Ambush associates

Mary O’Dwyer fought alongside many people during the War of Independence and Civil War, including Dan Breen. The people with whom she was involved in the Newtown ambush were seriously committed fighters. The commandant was Tommy Donovan, who had ordered her to spy on the RIC patrol and who was shot dead in Killenaule only … Read more

Reconstruction

The American Civil War (1861–5) brought freedom to four million slaves. Reconstruction was the attempt to politically, socially and economically rebuild and reform the South. By the early 1870s, biracial democratically elected governments were functioning throughout the South. Citizenship and suffrage had been granted to African-Americans under the Fourteenth Amendment (1868) and the Fifteenth Amendment … Read more

Friends in Times of Turmoil EXHIBITION

This historical exhibition, prepared by the Polish Embassy in Dublin, examines Wacław Tadeusz Dobrzyński’s central role in establishing diplomatic relations and friendship between the young states of Ireland and Poland in the twentieth century. It will be presented in the following venues in the coming months: 3–28 July 2017: Dublin City Library & Archive, Pearse … Read more

A ‘foreign game’—President Hyde and GAA Rule 27

The second leg of the first ever soccer match between Poland and Ireland, which took place in Dublin on 15 November 1938, was attended by the president of Ireland, Douglas Hyde, and Taoiseach Éamon de Valera. The result was a 3–1 win for Ireland. As a result of his attendance, President Hyde was removed as … Read more

Seán O’Callaghan’s To Hell or Barbados

As many readers of this magazine are surely aware, Seán O’Callaghan’s To Hell or Barbados (2000) revived public interest in the colonial connection to Cromwell’s curse. Nursing nationalist outrage about the conquest, O’Callaghan calculated that 50,000 Irish were sold in the colonies, a number that grossly inflates the estimates of modern scholars, which run from … Read more