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Killings at Coolacrease

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The killings at Coolacrease refer to an incident in the Irish War of Independence which happened in County Offaly in 1921. The Pearsons of Coolacrease were a family loyal to the British government, living in Coolacrease, near Cadamstown, about halfway between Birr and Tullamore in County Offaly. On 30 June 1921, eleven days before the Truce which ended the Irish War of Independence, brothers Richard and Abraham Pearson were shot by a firing squad of the Irish Republican Army (IRA), and their house was burnt.

The Pearsons of Coolacrease

In 1911, the Pearsons moved from neighbouring Queen's Co. now Laois to Coolacrease, where they purchased a 341-acre (1.38 km) farm which they worked successfully. They belonged to a religious movement commonly referred to as Cooneyites or Christian Conventions which, though evolved out of Protestantism, is considered to be distinct from the main Christian groupings such as Protestantism and Roman Catholicism.

Initially, the Pearsons integrated well into the local community, and their children attended the local Catholic school in Cadamstown, where one of them was a member of the hurling team. Following the Sinn Féin electoral successes in the elections of December 1918 a majority of the Irish elected representatives implemented their election manifesto by establishing the First Dail on 21 January 1919. In a conflict called the Irish War of Independence military hostilities between the IRA and the British forces in Ireland developed into a bitter guerrilla conflict in 1920 and 1921.

In County Offaly, where the Pearsons had their farm at Coolacrease, the military conflict was slow to develop, but it intensified in the course of 1921. A number of Catholics, classified by the Irish Volunteers or IRA as spies and informers, were executed. In Kinnitty, about five miles (8 km) from Coolacrease, two men of the Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC, the militarized police force which was the principal agency of the British state in Ireland) were killed in an ambush by the IRA on 17 May 1921. Following a dispute between the Pearsons and local Catholics over a mass path running through the Pearsons’ land, two IRA men, John Dillon and J. J. Horan, were arrested. However this dispute probably occurred a year earlier in 1920 and was already settled.

The shootings

In June 1921 the Kinnitty Company of the South Offaly No. 2 Brigade IRA was ordered to construct a roadblock as part of county-wide military manoeuvres. At around midnight the Pearsons came to the roadblock and fired a shot or shots.

An eight-man IRA road-block party selected a tree for a roadblock on the Birr to Tullamore road, about half way between the Pearsons’ house and the village of Cadamstown. The roadside tree was at the point of boundary between the Pearsons’ and a neighbouring farm about half a mile from their house. Two men were posted as sentries on the road to either side of the planned road-block. According to Paddy Heaney, at about midnight steps were heard approaching along the road from the direction of Pearsons’ house. Sentry Mick Heaney issued the verbal challenge “Halt! Who goes there?”. In response shots were fired at him, wounding him in the abdomen, arm and neck. The other sentry ran to his assistance and both returned fire. The other sentry Tom Donnelly was shot in the head. A retired RIC man who had been detained by them was also shot by the attackers. The abdominal injuries of Mick Heaney were serious and he died a few years later. The retired RIC man was seriously injured in the back and legs, and lost a lung. In this version, the Pearsons had, as staunch loyalists, become hostile to the local community as the war intensified, leading to their participation as combatants in the war.

According to one alternative account, the Pearsons fired a single shotgun cartridge in the air as a warning to rebels who were damaging their property while Alan Stanley wrote,"A cousin of my father's, Oliver Stanley, told me that after the tree had been felled, a number of men came to man the barricade thus created, and were shortly afterwards suprised by security people (police and auxiliaries presumably). He said that a brief gun battle had ensued and a man was injured on each side."

Following official investigation Philip McConway articles in Officers’ Battalion Council, into the identity of the men who attacked the road-block, Thomas Burke, the IRA Officer Commanding South Offaly No. 2 Brigade, ordered that the three brothers Richard, Abraham, and Sidney Pearson were to be executed and their houses destroyed. The orders to shoot the Pearsons would have come directly from IRA headquarters, and not made locally. However McConway indicates the decision to execute was made by Burke himself.

On 30 June 1921, about a week after the roadblock shootings, a party of about thirty IRA men arrested Richard and Abraham Pearson They were taken to their house and held under guard there with other members of the family (their mother, three sisters, younger brother, and two female cousins) while the house was prepared to be burned. Their father William Pearson and brother Sidney were away from home at the time. The brothers Richard and Abraham Pearson were shot by a firing squad of about ten men, and the house was burned. Richard and Abraham Pearson died after six hours and fourteen hours, respectively.

