1920 AD - 5 / November
November 1st: Kevin Barry
the 18 year old
Irish
Volunteer arrested in
Dublin
for trying to disarm British
Imperial Government Military
soldiers was to be the first of
24
Irishmen
executed "officially" by the British
Government and Michael Collin's
efforts to save him had to be abandoned when it was found
the prison wall was too well constructed for an explosion to create a section
through which he could escape.
Sir
Henry Wilson
the
British Imperial Military Army Chief
told
the British Cabinet
that he
would resign his post if
Kevin Barry
was not
executed
and there was then massive protests carried out to save him, as he was considered a prisoner of
War, but all
attempts to obtain clemency fell on death ears. (Later on
Sir
Henry Wilson himself
would be assassinated under previous original orders given by
Michael Collins).
J.H. Gooding
who had acted as a British Imperial Government spy for
Lord French
in an endeavour to capture
Michael Collins
was
also fronted
with all the evidence by
Arthur Griffith the
Acting - President of the 1st Dail Eireann who advised him also to leave
Ireland
for his own
personal safety.
- The Dail
Eireann Courts
in Ireland were to be constantly raided by the
British Government forces, but they were still to be able to continue on with their
hearings right up to the Anglo - Irish Truce in the future.
November:
The
American Committee on
Conditions in Ireland reported back to the Friends of Irish Freedom, while the
American Commission for
Relief in Ireland also raised an additional
$ 5,000,000 dollars.
November 5th: The
British Imperial Government's
Black & Tans and
Auxiliary forces in
Ireland raided the town
of Granard
in Co. Longford in the north - west
of the
Northern
Leinster were they set fire
to the homes there, and therefore came up against the
Irish Volunteers /
I.R.A. led by
Sean Mac Keon the commander of the
Longford
Irish Volunteer Brigade who
with
20
of his men was able to successfully drive them off. Any reports about the raid they carried
out there and the actual result were suppressed by
the British Government's authorities in
the
Dublin Castle. (The Devil's 1/2 acre)
November 13th: 700
British
forces with no arms physically attacked
the political
Sinn Fein Party
headquarters
in
Dublin
were
they where resisted by
30
armed
Irish
Volunteers / I.R.A. who
had received advance notice that they were coming and they were able to drive them off,
and mention of this attack also and it's successful result was prohibited from being reported by the
British Imperial Government's stronghold in
Dublin Castle.
November 14th: Liam Tobin
the I.R.A.
/ Irish Volunteer's
Deputy Director of
Intelligence and his assistant,
Tom Cullen had a close call when they were taken at the
Vaughan Hotel
by
British Imperial Government
forces who interrogated
them for two hours until they finally decided to let them go and this enabled
them to recognize a further 2 members of the
"Cairo Gang," in
Bennet and
Ames,
among their
interrogators. Later on the
British Government Auxiliaries
were to carry out another
raid there, but it was not to be until everyone of any importance connected to the
Irish Republicans /
I.R.A. had left and they
were to only then arrest
the unfortunate
Conor Clune who
would only be visiting
Dublin
from Co. Clare. Although he was not involved at all in any way
with the I.R.A. he was to
be still imprisoned in Dublin Castle
were he was to be
murdered in the future along with
Richard Mac Kee and
Peadar Clancy who both
I.R.A. members who were to be captured at other venues and
also put
in the Dublin Castle prison withy him.
November 16th: Meanwhile in America, Eamonn de Valera,
the President of the 1st Dail
Eireann held a meeting at
the Raleigh Hotel
in
Washington, to promote his new
Irish - American
organization to be
known as the American Association for the Recognition of the Irish Republic.
This was to counteract some of the enmity flowing from the executive of the
Friends for Irish Freedom and to
try and do
away with any further division to the cause and to these ends he also carried out a
personal grand tour there to promote it's ideals.
