Independent Cllr Kieran McCarthy has welcomed the new regeneration proposals being drawn up for The Marina’s walkway. These will be presented to central government by City Hall engineers later this year. They include proposals for a complete replacement of the existing footpath and carriageway with the exact layout to be decided through the design process and public consultation. The project will also seek funding for public lighting, some repairs to the quay wall and some general improvement to the public realm including seating, bike parking etc.
Ultimately, the scope
of works wishes to create a high quality public amenity space for pedestrians
and cyclists with a car free zone between Pairc Uí Chaoimh and Church Avenue.
The Infrastructure
Development Directorate of Cork city Council will be publishing a notice
seeking tenders from suitably qualified and experienced Design Consultants for
the upgrade and enhancement of the Marina (Centre Park Road to Blackrock
Village).
Cllr McCarthy noted”: Discussions are underway with funding agencies regarding the financing of the project. City Hall is aiming to appoint the design team in March/April 2021. By the end of 2021 they aim to present a recommended layout to Council members with construction to follow in early 2022 subject to the necessary consents and funding approval”.
Winter at The Marina, Cork (picture: Cllr Kieran McCarthy)
1084a. Picture of Mary Bowles from non-recorded photographer, January 1921 (source: Cork Examiner).
Kieran’s Our City, Our Town Article,
Cork Independent, 28 January 2021
Journeys
to a Truce: Clogheen and the tale of Mary Bowles
P J Murphy, Company Commander with Fianna Éireann, in his
witness statement for the Bureau of Military History (WS869) recalls that in
January 1921 owing to the activity of police and Black and Tans, a number of C-Company
of Cork IRA Brigade No.1 could not sleep at home. They were accommodated in the
former Cork Lunatic Asylum on the Lee Road. The place was raided several times.
A number of arrests were made, including one named Tadhg Barry who was later
shot dead on 15 November 1921 by a sentry in Ballykinlar Camp).
P J Murphy’s hideouts with others comprised a number of
friendly houses and barns in the Clogheen district (three miles from Blarney).
There they made sure that they had sentries posted throughout the night. Flying
Columns were now being organised and all necessary arrangements were being made
to make sure arms and equipment were protected and in serviceable order. A
number of visits had been made by C-Company members to their arms dumps.
However, they also had also to contend with informers, who led crown forces to
Clogheen.
On 13 January 1921, P J Murphy recalls that the C-Company
party included Liam Deasy, Dan Donovan (Sandow), Tom Crofts, Pa Murray, J
Dennehy, Mick Bowles, Paddy Connors, Tom Dennehy, Dan Murphy, Mick O’Sullivan,
Dan Crowley, Jeremiah Mullane and Jeremiah Deasy.
P J Murphy did the last sentinel duty from 5am to 7am.
When they moved out in the morning – some of them to the city to their jobs – P
J remained behind with Mick Bowles and Paddy Connors and brought the guns and
grenades up to the family home of the Bowles family nearby. At this time, they
had the Lewis gun, which was used in the Parnell Bridge Ambush in early January
1921 and had brought it out to show it to Liam Deasy and some of the Brigade
officers. They were proud of its possession.
P J Murphy describes that about 11am the place was
surrounded by military and Black and Tans. The few of P J’s comrades who
remained behind were in a nearby house having a cup of tea when they heard
strange voices in the adjoining fields. They picked up their equipment and made
their escape. The Lewis gun was lying near a fence covered with a ground sheet.
Sixteen-year old Mary Bowles tried to get the gun to a place of safety. She was
spotted by the Tans and arrested. Over the ensuing 24 hours, a great deal of
the arms equipment, including the Lewis gun, was captured. The arms dump was
discovered complete with rifles, revolvers, ammunition, gelignite, gas masks,
periscopes, megaphones, and German automatics. Mary was arrested with four men
and brought to the Bridewell in the city.
Shandon History Group’s book Ordinary Women in
Extraordinary Times records that at the Bridewell Mary Bowles was found to
be wearing under her blouse steel body armour strapped to her shoulders and
fastened at the sides. She was also in possession of a service revolver and an
automatic pistol, both loaded in every chamber. Senior Cork Cumann na mBan members such as
Sorcha Duggan, May Conlon and Lil Conlon approached Bishop Cohalan requesting
his intervention in seeking her release but were not successful. Mary was moved
to the Women’s Prison in Sunday’s Well. On 25 February 1921, she was sentenced
to Roman Catholic Reformatory School. Shandon History Group have suggested that
the Good Shepherd Convent may have been her detention school.
Meanwhile the capture of the arms led the Black and Tans to
become more frequent visitors to the Clogheen area, with the result that C-Company
members had to go further afield for sleeping quarters. P J Murphy details that
they moved to the Carrignavar area where Company Officers Jerry Dennehy, Mick
Bowles, Seán MacSwiney (Terence’s brother) and five or six more were arrested
one night in a local house. They were captured with arms and each were
sentenced varying from 10 to 15 years imprisonment. The guns were not actually
captured in their possession. They were found in another part of the house.
P J Murphy highlights that curfew in Cork City in early
1921 was from 5pm to 3am on Saturdays and Sundays. Martial law was enforced and
anyone caught with arms was executed. The military patrolled the streets during
curfew hours, and when they withdrew the Black and Tans came out and carried on
with their wholesale murders, burnings, and lootings. These activities had a
discouraging effect on some of the Volunteers. They feared repercussions on
their families and returned their arms to the Unit Quarter Master. P J Murphy
describes: “Physically those sleeping out were in a bad way. Scabies was
rampant and those who returned home infected their families. Many others
contracted TB. People who were friendly to us became afraid that they would be
caught harbouring the IRA. No place was safe for more than a few nights”.
As the British campaign intensified it was met by
increased activity by the Volunteers. Trees were felled, trenches dug across
the roads, bridges blown up and everything done to hamper their communication.
Captions:
1084a. Picture of Mary Bowles from
non-recorded photographer, January 1921 (source: Cork Examiner).
1084b. Commemorative plaque in Clogheen, Cork to Mary Bowles, present day (picture: Kieran McCarthy).
1084b. Commemorative plaque in Clogheen, Cork to Mary Bowles, present day (picture: Kieran McCarthy).