battles, open warfare and the popular involvement of the community, every area has its own story to tell. We hope this blog can play a small part in putting our community back in touch with our revolutionary history and teach a new generation of its role in Ireland's fight for freedom.

Through songs and stories, pictures, the personal accounts of those who took part and historical and contemporary articles, we hope to bring that history to life so as it can be appreciated by the local community.

We welcome articles and stories relevant to the republican and socialist history of Dublin South Central. Anyone who would like to contribute can forward an email to Dscfightingstory@gmail.com