Angliss
/ Mac Mahon,
the
British
Imperial Government
spy,
who they had
recalled from
Russia to carry out their undercover
operations in Ireland, and who had been involved in the murder of
John Lynch
at the
Exchange Hotel in
Dublin,
run off at the mouth and
named all of the other British
Imperial Government
agents who were all using false names. Many of
these had already carried out murders
on the
Irish population and among their group were
the 16
Special Secret Service
Agents who had been bought in from
Cairo and
Russia. Their
mission had been to penetrate
secretly into the
Irish community and to this end they had then all arrived separately in
plain clothes, and on different dates, as it was their combined intention to also take out
Michael Collins along with the
Irish Organization in
Dublin,
and Angliss
had
also blurted out the details of these deadly intentions.
November 17th:
The
British Imperial Government forces had shown
no mercy in the City of
Cork,
in the City of
Limerick
and in Co. Tipperary
all
in the Munster Province, and
they were now even further determined, by any means necessary, to destroy the
I.R.A.
Volunteer organization in the
Dublin
area. Lieutenant "G" who was
Michael Collins'
agent in the British Military
Intelligence
had informed him that he only had 4 days to clear
out the "Cairo Gang"
until the
21st of this month
or else, and a list of
35 suspected members of the
"Cairo Gang" had been drawn up together with their photographs. It was
given over to
Cathal Brugha
to peruse and he then removed the names of
15 of the men from the
list, and
Michael Collins
then
handed the task over to
Richard Mac Kee
while supplying him with all of the
addresses of those who were left on the list containing the main agents in the
British Government's
"Cairo Gang," and that it must be carried out on the
21st.
Richard Mac Kee then informed
Peadar Clancy
and
the "12 Apostles" from
the Irish Volunteers who had
already carried out surveillance on were they were all living. In the meantime, the
British Imperial Government's "Murder Gang"
had shot dead
Father
O Callaghan
in
Co. Cork, and a school teacher in
Galway
in Co. Galway in
Southern Connacht by shooting him in the head,
and
Father
Griffin the same way
and also
Michael Walsh
a publican from
Galway.
Sir
Hamar Greenwood
true to form once again informed
the British House of Commons
that it was the Irish Volunteers
/
I.R.A. carrying out these murders on their own
Irish
people.
November 19th: James Coleman
was shot dead on this day in his own home while opening his door, and
Stephen Coleman who was no relation
was also shot in his bed in front of his wife, and for good measure they also killed
young
Hanley who lived next door.
Members of the
I.R.A. Volunteers 3rd Battalion Dublin Brigade,
who served under
Patrick Flanagan,
were
now also arrested, and placed in
the Beggars Bush Barracks
were they were interrogated and by the minute the pressure became greater t
do something as many new arrests were being made of
anyone at all in Ireland who was purported to be an Irish Volunteer.
November 20th: Michael Collins
met with
Richard Mac Kee
and
Peadar Clancy
who were in charge of the Irish
Volunteer's "12 Apostles" at the
Vaughan Hotel were it was decided
that it was now ore then ever imperative that they to go ahead with their plans to remove the
British Imperial
Government's secret agents, known as the
"Cairo Gang," from
the scene in Ireland. It was now a matter of life or death for all concerned, before they
eventually destroyed
any further chance that the Irish population had of obtaining any
Self - Determination for Ireland.
The
previously mentioned innocent bystander,
Conor Clune
who had been
only a visitor to Dublin from Co. Clare
in the north - west of the Munster Province,
who had
previously arrived in Dublin,
with the son
of his employer,
Dr.
Edward Lysaght
the Irish
genealogist, had wanted to meet
Piaras Beaslaoi / Beasley who was the editor of the
Republican
paper,
An tOglach,
who
was also involved in the
Gaelic League
the same as he was.
Sean O Connell had taken him to the
Vaughan Hotel to meet him, but a warning was given that the
British Government 's
Auxiliaries and the Black & Tans had
surrounded the hotel and
Piaras Beaslaoi, who was on
their
wanted list, took off to hide out, while
Conor Clune just stayed put, as he
knew that he was not involved in
anyway with the I.R.A., but they
had still arrested him and imprisoned him in Dublin
Castle.
