Douglas Road Councillor Kieran McCarthy has been blogging about the centenary of the War of Independence in Cork in 1920. His website at www.corkheritage.ie contains links to his newspaper articles and pictures. Kieran’s work attempts to provide context to this pivotal moment in Cork’s history. The centenary of Terence MacSwiney’s death after his 74-day is fast approaching on 25 October and Terence also once lived at Eldred Terrace on Douglas Road with his wife Muriel. Kieran notes: “Terence is truly a colossus in Cork history who has attracted many historians, enthusiasts and champions to tell his story. His story is peppered with several aspects – amongst those that shine out are his love of his family, city, country, language comradeship, and hope – all mixed with pure tragedy. In many ways, the end of his 74 day hunger strike changed the future public and collective memory narrative of Cork history forever”.
Continuing Kieran details: “The blog pieces also explore Cork in 1920 and how the cityscape was rapidly becoming a war zone. Risky manoeuvres by the IRA created even riskier manoeuvres as ultimately the IRA took the war to the RIC and Black and Tans. Reading through local newspapers each day for 1920 shows the boiling frustration between all sides of the growing conflict. Tit-for-tat violence became common place”.
Earlier this Kieran released a new book Witness to Murder, The Inquest of Tomás MacCurtain with John O’Mahony. The last time Tomás’s inquest in full was published was in the Cork Examiner between 23 March 1920 and 18 April 1920. Despite the ordeal and daily fallout from the interviews, over time the fourteen hearing sessions have not overly been revisited by scholars of the Irish War of Independence. The verdict has been highlighted on many occasions by many historians, but the information of the inquest has never been overly written about or the narratives within it explored.
15 October 2020, “Kieran McCarthy, Independent Cork City Councillor and Local Historian discusses plans for the tallest building in Ireland to be built in Cork City, and what it means for the redevelopment of the country’s second city”, Plans for Ireland’s Tallest Building Receive Permission, Morning Ireland, RTE Radio 1, https://www.rte.ie/radio/radioplayer/html5/#/radio1/21850843
Kieran’s Our City, Our Town Article, 15 October 2020
Remembering 1920: The Last Stand of Michael Fitzgerald
The 16 October 2020 coincides with the
centenary of the death of Michael Fitzgerald (1881-1920), who was one of the
eleven hunger strikers in Cork Gaol in October 1920. Born in Ballyoran in
Fermoy, Michael before his arrest lived in Clondulane, where he worked in a
local mill. In 1914, he enlisted he joined the Irish Volunteers and was an
active member building up the organisation in Fermoy and the wider region in North
Cork.
In time Michael became Commandant of
the 1st Battalion of Cork, No 2 Brigade and worked closely with
Commandant Liam Lynch. Michael was in charge of the small body of Volunteers
who captured Araglen police barracks on Easter Sunday 1919. He was arrested and
sentenced to three months imprisonment in Cork Gaol. He spent the most part of
those three months in solitary confinement in Cork Gaol, together with a number
of other prisoners. He had been released only about a fortnight after serving
this sentence of three months, when he was again arrested on 8 September 1919,
in connection with an attack on British soldiers at Fermoy when Private William
Jones was shot dead. Since his arrest on 8 September 1919, he has been in
prison, principally at Cork Gaol. On 11 August 1920 he went on hunger strike, a
cause which Terence MacSwiney also took up, when he was arrested later in
August.
The Cork Examiner records that
at the time of Michael Fitzgerald’s death on Sunday night 17 October 1920
at 9.45pm, four priests, four nuns, his relatives and friends and the relatives
of the other prisoners worn present. Father Forrest (Australia), Fr Fitzgerald
(Prison chaplain), Fr Duggan (Assistant Prison Chaplain), and a chaplain from
the Cork Detention Camp were present in the cell as were also the dying
prisoner’s friends, and four nuns.
Relatives of the other prisoners were
kneeling outside the cell in the corridor reciting the Rosary. Two candles,
which were on either side of a crucifix, were the only lights in the cell. The singing
of hymns by the crowds, who had gathered outside the gaol, were distinctly
heard in the quietude of the cell up to about 9.30pm. At this hour, mindful of curfew,
the people outside began to leave for home, and the singing ceased. Fr Fitzgerald
began reciting the third rosary, in which all fervently joined, and the only
sounds heard in the cell were the murmurs of prayers and the slow breathing of
Michael, which was becoming more laboured by the minute. Fr Fitzgerald had only
gone to the second decade of the Rosary when at 9.45pm, one of the nuns at the
bedside turned around. She had no need to speak for all understood that Michael
was very near the end. He breathed with more and more difficulty, and soon
after passed away.
