Misplaced Pages

Conor Clune: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 09:13, 18 January 2008 editDomer48 (talk | contribs)16,098 edits fix← Previous edit Revision as of 09:25, 18 January 2008 edit undoDamac (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers11,899 edits Not his Irish name. No page provided. Why don't you check out the Dublin Castle memorial plaque, if you can read Irish that is.Next edit →
Line 1: Line 1:
] ]
'''Conor Clune''' (] '''Conchobhair MacClune'''<ref></ref> ] - ] ]) was one of three men along with ] and ] killed in controversial circumstances in ] on ], 1920, a day that also saw the killing of a network of British spies by the "]" unit of the ] and the killing of 14 people in ] by ]. <ref name=" Sean O'Mahony ">Sean O'Mahony, ''Death in the Castle: Three murders in Dublin Castle 1920''. 1916/1921 Club</ref> '''Conor Clune''' (] - ] ]) was one of three men along with ] and ] killed in controversial circumstances in ] on ], 1920, a day that also saw the killing of a network of British spies by the "]" unit of the ] and the killing of 14 people in ] by ]. <ref name=" Sean O'Mahony ">Sean O'Mahony, ''Death in the Castle: Three murders in Dublin Castle 1920''. 1916/1921 Club</ref>


==Early Life== ==Early Life==

Revision as of 09:25, 18 January 2008

File:Conor Clune.JPG
Conor Clune

Conor Clune (1893 - 21 November 1920) was one of three men along with Dick McKee and Peadar Clancy killed in controversial circumstances in Dublin Castle on Bloody Sunday, 1920, a day that also saw the killing of a network of British spies by the "Squad" unit of the Irish Republican Army and the killing of 14 people in Croke Park by British forces.

Early Life

Conor Clune was born in the village of Quin, County Clare, the son of John and Bridget Clune (nee Walsh) of Kilkishen. Clune was one of a family of seven boys and three girls. He was educated at the local National School and St. Flannan’s College, Ennis. A Gaelic League enthusiast, he also spent some time at Ring Irish College, Colaiste na Rinne, Co. Waterford. From a young age he was active in Gaelic League circles, and spoke Irish on every occasion possible.

The Irish Volunteers

Edward MacLysaght

Following a period during which he worked in Dublin he applied for and was appointed Manager at the seed and plant nursery owned by Edward MacLysaght at Raheen, Tuamgraney, about ten miles from Quin. It was with MacLysaght, an intelligence officer with the IRA that he travelled to Dublin on the morning of Saturday, November 20, 1920.

Vaughan’s Hotel

File:Peadar Clancy.JPG
Peadar Clancy

They arrived in Dublin that Saturday evening. Clune told Mr MacLysaght that he was to meet Piaras Beaslaí, a member of Dail Éireann, Director of Publicity and then Editor of An t-Óglach and another Gaelic League enthusiast that evening. They parted company, after arranging to meet on the following day. Also on Saturday evening, Peadar Clancy, along with members of the GHQ staff of the Irish Republican Army, met at 35 Lower Gardiner Street, Dublin.

The meeting was called to discuss the final arrangements for what would be the route of the British secret service, with the elimination of the Cairo Gang the following morning. Having concluded their business, the meeting dispersed, Michael Collins, Clancy, McKee and some of the others went to Vaughan’s Hotel Parnell Square,then the rendezvous for many of the leaders of the IRA.

It was at this time that Clune, accompanied by Sean O’Connell, went to Vaughan’s. Beaslaí was upstairs with Brigadier Dick McKee, Michael Collins, Peadar Clancy when word was brought to Beaslaí that Conor Clune from Clare was there to meet him.

While in the hotel, the porter, Christy Harte, became suspicious of one of the guests, a Mr Edwards. Edwards had made a late-night telephone call, and then left the hotel. Harte informed the Volunteers, who then quickly left the building. Beaslaí, who was familiar with the Hotel’s surroundings escaped with the other senior Volunteers including Michael Collins.