November 21st: 2.a.m
Richard Mac Kee
and
Peadar Clancy,
the I.R.A. Volunteer leaders of the "!2 Apostles" were staying
at
Fitz Patrick's
in
Gloucester Street,
where it is
believed an R.I.C. police
Sergeant living nearby tipped off
the British Imperial Government authorities in the
Dublin Castle that they were
there. This particular
R.I.C. Sergeant was already on another list of
British Government informers and the members of the
I.R.A. Volunteers
had previously wanted him removed from the
scene also, but their request was denied as there had not been enough evidence against him.
Richard Mac Kee
was able to
destroy the list with the names and addresses of the "Cairo Gang" he had on him before he
was captured along with
Peadar Clancy and
Fitz Patrick
who were all taken off
to be imprisoned in the
Dublin Castle where they were put in with the
innocent new arrival
Conor Clune from
Co. Clare.
On this same day both
Houses of the
British
Parliament in England "officially" passed the
4th
Irish Home Rule Bill under British Law to artificially
partition Ireland into
2 separate
Parliaments, creating
a division also of 6
of the
9 Counties in the
Ulster Province
on purely ethnic and sectarian grounds to suite the continuation of the
Ascendancy in
Ireland as it would have been
too hard to gerrymander the whole
9 Counties.
Co. Cavan, Co. Donegal and
Co. Monaghan in the
Ulster Province were left out, as had been agreed solely to by
Edward Carson
the "Official Unionist" leader and
David
Lloyd - George the
British Imperial Government Prime Minister. Anyone with any sense at all, who really cared, could see that in the future this
would bring about the deaths of many thousands
of human beings there in the 6 Counties
artificially partitioned from the
9 in the Ulster Province, with untold misery
and eternal conflict, for no real purpose in the end, other then the accommodation
and expediency on the part of the British Government to opt out of any real
responsibility for the lives of the people in Ireland. Any true Statesmen could see that regardless of the continuation
of all of the dreadful turmoil ahead, Ireland would one day be re - united
anyway. (But of course this would not in any real way personally impede the immediate needs
of the British Government who were by now finally abandoning the ship
by laying the grounds for all of the future turmoil in
Ireland.) It had nearly been 800 years of untold repression
already carried out by the subsequent English and British Government's in Ireland
and the Irish people still had
not given up the ghost, did they really care or think that this would see the
end of it all for them.
Father
Michael Griffin, a
Catholic priest, had
previously been kidnapped and shot through the head and his body had then been thrown into a bog, as
there was now no need to "officially" have any reason whatsoever to
kill
any Irishman and the British
Parliament at Westminster had passed legislation to ensure that the
British Imperial Government Military forces now had no need
to
justify any of their actions.
Arthur Griffith
the
Acting President of the Irish Dail Eireann
/ Irish Assembly
feeling the emotional and physical pressure and strain of it all that was now being applied with a vengeance
by the British Government now asked
Michael Collins to
take over as the Acting - President
of the Dail
Eireann if he
personally should also be arrested or assassinated by the
British Government forces.
Once again the British Imperial Government in England had pushed the
Irish people to the point of no return, and
it was now time for real action, not words, and at
8.45
a.m. the
I.R.A. Volunteers
from
the Dublin
Brigade, composed of
picked men from each group, separated into
8
parties and were sent out to
carry out their assignments in the
8 separate
areas in the City of
Dublin, while other
I.R.A. Volunteer members from the outer areas of
Dublin, were to act as their
individual back ups.
12 British Government Secret Agents
were to be
killed and
another 5
were to be wounded,
together with a civilian on this particular morning, which became known as
"Bloody Sunday."
