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Wounds

Page 35

by Fergal Keane


  Clashmealcon caves 244

  Cléirigh, Bean Uí 11

  Clounmacon national school 164, 224

  Clune, Dr Patrick, Archbishop of Perth 202

  Cnoc an Óir (Hill of Gold) 44–5, 55

  Collins, James 94, 114

  Collins, Michael 15, 20, 25, 69, 162, 183, 241n; ambush, death and burial 30, 213, 232–4; character and description 25, 213, 218, 229–30; confronted with Republican counter-demonstration at Tralee 223; defends the Treaty in the Dáil 220–1; develops new form of guerrilla warfare 27; directed campaign of terror against government 272; as full of optimism and confidence 209; as hero and wartime leader 217–18; idealised counter-factualism concerning 254–5; informed of meeting between de Valera and Lloyd George 212; loyalty to 217–18, 229; orders dawn mission against British intelligence agents 152; orders killing of RIC Oswald Swanzy 147n; orders Mee back to Listowel to form police underground unit 145–6; orders to target British spy network 97; prepares to talk with Lloyd George and Churchill 207; quoted by the Provisional IRA 273; reputedly hides in Scoil Bhríde school 10; sends Forde to Kilmallock area 121; signs Peace Treaty 214–15; steeped in tradions of secrecy 29; thanks troops for recapturing Tralee 232; tracks down police constables, spies, informers 26; Truce and peace-making 201, 202, 204–5

  Collins, Thomas 97

  Colum, Mary 89

  ‘Come all ye loyal heroes wherever you may be …’ (anon) 41

  Connolly, Joseph 88

  Connor, Toddy 162

  Cooleen faction 50

  Cope, Sir Alfred 202–3, 205

  Cork 5, 37, 147, 152, 173, 266, 271; City Library 16; Grammar School 266

  Cork, Cornelius Lucey, Bishop of 266

  Cork and County Club 111

  Cork Examiner 60, 226, 231

  Cornamona, Co. Galway 33

  Cosgrave, W.T. 234

  Costello, James 188, 189

  Coughlan, James 149–50 and note

  County Clare 43, 49, 87, 88, 154, 240

  County Cork 32, 97, 266

  County Donegal 247

  County Galway 19, 24, 32–3, 87

  County Kerry 29, 87, 222, 223–4

  County Leitrim 191

  County Limerick 3, 4, 39, 87, 125, 127, 153, 276n

  County Mayo 40, 69, 297

  County Monaghan 214

  County Sligo 37

  County Tipperary 36, 51, 53, 102, 210, 247

  County Waterford 14

  County Wicklow 132

  Cowley, T. 125

  Creagh, Bertha 74, 135, 136, 138

  Croagh Patrick 297

  Cromwell, Oliver 5, 8, 54, 105, 133

  Crossmaglen 13

  Crotta 139

  Cú Chulainn 11, 12

  Cumann na mBan 89, 98, 144, 165, 214, 289, 329

  Cumann na nGaedheal 292–3

  Cunningham, Phil 53

  Curtayne, Father 102

  Curtin family 74

  Curtin, John 73–4

  Cush, Nathaniel 271

  Dáil Eireann 92, 213, 225, 237

  Daily Mail 131

  Dalton, General Emmet 233

  Dalton, Patrick 199–201, 212

  Dan, uncle 2

  Darcy 145, 290

  Davitt, Michael 33n, 69–70, 75, 76

  Dee, Con 100, 198, 199–201, 214, 239–40, 279

  Deenihan, Jimmy 276

  Defence of the Realm Act (DORA) (1914) 93

  Delaney, Constable 90

  Delaney, Enda 285n

  Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) 276

  Denny, Rev Edward 57

  Dermot O’Brien and his Clubmen, ’The Merry Ploughboy’ 9

  Derry 14n, 273

  Devlin, Joseph 110–11

  Devlin, Michael 271

  Dillon, Eamonn 267

  Dillon, John 88

  Dingle 3

  Doodle campaign (1951) 251 and note

  Drumcondra 29

  Dublin 3, 7–9, 23–5, 27–8, 78, 84, 97, 111, 151–2, 153, 225, 227, 229, 244, 260, 266, 289; Abbey Theatre 10, 283; Blackrock College 298; Curragh camp 84; Four Courts 225, 249; Garden of Remembrance 7; Gate Theatre 7; General Post Office 9, 26, 87, 124, 265, 272; Glasnevin cemetery 8, 173, 300; Kilmainham jail 236; Mansion House 213; Phoenix Park 27, 36; St Stephen’s Green 28; Scoil Bhríde school 10; Shelbourne Hotel 28; Terenure College 9; Trinity College 36; Vaughan’s Hotel 205