A constant visitor to the deceased
during the hunger strike was a Miss Condon from Fermoy, to whom he had been
engaged. About seven days previously they had decided to get married in the
prison if possible and they had informed Fr Fitzgerald, the prison chaplain of
this intention. The chaplain undertook to do the ceremony on the condition the
permission was granted by the gaol authorities. They refused to allow the
marriage ceremony. Michael’s friends then wrote to the Bishop of Cork, Daniel
Cohalan, who granted permission to another priest to perform the ceremony. In
early October, the priest accompanied by Miss Cordon and others visited the
cell in which Michael lay, and all the preparations for the marriage were
complete. Michael had even procured a wedding ring, which he kept under his
pillow. The wedding was to have been performed accordingly but at the last
moment the prison authorities intimated that if the ceremony was proceeded with,
they would prohibit all visits from relatives to the hunger strikers for the
future. In order to not rob his comrades of this last privilege Michael
accordingly agreed not to proceed with marriage.
From noon on 17 October there was
considerable military activity in the vicinity of the gaol. At intervals,
lorries, filled with armed soldiers, arrived, and while, some of the military
entered the building others took up positions in its precincts. These, lorries
went to and from the military barracks to the prison at regular periods. Many
friends of the prisoners assembled from an early hour outside the gaol, and
their number were assembled by the arrival of relatives of Michael, and people
from Fermoy in motor cars and other vehicles. It was learned that the military
authorities had decided to hold a Court of Enquiry at Victoria Barracks at 11am
that morning into the circumstances surrounding Fitzgerald’s death. During the afternoon,
a number of military officers, those who constituted the Court of Inquiry
visited the Gaol. and, having viewed the body, gave permission to the relatives
for Michael’s removal.
The ensuing funeral in SS Peter and
Paul’s Church was enormous with crowds lining Cork City Centre to pay their
last respects. The coffin was then conveyed to Kilcrumper Cemetery near Fermoy
where it was met by another enormous crowd. On his burial three volleys were
fired over Michael’s grave. Looking on throughout the day were policing
authorities and the Black and Tans. The tension was rife.
Michael’s death was the first death of
a hunger striker in an Irish prison since the death of Thomas Ashe in Mountjoy
Prison on 25 September 1917. Michael’s death was to follow in quick succession
by Joseph Murphy and Terence MacSwiney.
To be continued…
My new book Witness to Murder, The Inquest of Tomás MacCurtain is
now available to purchase online (co-authored with John O’Mahony 2020, Irish
Examiner/www.examiner.ie).
Captions:
1070a. Michael
Fitzgerald, c.1920 (picture: Cork City Library).
1070b. Grave of Michael Fitzgerald, Kilcrumper
Graveyard Fermoy, present day (picture: Kieran McCarthy).
1070c. Monument to Michael Fitzgerald in Fermoy,
present day; Michael Fitzgerald Road also exists in Togher, Cork City (picture:
Kieran McCarthy).
1070c. Monument to Michael Fitzgerald in Fermoy, present day; Michael Fitzgerald Road also exists in Togher, Cork City (picture: Kieran McCarthy). 1070c. Monument to Michael Fitzgerald in Fermoy, present day; Michael Fitzgerald Road also exists in Togher, Cork City (picture: Kieran McCarthy).
To ask the CE for a progress report on Marina Park? (Cllr Kieran McCarthy).
Motions:
That road safety measures be again looked at the junction of Ballinlough
Road and Bellair Estate. The corner of Old Lady of Lourdes National School is a
blind corner and has many people crossing this dangerous stretch of road
everyday (Cllr Kieran McCarthy).
That arrangements be made that the 1779 archway behind Supermacs on
Kyrl’s Quay be abstracted and placed in a more prominent position nearby to
reflect its stature, history and design (Cllr Kieran McCarthy).
To get a progress report at the South East Local Area Committee on
progress in installing ramp on Churchyard Lane as agreed by Councillors some
time ago (Cllr Kieran McCarthy).
That Cork City Council consider signing up to the Walk
21 International Charter for Walking (Cllr Kieran McCarthy).
Old Cork City Hall, 1920 (source: Cork City Library)
The Marina, Cork, 11 October 2020 (picture: Cllr Kieran McCarthy) The Marina, Cork, 11 October 2020 (picture: Cllr Kieran McCarthy) The Marina, Cork, 11 October 2020 (picture: Cllr Kieran McCarthy) The Marina, Cork, 11 October 2020 (picture: Cllr Kieran McCarthy) The Marina, Cork, 11 October 2020 (picture: Cllr Kieran McCarthy) The Marina, Cork, 11 October 2020 (picture: Cllr Kieran McCarthy) The Marina, Cork, 11 October 2020 (picture: Cllr Kieran McCarthy) The Marina, Cork, 11 October 2020 (picture: Cllr Kieran McCarthy) The Marina, Cork, 11 October 2020 (picture: Cllr Kieran McCarthy)
1069a. Old Cork City Hall, c.1920 (source: Cork City Through Time by Kieran McCarthy & Dan Breen).