The
Irish
Volunteer forces
at first raided 28 Pembroke Street
where they killed
Captain
Price who was
a British ex -
Middlesex Regiment
officer and
Captain
Dowling from the
Grenadier Guards,
and Colonel
Montgomery
of the
Lancashire Fusiliers
was shot, while
Captain
Keenlyside and
Lieutenant
Murray were wounded. At
119 Morehampton Road,
Lieutenant Mac Lean
the
British Chief Intelligence Officer and his friend
Smith were killed and his brother - in - law,
Caldow
from
Scotland
was wounded. At
119 Lower Baggot Street,
Captain
Bagally the
British Government's Court Martial officer who
had also been involved in the murder of the innocent
John Lynch
from
Kilmallock at the Exchange
Hotel was another killed. At
92
Lower Baggot Street, Captain
Newbury
from the Royal West Surrey Regiment was killed, and at
38 Upper Mount Street, Lieutenant
Ames ex
Grenadier Guards
and
Lieutenant Bennet ex
Royal
Artillery were others killed. At
38 Earlsfort Terrace, Captain Fitz
Gerald was killed, while at the
Gresham Hotel, Captain
Mac Cormack from the
Royal Army and
A.L. Wilde were killed. At
22 Lower Mount Street
Lieutenant Angliss
/ Mac Mahon was killed, but
Lieutenant
Peel
who was
also there with him was able to escape. At one of the addresses the
Black & Tan Auxiliaries were to appear
outside the building and the I.R.A. Volunteer Dublin Brigade
members split up into two parties, with one
under
Tom Keogh going out the front
way firing as they went and were
able to get away.
Garnin and
Morris two of the
Black & Tan Auxiliaries were sent by their officer to get them further
help from their barracks. but were captured by the back up crew near
Mount Street Bridge
and were the
first of the Auxiliaries
to be
killed so that they could not identify their captures. The other
I.R.A.
Volunteer Dublin Brigade party went out the
back way were
Frank Teeling was wounded and left behind, and
General
Crozier arrived just in
time to save him from certain death as an
Auxiliary was pushing a gun against
his temple and he then had him taken away to the hospital.
4 British
Imperial Government Army officers
had escaped the Irish Volunteer net, including
Colonel
Jennings
who was not where
he was supposed to be at the Eastwood
Hotel and the others who were supposed to be at the
Standard Hotel were also missing. While looking for
Major Callaghan
at Fitz William Square
they had run across
Captain
Crawford
and
advised him to leave the Country or else and
Captain
Mac Cormack
who had not been on the list was killed by mistake.
Peel
and others at
the Shelbourne Hotel had been
very fortunate and were able to escape onto the roof when alarmed by a
frightened
I.R.A. Volunteer member shooting out a mirror in the dark during the
intense anxiety of it all.
Lieutenant James Kenny
who was an
I.R.A. Volunteer
in the 4th
Dublin Battalion
together with
Frank Burke
who was a
schoolteacher were
2 of the
"12 Apostles"
and their mission was to
also
handle Mr.
Cleveden, but he too had not been were he was supposed to
have been.
Arthur Griffith
the Acting - President of the 1st Dail Eireann
was in a state of terrible shock, but Michael Collins
told
him that there was just no other way that they could ensure the future safety of any the
Irish who were now involved in trying to bring about
Irish
Self
- Determination from the British
Government.
The
I.R.A. Volunteer Dublin Brigade
officers had advised the Gaelic
Athletic League members to cancel their football match set down for
Croke Park in Dublin on this day, but they had decided to go ahead anyway, as they did not want their
association identified with any I.R.A.
Volunteer
activities and during the afternoon at
2.45
p.m. a British Imperial Government plane flew over the playing field and sent out a red signal flare.
The British
Government Army
Auxiliaries then turned up there en - masse in trucks at the
football match and the Black & Tans formed a line with their rifles
erect and at the ready, as a British
Military officer on top of the
wall began to open fire on the gathered crowd below with his revolver, and the
British Military forces
then followed suite with their rifles
also blazing away, and as there were
7,000 people in
attendance at the match they soon killed
14 of them outright, including one of the
Co. Tipperary
players, and also wounded
62 other spectators there, as they
just blatantly fired on
the people who were present at the match. The British Imperial Government forces
then began using sub - machine guns on the crowd, without any conscience at all, as now under the
British Government's previous Act
they were
encouraged to kill any of the Irish population without suffering any recourse, and
many Irishmen, women and
children fell to the ground. One of the players,
Michael Hogan from
Grangemockler in Co. Tipperary never moved at all, so
Thomas Ryan from
Co.