  Dublin Castle 39, 91, 92, 108, 130, 131, 145, 155, 204, 241n

  Dublin Guards Regiment 227 and note, 241, 242, 243

  Dublin Metropolitan Police 24

  Duffy, Louise Gavan 10

  DUP see Democratic Unionist Party

  Easter Rising (1916) 26, 80, 120, 141; All-Ireland Republic declared 16; anniversaries and commemorations 8–9, 12, 299–300; events of 86–8; execution of leaders 38, 88; Garden of Remembrance for 7; legacy of 272; as political success 95; punitive state response after 270; release of Republican prisoners 92–3; see also Civil War (1922–23); Irish Revolution (1911–23); War of Independence (1919–21)

  Edward VII 130, 131

  Edward VIII 26

  Edwards, Hilton 7

  Elizabeth I 4, 16, 105, 133

  Emergency Powers Bill (1920) 235

  emigration 61–3, 65–6, 285 and note

  Emmet, Robert 8, 132–3

  Enright, Dan 193, 247

  Enright, Thomas 209–11, 212

  European Economic Community 296

  evictions 33–5, 68–9, 72, 76, 119, 168

  Farnlow (Tan marksman) 191, 206

  Farrell, Dan 165–6, 168–9, 171

  Farrell, William 9

  Fenians 10; 1867 rebellion 83; attack on Kilmallock barracks 119–20; belief in force to drive British from Ireland 120; boys sworn into the ranks of 84; influence of 28–9; IRB as official name of 82 and note, 330; launches bombing campaign in Britain 28 and note; official name of 28; organisation and financial support for 82n; play set during struggles 10; secretly prepare for insurrection 86–7; seek complete independence 82

  Fenit 230

  Ferris, Martin 276 and note

  Fianna Fáil (the Soldiers of Destiny) 18, 126, 250, 272

  Fianna legend (Diarmuid & Gráinne) 44–5

  Fine Gael 18, 219 and note, 244, 252, 276

  Finucane, Michael 207–8

  Finuge 72

  Fisher, Lydia Jane 47

  Fitzgerald, Elizabeth 139

  Fitzmaurice, Rev George 136

  Fitzmaurice, Sir James 118–19

  Fitzmaurice, John, Baron of Kerry 192

  Fiver Feale 226

  Flavin, Danny 93, 94, 197, 224–5, 244

  Flavin, Peter 85

  Flynn, Desiree 40, 172, 298–9

  Foley, Catherine E. 64n

  Foran, John 74

  Foran, Patrick 227

  Forde, Seán 120 and note, 121, 124, 127, 152–3

  Franklin, Benjamin 135

  Fraser, James 47

  Free State 17–18, 164, 214, 248, 249, 250, 289, 290, 330; during the Civil War 219–20, 223, 226–7, 228, 232, 234, 235, 236, 237, 240

  Free State army 222–3, 225, 227, 230, 238, 241, 242, 244, 246

  Fuller, Stephen 18–19, 242

  GAA see Gaelic Athletic Association

  Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) 38, 83–4 and note, 292

  Gaelic League 83 and note, 93, 98, 271

  Gale cemetery 64, 187

  Gallogly, Denis 176

  Galvin, Garret 61

  Galvin, John 235

  Galvin, Mary 61

  Galvin, Michael ’Mick’ 128–9, 186–7, 188

  Garda Síochána 243

  Gardai 252n, 299

  Gaughan, Father Anthony 165, 168n, 192, 219

  Gilbert, Sir Humphrey 4, 118

  Gladstone, William 69

  Good Friday Agreement (1998) 274, 278

  Gortatlea police barracks 96

  Gortglanna 198

  Government of Ireland Act (1920) 212–13

  Great Depressi
on 280 and note

  Great Famine see Potato Famine (1845–49)

  Great War 24, 25–6, 40, 85–6, 91, 95, 106, 140, 141, 170, 189, 210, 230, 270

  Greenwood, Sir Hamar 111, 171

  Gregory, Isabella Augusta, Lady 37

  Greogy XIII, Pope 4

  Griffiths, Arthur 214, 215

  Grousset, Paschal 71

  Guardian newspaper 14

  Gunn-Mahony family 129–30

  Gunsboro 138

  Gurtenard Wood 103, 167, 192, 226

  Hannan, Susie 176

  Harrel, David 37

  Harrington, Niall 238, 242, 243

  Harris, Breda 24

  Harris, Sergeant Jamesie 24–5

  Hassett, John 37

  Hassett, Paddy 5, 17, 266, 271

  Hassett, Patrick 35, 37–8

  Headfort, south Kerry 169–70

  Heaney, Seamus 7

  Henry IV 192

  Hewitt, John, ‘Neither an Elegy nor a Manifesto’ 269

  Highland Clearances 63

  Hitler, Adolf 251, 258

  Ho Chi Minh 25, 27

  Hoffman family 140n

  Hoffman, Frank 140n

  Holmes, Phillip 174, 192

  Home Rule 26, 29, 38, 39–40, 75, 76, 80–1 and note, 82, 84, 85, 91–2, 141, 218, 260, 270