Reprisals by the Black and Tans for
the Barrack Street Ambush on Friday 8 October and for the connected death of
Private John Gordon Squibbs were quick. The stakes were heightened again when
that Friday night City Hall (old) was targeted by the Tans for an arson attack.
Even though it was not fully successive, much damage was caused. The attack commenced about
3.45am, when a volley of shots was fired evidently from rifles at the building.
The witness to the attack was the building’s night watchman who described to
the Cork Examiner how the events unfolded.
The firing ceased after a few minutes,
and all was again quiet for some ten minutes or so, when there was a renewed
outburst of rifle firing. While the second volleys were being fired the night
watchman heard two loud bomb explosions. He went into the vestibule of the City
Hall and saw that the western portion of the building was in flames. He
had already telephoned the city’s Fire Brigade when he had heard shots, and now
when he saw the conflagration in the Public Health Offices he again communicated
to the brigade.
The fire brigade, under Captain Alfred
Hutson, were not slow to arrive. Lines of hose were speedily laid, and water
was soon poured into the Public Health and Waterworks offices. The flames at
first spread with alarming rapidity, and at one time it looked as if that
portion of the Hall would be completely burnt out. The strenuous efforts of the
members of the fire brigade, however, soon brought it under control. After several
hours, the flames were overcome, and the fires subdued. Two men were left in charge
for the remainder of the morning.
The destruction of the offices of Public
Health and the Waterworks, and the adjoining offices was very considerable.
Document, records, and other literature relating to municipal affairs were all were
destroyed. The windows in this portion of the building, looking out on the
river, were all smashed, and it was obvious that the bombs, which exploded in the
building were hurled through these windows. In the interior of the building
there is ample evidence of the destruction wrought by the bomb explosions. In
the Public Health Department, picture frames and other accessories were smashed
to pieces by the force of the explosion, as was also the fender of the fireplace.
A bomb, which exploded in the eastern portion of the building, also caused
considerable damage.
At this side of City Hall were
situated the lamplighter and watchman’s shed and further back was a yard in
which wheelbarrows, spades, and similar implements were kept. The bomb appeared
to have exploded in the centre of the yard, and the ground was all torn up, with
one of the wheelbarrows badly damaged. The rifle firing seemed to have occurred
at the other side of the building for the walls and ceilings around the Public
Health and Waterworks Office’s bore several bullet marks.
Immediately overhead, the City Engineer’s
department narrowly escaped destruction both from the conflagration and the bombs
which were hurled up at the windows. One bomb, indeed, entered, and exploded in
a corner near a safe, blowing portion of a floor away.
Later on that weekend, on Sunday 10
October 1920 large parties of RIC, working in conjunction with the Black and
Tans, carried out a very unexpected raid in Cork City Centre. The streets were,
as usual on Sunday afternoon, thronged at the time, and the sudden swoop
created much alarm and panic. About 2.40pm the police and the Black and Tans took
possession of MacCurtain Street, Coburg Street, Bridge Street, St Patrick’s
Bridge, St Patrick’s Street, the Grand Parade, and other thoroughfares in the
centre of the city. The lorries in which the military arrived were escorted by
armoured cars. Cordons were drawn across the streets at several points and the
large numbers of people on the streets at the time found themselves surrounded military or
police pickets.
As the civilians were ordered to halt,
they were obliged to submit to be searched. Even those outside the cordons, but
in the immediate vicinity, were not exempt from the searches. For the most partthe people quietly allowed themselves to be searched, after which they were
permitted to go outside the cordons, and wherever they wished.In this
manner hundreds of civilians were searched.
In some cases, the military commands
to halt were not obeyed, and one man, who it is stated, did not halt when
called upon to do so, was shot. His name is given was Michael Griffin, a
labourer, aged about 60 years residing in Cattle Market Street, Cork. It
appears that he was passing through Merchant street at the time, and was called
upon to “halt”, but either did not hear or refused to obey the challenge. The
Black and Tans opened fire and he was struck by a bullet. The wounded man
collapsed and was unable to move The Corporation ambulance was sent for and was
quickly on the scene. He was conveyed to the South Infirmary but in the hours
that followed he died. The military parties withdrew from the streets about
3.45pm, having made one arrest. Such policing manoeuvres only increased as
October and November 1920 progressed.
More next week…
This
week’s column marks the 21st year mark of Our City, Our Town
(started in early October 1999). Thanks to everyone for their support along the
journey.
My new book Witness to Murder, The Inquest of Tomás MacCurtain is
now available to purchase online (co-authored with John O’Mahony 2020, Irish
Examiner/www.examiner.ie).
Captions:
1069a. Old Cork City
Hall, c.1920 (source: Cork City Through Time by Kieran McCarthy &
Dan Breen).