Wexford ran over and began saying the
Act of Contrition
to him and he too
was then shot dead as he knelt there beside him, and the
rest of the
Co.
Tipperary players were then herded together by the Black & Tans,
who had full intentions of shooting them all, while other
British Government forces went throughout
the whole crowd, who were by now a mass of thoroughly distraught human beings.
Jack Shouldice was also among those who were detained due to the diary he was
carrying, but was eventually released. (Among those who lay dead on the field was
a young 10 year old boy,
Jerry O
Leary.
Mac Namara, who was a member of the Metropolitan Detective Branch, who also worked in with Michael Collins, was by now also worried by the rantings of the British Imperial Government Auxiliaries, so he informed him of their behaviour and Michael Collins was preparing to get the I.R.A. Dublin Brigade to attack their Braidwell Barracks to try and release Richard Mac Kee and Peadar Clancy, but found out they were actually being held in the Dublin Castle, which was impregnable.
November 22
- Sunday: The
deaths at 11 a.m. of
Richard Mac Kee,
who was
Michael Collin's
right hand
man, and that of
Peadar Clancy was a great
loss to the cause in
Ireland as they together with
the innocent Connor Clune were
to be murdered after the British
Imperial Government's
forces under
Sir
Ormonde Winter and their
agents,
Hardy and
King,
had
previously carried out
torture on them.
They then
removed the rest of the Irish prisoners to other
barracks, leaving only the 3
of them in the Dublin Castle, on their own, before allowing the
Auxiliaries to murder them
there in cold
blood by bayoneting and shooting. Later on endeavouring to cover up the murder
of these 3
prisoners at once,
Sir Ormonde Winter
alleged that they had tried to escape and depicted
the innocent
Conor Clune as an
I.R.A.
officer from Co. Clare.
In a further attempt to justify the cold blooded murders on this occasion they
also released a fake film
supposed to be of their attempted escape and to counteract the
British
Government
propaganda the I.R.A.
Volunteer newspaper,
An tOglach,
now began to publish reports on a weekly basis, were it had previously only
came out fortnightly.
Dr.
Edward Lysaght
who had previously been expecting to
meet up with
Conor Clune so that they
could return home to
Co. Clare, were
he worked for his father in his
Nursery business, was shocked to hear that the
British Imperial Government forces
had killed
him. He arranged
to pick up his body to take him home to his father, and took it to the
Catholic Pro - Cathedral
were
Michael Collins
and his
staff acted as pall bearers and an Evening Herald photographer took a clear picture of Michael Collins.
Next
morning on seeing Michael Collins photo in the
Dublin newspaper the
I.R.A.
Volunteers did the rounds and gathered
up all the copies and went to the paper and destroyed the picture plates.
The death of the
British Imperial Government's
Special Agents
received much publicity in
England where they stated that they were unarmed
British Military Army
officers killed in
their beds while the massacre of the Irish spectators and the player at
Croke
Park barely
rated a mention.
Sir Hamar Greenwood
the British
appointed Under - Secretary
of State in Ireland
who
was basically responsible for all the mayhem in
Ireland gave his rendition of the
facts to the British House of Commons
that
included a
manufactured account that the
I.R.A.
Volunteers
had used a sledgehammer to bash in the heads of these unfortunate
innocent army officers at the
Gresham Hotel.
Frank Teeling
from the I. R.A Volunteers who had been wounded and captured in
Mount Street was sentenced to death
by a British
Imperial Government Court Marshall
and placed in
Kilmainham Jail to be hanged, along with
Ernest O Malley
who was using the
alias of
Bernard Stewart,
who was an Irish
Volunteer organizer and had
built up the organization
in the
Midlands and the south of
Ireland. Patrick Moran and
James / Tom Whelan
were also arrested and tortured in the
Dublin Castle and sentenced to death then placed in with
Ernest O Malley at
Kilmainham Jail and one of the guards there then gave
Ernest O Malley a gun and a pair of wire cutters and he was able to escape
with
Simon Donnelly
and
Frank Teeling, but
Patrick Moran
wouldn't go.