  Home Rule bills 81 and note

  Homer, Iliad 11, 122

  Hornibrook, Johnny 266

  Houlihan, James 148–9

  Houlihan, John 148–9, 212

  Houlihan, Timothy 182, 219

  Howth 84

  Huckerby, Thomas 113

  Hume, John 275

  Humphries, Thomas 147

  Hussey, S.M. 72

  Hutchinson, Billy 295

  Hyde, Douglas 37

  Hyde, Sean 248

  Hynes, John 113

  ILP see Irish Labour Party

  Inchagoill, Lough Corrib 33

  India 24, 26

  Ingledew, Charles 175–7

  Inglis, Brian 265–6

  IRA 3rd Battalion 219

  IRA see Irish Republican Army

  IRA Cork No.1 Brigade 202

  IRA Flying Columns 13, 27, 118, 126, 127, 188, 208, 235, 239; East Limerick Flying Column 125, 126, 127; north Kerry Flying Column 178–84, 197–8, 214, 217, 264, 290; West Limerick Flying Column 198

  Iraq 25–6

  Ireland: aftermath of the Civil War under de Valera 246–61; bloody history of 3, 4, 17–20; British attempt to meet terror with terror 27; challenges to certainty and authority 89–90; chronology of major events 325–8; considered nest of potential traitors 4; on cusp of irreversible decline 40; death, violence and bombs 14–19, 83; decline of British power in 25–6; desire for stability in 282–3; Doodle campaign 251; events leading up to the Troubles 12–15; executions, shootings and guerrilla war following the Rising 88–102; faction fighting and retribution in 49–54; failure of 1798 and 1867 rebellions 28 and note; famine, eviction and emigration 33–4, 57–69, 72; fighting and atrocities following signing of the Treaty 225–45; flourishing of poets and playwrights in 257; Great Depression and economic war with Britain 280 and note; Home Rule movement 26, 29, 38, 39–40, 75, 76, 80–1 and note; and the hunger for land 47–9; killing, ambush and retaliation in 29–32, 94–100, 120–7, 143–4, 146, 147–50, 151–3, 155, 157–8, 159–60, 169–70, 174–84, 189–96; land agitation, death and eviction 33–5, 70–6, 204–5; memories, shadows and repercussions of the Revolution 270–3; memory and self-examination 299–300; myth of Irish as nation of natural rebels 256; and Partition 260; paternalism in 280–1; rich cultural references in 11–12; sectarianism and violence during the Troubles 12–16, 271–3 and note, 274–5; sin, sex and female emancipation 281–2; Treaty debates 219–21; Truce and peace-making 201–15

  Irish Church Act (1869) 56n

  Irish Citizen Army 88

  Irish ghettos (US) 67

  Irish Labour Party (ILP) 5

  Irish National Land League 33 and note, 69, 70–1, 73, 75, 137

  Irish Party (at Westminster) 69, 76, 81

  Irish Republican Army (IRA) 31, 330; aftermath of Civil War 247–51; assassin group known as the ’Squad’ 26, 152, 229, 230, 239; attack and kill O’Sullivan, Kane and Vicars 152, 153, 154–5, 156–7, 159–60, 189–91, 191–6; attack on Kilmallock barracks 120–7; Ballyseedy mine incident 18; banned by the Government 98; become more ruthless and efficient 96; blow up Free State armoured car outside school 9; complaints against 231; continues to claim the right to kill its enemies 254; drift to the left 8; and elimination of Protestants 262–4; enforces shadow writ of the Dáil 92; fighting and atrocities during the Civil War 227–8, 229; forewarned of escalation of military campaign against 202; guerrilla war waged by 94–100, 120–7, 169–70, 178–84, 185–6, 188, 211, 247; hide in plain sight 80; ignore the Truce in Northern Ireland 213; increased recruitment after the Truce 208; informants and local intelligence 96–100; killing of Kevin O’Higgins 5–6; learn to fear the Auxies 107; membership of 13; military/political factions 274; splits for and against the Treaty 219–21; splits in 254; suffer from the ’IRA itch’ (scabies) 197–8; support for during the Troubles 273–4; targeting of police, spies and British intelligence agents 38–9, 96, 97–8, 101–2, 108, 113, 120–7, 152, 181; traditions of silence and communal solidarity 75; and the Troubles 271–4; Truce and peace-making 201–6; unhappy that war had ended 209–11; UVF warnings against 12–13; violence, vengeance and retaliation 29, 111, 113, 143, 147–50, 151–2, 169–70, 178–84, 206, 211; weapons, food and messages smuggled to 96–7, 98–9, 104; see also Official IRA; Provisional IRA

  Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB) see Fenians

  Irish Revolution (1911–23): as challenge to authority 89–90; children of 15; discussion and questions concerning 16–17; early events and tensions 80–6; guerrilla war and violence after the Rising 88–102, 94–100, 120–7, 169–70, 178–84, 185–6, 188, 211; marching song 259; memories, shadows and repercussions 270–3; peace talks 201–5; and threat of excommunication 89; see also Civil War (1922–23); Easter Rising (1916); War of Independence (1919–21)

  Irish Times 119

  Irish Volunteers 222, 330; ambush Captain Watson 185–6; and attack on Kilmallock barracks 121; as broad coalition of separatists and nationalists 80–1, 82; conflict, confrontation and grievances 93–4; damned from the pulpit and told to go home 88; firearms obtained by 93; formation of 78n; Listowel branch 80, 84, 86; membership of 84, 91; ready to launch guerrilla war 90; swear allegiance to Dáil Eireann 92; women as allies of 89

  Irregulars 214

  ‘Jack the Dead’ 64

  Johnston, Gillian 271

  Jordan, Niall 246

  Joyce, James 118, 147, 265

  Kane, James 159–60, 191–6, 212, 214, 223, 249, 252, 294

  Kavanagh, Paddy 198

  Kean, Edmund 8

  Keane, Anne 285, 285n, 289

  Keane, Bill: character and description 83, 102, 286; death of 287; John B.’s poem about 286, 287; lives with his parents and siblings 280; love of words and literature 83, 103, 224; meets and marries Hannah 102–3, 174, 206; member of the Gaelic League 83, 271; refuses to acknowledge Father O’Connor in the street 283; seeks refuge from reality in alcohol 285–6; teaches at Clounmacon national school 164, 224

  Keane, Dan 103, 164, 177, 206, 256, 281

  Keane, Denis 285

  Keane, Eamonn: as accomplished actor and storyteller 2–3, 5, 8, 9, 10, 11, 19, 44–5, 283–4; alcoholism of 12, 14; attitude towards Irish history 8; character and description 6, 8, 9, 287; confounded by the Troubles 13–14; discussion on holding on to the land 48; education of 283; final visit to Belfast before his death 277–8; involved in public fracas and sent to England 284; pantheon of greats 69, 70; relationship with his mother and aunt Juleanne 287–8; as romantic nationalist 5; schooled in classical literature 11–12; takes Fergal to watch anniversary parade in Dublin 9–10

  Keane family 103–4, 163, 173

  Keane, Fe
rgal: attends hundredth anniversary of Easter Rising 299–300; attitude towards history and mythology 7, 11–12; childhood and education in Dublin 7–9, 10–11, 43–4; contemplations on legacy of Revolution 270–6; early memories of the Troubles 13–15; effect of parents’ separation on 16–17; family connections to RIC 35, 37; feels pride in his family’s involvement in the Revolution 300; haunted by memories of the dead and the revolutionary generation 294–6; interviews men involved in the Troubles 294–5; learns about heroism in battle 11; named after dead IRA man 6; re-visits Church Street 161–5; reasons for writing memoir of his family and the Civil War 19–21; takes his father on a final tour of Belfast 277–8; visits Kilmorna 129; as war correspondent 79–80; witnesses his father ’dying’ on stage 10

  Keane, Hannah Purtill 1, 41, 78, 162, 271, 300; accepts life as it is 283, 291; ambitious for her children 285; birth of children 280; birth and family background 42–5; brought up with stories of the Famine 63; character and description 89, 288; death of 287; family life with Bill and the children 285–6; favourite story 46; fears the shadow of drink 287; feels effect of schism 214; involvement in revolutionary violence 95–6, 290; joins the Blueshirts 251; leaves no diaries, letters or recorded interviews 3, 17, 20, 291; meets and marries Bill Keane 102–3, 206, 224, 279; proud of her role in Cumann na mBan 289; refused war service medal and military pension 289–90; relationship with her son Eamonn 287; remains loyal to Collins and accepts peace 206–7, 251; returns to working on the farm 209; smuggles weapons, messages and food to IRA 13, 80, 98–9, 104, 115, 144, 163, 174; studio photograph of 291; suffers bouts of depression 288; threatened by notorious Tan 145; weeps over death of Michael Collins 232; welcome’s Eoin O’Duffy despite threats 252–3; works for draper’s in Listowel 90, 103, 145, 164, 174, 209

 

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