Clune was arrested in the raid which soon followed by British Auxiliaries. Clune was the only one arrested at Vaughan’s that night as he was not registered as a guest. This, according to Seán Kavanagh a member of the "Squad", would ultimately cost him his life. Clancy and McKee would also be arrested in the early hours of the morning in another part of the city, though the Cairo Gang assassination plan was already in motion, for the next day.

Dublin Castle

File:Dick McKee.JPG
Dick McKee

Having been arrested, the three men were taken to the old detective office in the Exchange Court. According to T. Ryle Dwyer, the room was being used as a kind of guardroom, and was furnished with some beds, tables and some stores, which included a box of hand grenades.

Brigadier General Ormonde Winter head of the British Secret Service in Ireland and two Auxiliary Division officers, Captain Hardy and Captain King, were the British personnel who interrogated Clune, Clancy, and McKee.

A Republican prisoner, V J. Young, who was in custody at the time in the Castle is certain that Clune was killed in error for Sean Fitzpatrick the man arrested with McKee and Clancy at Fitzpatrick’s home in Gloucester St. Clune and Fitzpatrick he says were of similar build and both were wearing brown suits. Young overheard two Auxiliary officers disputing the identity of one of the prisoners. One said, “That’s him” while another said” no, its him” as they looked at just Fitzpatrick and Clune.

According to T. Ryle Dwyer, the prisoners "supposedly" got hold of the hand grenades and threw them. One of the sentries testified that himself and a colleague heard a noise behind them and noticed that two of the prisoners had thrown the grenades at them. They dived for cover behind some mattresses, but the grenades did not detonate. One of the prisoners was also said to have got hold of a rifle according to one of the guards, which he levelled and fired at the guard commander as he entered the room, but missed. The prisoner then turned the rifle and fired another shot at another guard. The guard said he then fired at the prisoner, and the prisoner dropped, and that the guard commander also fired at the prisoner. The guard commander said, on hearing a noise, entered the room, and "the prisoner McKee fired at me", and that McKee then turned and fired at the sentry. The guard commander also claimed to have dropped McKee. He then said he saw Clancy with a shovel, and that Clancy was attempting to strike another guard. One of the guards (who had dived behind the mattresses) then fired at Clancy and he fell.

Commemorative plaque in memory of the three Volunteers, erected by the National Graves Association above the door of the guard room at Dublin Castle.

A fourth witness was to tell much the same story.

According to Sean O'Mahony, they were tortured in the guardroom in order to extort from them the names of the Volunteers who had earlier that morning shot the fourteen members of the Cairo Gang. Refusing to talk, they were "subsequently murdered" on the evening of 21 November 1920.

The condition of their bodies when returned by the British authorities to their families supports this assertion. There were extensive signs of discolouring, which seemed to indicate extensive bruising. The army doctor claimed that large staining could occur, and this would depend on the way the bodies had been lying. He also said that Clancy had been hit with up to five bullets, which made eight wounds; Dick McKee had three wounds caused by two bullets. He said McKee had no bayonet wounds, but there was a bullet lodged underneath his skin on the right of his chest. Clune, he said, had nine wounds caused by seven bullets. T. Ryle Dwyer also states that David Neligan was adamant that they had not been bayoneted.

His employer Edward McLysaght took charge of the body when the authorities released it. He had the body medically examined. The examination proved that Clune was shot 13 times in the chest. Clune’s body was brought home to Co. Clare for burial. His coffin was draped with the tricolour but when a British Officer objected to it, Canon Slattery the presiding priest complied and removed the national flag. He is buried in Quin Abbey near his ancestors, Clune was 27 years of age.

References

  1. ^ Sean O'Mahony, Death in the Castle: Three murders in Dublin Castle 1920. 1916/1921 Club
  2. ^ 50th Anniversary Commemorative Booklet, published in conjunction with the unveiling of a memorial by Club na Sionna, Gaelic League Branch and the people of Quin, with an introduction by Kevin J. Brown.
  3. ^ T. Ryle Dwyer, The Squad, Mercier Press, Cork, 2005, ISBN 1 85635 469 5.
  4. ^ Daniel McCarthy, "A Clare Patriot," address delivered to the the Peadar Clancy Festival., subsequently published in The Clare Association Yearbook 2002

Template:BD-SORT