He believed in democracy and knew that he was
innocent of the charge they had
brought against him, but unfortunately for him the
British Imperial Government
still
executed him without allowing his evidence to be heard. Simon Donnelly
later on after the end of the Anglo
-
Irish War was to become the commanding officer of the
Dublin
Irish Republican police, while
Ernest O Malley
who
Michael Collins had a high regard for as a fighter was to become
the Commander of the
2nd Southern Division of the Irish Volunteers.
With the loss of two of their best men in the
I.R.A. Volunteers
a reorganization was carried
out with Oscar Traynor and
J.
Mooney taking over the positions previously held in the
Irish Intelligence
by
Richard Mac Kee and
Peadar Clancy. They set up in the
La Plaza Hotel where they were in
the future never raided by the
British Government
forces, and
J. J." Ginger"
O Connell took over as the
I.R.A.
Volunteer's Director of Training and he also
set up in the same building were he was assisted by
Emmet Dalton.
November 22nd: Mr. Moylett
who lived in England was
trying to bring about Peace in Ireland
by having discussions with
David Lloyd - George the British Imperial
Prime Minister,
and
the subject of the demise of the
14
British Special Agents came up, and he said
to Lloyd - George,
"It was a sad event," to which
Lloyd George replied,
"Not at all, they got what they deserved, beaten by the counterjumpers,"
meaning
Michael Collins.
At this time also
Michael O Rourke
was also up before the British Court
Martial for
killing a
British Army soldier.
November 23rd: The
British
Imperial Government Auxiliaries also
killed a student at Lincoln Place
in Dublin in cold blood as he was walking away and they continued
to carry out raids everywhere and anywhere they liked, and this encouraged many
Irishmen and women
who were not previously behind the political
Sinn Fein
Party to now adopt a
different point of view, as they
saw plainly themselves what was occurring and were being effected by the random
violent conduct carried out by the
British Government's Armed
forces. The
British Government's Dublin Castle
authorities were also by now finally becoming suspicious of their own
Detectives, and
Broy was arrested, but they
could find no evidence to convict him, despite this they put him away in
Arbour Jail until after the
Anglo - Irish Truce. They dismissed
Mac
Namara also, but he was still able to
personally continue to assist
Michael Collins, while
Neligan
was actually
promoted and put in the Dublin
Castle's Secret Service were he was able to continue his good work
providing
Michael Collins
with further
information into the future.
The British
Imperial Government under Lloyd - George
had by now set up internment camps at
Ballykinlar in Co. Down in
the north - east of the
Ulster Province and at the
Curragh below
Dublin
to intern all of the
Irish prisoners.
November 24th:
The British Imperial Government then arrested
Arthur Griffith
the
Acting - President
of
the Dail Eireann, together with
Eamonn Duggan
and
Eoin Mac Neill,
and they put them
also into the
Mountjoy Jail
in Dublin were
Michael Collins
was able to
keep in contact with them. Arthur Griffith
was not to be released until July 11th
in
1921, which would then
at that time allow him to be able to participate
personally in the Anglo
- Irish Truce that was to come.
Meanwhile in America, Eamonn de Valera, on hearing
of his arrest felt he should return to
Ireland
from
America and wanted
Michael Collins to set it all up for him, while
Michael Collins himself had now
the added burden of being also the Acting - President of the
1st Dail Eireann.
The British Imperial Government
forces continued their raids on the
Vaughan Hotel to try and capture
Michael Collins,
and even offered the owner,
Mac
Guire
40,000 pounds
if he would give him up.