The medical reports declare that the death of Richard Pearson was due to haemorrhage and shock caused by gunshot wounds to the left shoulder, right groin, right buttock, left lower leg and to the back; the most serious being the wound to the right groin. And in the case of Abraham Pearson, death was declared to be the result of shock from gunshot wounds to the left cheek, left shoulder, left thigh, lower third of left leg and through the abdomen.

Atrocity claims

On 9 July 1921 the British Government in Dublin Castle issued a statement claiming that an atrocity had been committed against the Pearsons. Claims of murder and atrocity were made by William Stanley, "a loyalist fugitive and distant cousin of the Pearsons. He had been ordered out of Luggacurran in Co. Laois by the IRA" after allegedly becoming embroiled in a plot with the Auxiliaries to arrest an IRA Volunteer. He was living under an assumed name, “Jimmy Bradley”, at the time of the roadblock incident and escaped by running away when the Pearson brothers were arrested.

Stanley's son, Alan Stanley argued that the Pearsons were innocent farmers, that they did not shoot anybody at the road-block, and that they were murdered by people who wanted to take their land. These claims have been challenged.

A controversial television programme about the incident was broadcast by the Irish broadcaster RTÉ on 23 October2007. Formal complaints against the programme were rejected by the Broadcasting Complaints Commission.

A book strongly critical of the RTE program, 'Coolacrease: The True Story of the Pearson Executions',by the Aubane Historical Society and local Offaly historians, was published in 2008.

References

  1. ^ Alan Stanley (9 October 2005). "'I met Murder on the way'". Sunday Independent Magazine. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ Eoghan Harris (9 October 2005). "This tree has rotten roots and bitter fruit". Sunday Independent. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); External link in |title= (help) Cite error: The named reference "harris1" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  3. Parker, Doug & Helen (1982). 'The Secret Sect'. Macarthur Press.
  4. ^ Paddy Heaney (2006). "Coolacrease: A Place with a Tragic History". Offaly Heritage. pp. 220–225.
  5. 1918 election results
  6. Laffan, Michael (1999). 'The Resurrection of Ireland – The Sinn Féin Party, 1916-1923'. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0 521 65073 9.
  7. ^ Philip McConway (7 November 2007). "The Pearsons of Coolacrease, pt. 1". Tullamore Tribune. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help) Cite error: The named reference "mcconway1" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  8. ^ Philip McConway (14 November 2007). "The Pearsons of Coolacrease, pt. 2". Tullamore Tribune. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  9. Philip McConway articles
  10. 'Getting them Out', Tom Wall, Dublin Review of Books, Issue 9, 2009
  11. Pey (ed.). Eglish & Drumcullen - A Parish in Firceall. pp. isbn =. {{cite book}}: |last= has generic name (help); Missing pipe in: |pages= (help)
  12. I met Murder on the way p.67
  13. Béaslaí Papers, National Library of Ireland, Ms. 33, 913 (4)
  14. Brian Hanley, History Ireland, Vol 16 no.1 2008, pg.5 (Brian Hanley lectures in history at NUI Maynooth)
  15. Michael Cordial, Witness Statement, W.S. 1712, Bureau of Military History, Dublin
  16. NAUK (British Public Records Office) CO 762/24/5 William Sidney Pearson, King’s County, No. 324 1926-1927
  17. NAUK (British Public Records Office), WO 35/57A Court of Enquiry
  18. Dublin Castle Statement 1029 July 9 1921
  19. In 'Coolacrease: The True Story of the Pearson Executions', by Paddy Heaney, Pat Muldowney, Philip O’Connor, Dr Brian P Murphy, and others, Aubane Historical Society (2008).
  20. The Pearsons Of Coolacrease PART 1(Tullamore Tribune 7 Nov 2007), at http://www.offalyhistory.com/attachments/1_philip_mcconway_pearsons_coolacrease_1.pdf. The Pearsons Of Coolacrease PART 2 (Tullamore Tribune 14 Nov 2007), The Pearsons' Counter-Insurgency, at http://www.offalyhistory.com/attachments/3_pearsons_part_2a.pdf, http://www.offalyhistory.com/attachments/4_pearsons_part_2b.pdf. See also, Bew, Paul (2007). 'The Politics of Enmity 1789-2006'. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0198205555.
  21. TV review: When history and hearsay collide, The Sunday Business Post, October 28, 2007, by Emmanuel Kehoe
  22. RTÉ programme announcement
  23. "Decisions - February 2008". Broadcasting Complaints Commission website. Retrieved 2004-04-24.
  24. Aubane Historical Society page with information on the book
  25. The Coolacrease book was reviewed by Steven King in the Sunday Business Post ,30th November, 2008,. Joost Augusteijn in History Ireland Magazine, March/April 2009, and Tom Wall in the website “The Dublin Review of Books” Spring 2009.
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