Christy Harte
was also arrested
and imprisoned in Dublin Castle were he too was offered a large sum of money and a safe
passage out of Ireland to give up
Michael Collins and they then released him on this pretext,
but he immediately informed
Michael Collins of their plan. The
British Government
forces then arrested
Foley who was the private
secretary to the Lord Mayor of Dublin
thinking he was
Michael Collins,
but
on realising their mistake they had to let him go. The
Vaughan Hotel was now out of bounds
for the Irish Republicans, due to the many raids, so Liam Devlin
allowed
them to use his premises in Parnell
Street where they were able to continue to meet right up to the
Anglo - Irish Truce.
James Kirwan's
place was another used especially by
Sean Mac Mahon
the I.R.A. Volunteer's
Quartermaster General.
November 26th:
The bodies of some of the
British Imperial Government 's agents
and the two Auxiliaries, Ames,
Bennett, Bagally, Dowling, Garnin, Mac Mahon, Morris, Newbury
and
Price were loaded onto a
British
Naval destroyer to be returned
to
England, and the Auxiliaries
went along knocking
the hats off of those Irish who were standing by the way side looking on and the
River Liffey was afloat with them. An
"official" order was also put out
by the British Government's Dublin Castle authorities that
only close relatives were to attend the
funerals of those people the
British Government forces had killed
at
the
Croke Park
football match.
November 28th: Tom Barry
with his Flying Column
from the Cork
I.R.A. Volunteer No 3
Brigade, which was composed of
36 men run up against the
British Imperial Government's Black & Tan Auxiliaries at
Kilmichael near Macroom in
Co. Cork
in Southern Munster where they had a running gun battle
in which only one out of the
21
British Auxiliaries was to survive the battle, but he too was to disappear
and was never seen again. The I. R.A Volunteers
there had stopped the first
British Government forces truck when their second truck arrived, and they too stated that they would surrender, and
the I.R.A. Volunteers
stood up to accept their offer, but the
Black & Tan Auxiliaries then opened fire on them shooting
3
of the
I.R.A Volunteers killing
2
of them outright, including
the
16 year old,
Patrick Deasy. The
I.R.A. Volunteers then returned the fire and
they fought on until it was all
over, and they were able to capture
18 British
rifles and
1800 rounds
of ammunitions during the battle. Up until this particular fight to the death no
shots had ever been fired at the
Auxiliaries themselves, who were considered invincible, but the
I.R.A. Volunteers success on this occasion was
now to change all that.
The
British Imperial Government
forces arrested
Neil Kerr and
Stephen Lanigan among
others, and put them into the
Curragh Interment Camp
so
Neil Kerr had to somehow arrange for
Daly to take over the task of bringing
Eamonn de Valera the President of the 1st Dail
Eireann safely back
from America to
Ireland.
Cathal Brugha
as the
Irish
Minister of Defence
at the meeting
held at the Menerva Hotel
was
definite that he could drive the British Imperial Government out of
Ireland
and he put forward another proposal to carry out reprisals in
England where he was going to burn their buildings in retaliation for
the constant horror they were inflicting on
Ireland, to gain further publicity for the
Irish
cause,
there. This was agreed to and
Rory O Connor was put in charge and went off to
Liverpool were
17
warehouses were destroyed in one night, to be followed by more burnings all
over England and among these
attacks was the houses of the members of the
Black & Tans
themselves, which were
carried out under the direction of
Sean Flood who had been sent over earlier in
November.
November 29th:
The British
Imperial Government forces set
fire to the Dublin newspaper, the Freemans Journal,
which they then charged with publishing reports of the atrocities carried out by
their Black & Tans,
who now had
their headquarters at
Beggars Bush. The Freemans
Journal articles had also included the horrendous treatment of
Quirke who was given the lash and
Martin Fitz Gerald
the proprietor of the paper was charged by a
British
Government Court Martial
and given
6 months
imprisonment.
The British Government
forces
then also arrested
Michael Staines and
imprisoned him in with
Arthur Griffith, Eamonn Duggan and
Eoin Mac Neill
in
the Mountjoy Jail.
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