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Monday, October 3, 2016
Wednesday, August 24, 2016
Blog of The Year 2016 - Shortlist
We are honoured in this a very special year to be rewarded for our research by being shortlisted for Littlewoods Ireland Blog of the Year awards in the Arts and Culture section. Win, lose or draw we will continue to bring you the unique aspects of the Easter Rising.
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Saturday, August 13, 2016
The Trials of the 1916 Press Pack - Part Six
The newspaper article title was a
reflection of a question prompted by an interview that the Irish Parliamentary
Party leader John Redmond had given to an Associated Press reporter when asked
about the Rising.
The misguided insane young men who
have taken part in this movement in Ireland have risked and some of
them have lost their lives, But what am I to say of those men who have sent
them into this insane and anti-patriotic movement while they have remained in
the safe remoteness of American cities.
I might add that this movement has
been set in motion by the same class of men at the very moment when America is
demanding reparation for the blood of innocent American men, women and children
shed by Germany (the sinking of the Lusitania) and thus they are guilty of
double treason, treason to the generous land that received them as well as the
land that gave them birth.
‘IRISH PLOT NOT
HATCHED IN U.S, SAYS WIMBORNE
Lord Lieutenant Is Certain Rebellion Failed Because It Was Sprung on Spur of Moment.’
Lord Lieutenant Is Certain Rebellion Failed Because It Was Sprung on Spur of Moment.’
He wrote
‘'There is no
evidence at all that any American influence been concerned in the trouble in Dublin . There may be
sympathisers in America
with the disturbances, but even of that I have no knowledge”
Lord Wimbourne. Lord Lieutenant ofIreland
made this statement to me at the Vice Regal Lodge this afternoon for
transmission to America .
In reply to a question put to him concerning the Sinn Feiners' Insurrection and
the siege of Dublin .
I had repeated to him the official statement made concerning Sir Roger Casement's attempted landing that the plot was hatched In America. "I have not heard that. Certainly we have no official confirmation," he replied.
Lord Wimbourne received me in His official residence, from which one of his
predecessors. Lord Spenser, unquestionably watched the commencement of thePhoenix Park murders. For the first time I was
able to obtain an official account of the amazing event of the last week.
Augustine Birrell. Secretary of State for Ireland , was present at the time
added frequently to comments of the Lord Lieutenant.
Lord Wimbourne. Lord Lieutenant of
I had repeated to him the official statement made concerning Sir Roger Casement's attempted landing that the plot was hatched In America. "I have not heard that. Certainly we have no official confirmation," he replied.
Lord Wimbourne received me in His official residence, from which one of his
predecessors. Lord Spenser, unquestionably watched the commencement of the
I give Wimbourne’s
own narrative
Attack on Castle Fails.
"It began on Monday at half past eleven. We heard there had been an attack on the castle, that Stephen's Green and the Four Courts had been occupied, and also that the post office had been seized. Telephonic communication to the Curragh was at once put in motion and reserve troops arrived in
"The following morning this situation at the castle eared. All they did there was to shoot a policeman at the castle gates. They never got in or occupied it.
Sir Mathew Nathan (secretary to Augustine Birrell) was at the castle, but was never for a moment in danger.
"They prevented communication with the north. Also they cut all telegraphic communication with the country except the Curragh. This apparently they were unable to do. They failed to seize any station except the Broadstone station. This was surprised, but they didn't hold it long.
Author Note
Cave
failed to mention as it was in both UP and AP accounts of the press conference
that the Broadstone Station was unprotected when it was attacked.
"Tuesday morning we had all our reinforcements from the Curragh. Since that morning the Sinn Feiners had attempted nothing except sniping from any hidden spots or roofs. Tuesday a gunboat on the Liffey shelled Liberty Hall which we occupied at once "
Mr. Birrell pointed out that a great deal of time had been taken up of necessity by the soldiers In working their way round the Sackville street area
Lord Wimbourne resumed
"Wednesday night we had a complete cordon round the city, By Thursday there was another inner cordon round the Sackville Street district so we really had a double cordon. The troops from the Curragh were insufficient to deal with the trouble so we had to send for assistance. Field artillery has been used to get them out of houses.
"The situation in the provinces on the whole is very good. With the exception of fighting in Galway and Athenry where the police are in possession of the town, but where the rebels are encamped in the ruined castle; Wexford and Enniscorthy, County Meath and Louth everything is quiet. At
Mr Birrell interposed at this point
"The whole thing was timed. The Casement ship was armed and sent out from
Lord Wimbourne added:
"It is interesting to note that an automobile went into the river at
Resuming the
narrative the Lord Lieutenant said:
"The proclamation of the rebels, which I understand was sent by wireless, had seven signatures. Including Jim Connelly, J. T. Clark, an old Sinn Feiner who kept a tobacconists shop and has been under suspicion and has been reported on for years and men named Pearse and McDermott.
"The situation has now become a military one inDublin . Martial law has been declared in Dublin county and Dublin
city. There is no sign of sedition in the Royal Irish Regiments, the Royal
Irish Constabulary or in any section of the Irish population except the Sinn
Feiners. My own belief is that the decision to make this rising was not arrived
at until Monday itself. I think the attack was a most audacious and badly
planned plot which miscarried, not because we were largely ready for it, but
because it was formed on the spur of the moment."
The Lord Lieutenant had no official details of the casualties or of the properties destroyed by artillery or fire, but it is believed that the totals are much less than have been rumoured.
"The proclamation of the rebels, which I understand was sent by wireless, had seven signatures. Including Jim Connelly, J. T. Clark, an old Sinn Feiner who kept a tobacconists shop and has been under suspicion and has been reported on for years and men named Pearse and McDermott.
"The situation has now become a military one in
The Lord Lieutenant had no official details of the casualties or of the properties destroyed by artillery or fire, but it is believed that the totals are much less than have been rumoured.
But despite the strict War Office
censorship that they have overseen most telegraphs or telegrams being sent
across the Atlantic , as the British controlled
both the sea cables and the wireless stations, Associated Press managed to get
very accurate reports into the American Press. The AP’s article was carried by
the Harrisburg Telegraph in Pennsylvania and
the following is that article with the bold italic notations this author has
made to illustrate the reporting of Berry .
SINN FEINERS
DESPERATELY FOR LIVES CITY ON FIRE
Regulars Now Command All Rebel Positions, the Fall of
Which Is Matter of Time; Field Cans Bark, Machine
Guns Rattle and Rifle Fire Patters All Over City Apparently at Same Time; Casualty List Exceeds 100
Regulars Now Command All Rebel Positions, the Fall of
Which Is Matter of Time; Field Cans Bark, Machine
Guns Rattle and Rifle Fire Patters All Over City Apparently at Same Time; Casualty List Exceeds 100
SACKVILLE AND
GRAFTON STREETS IN FLAMES; ARTILLERY BEING USED ON VACANT HOUSES
Snipers on House tops Take Pots hot at All Civilians; Firmly Believed in Popular Mind That German Submarines Have Been Landing Arms For Several Months; Countess in Uniform Shoots Guard; Looting Is Now Widespread London. April 27. (Thursday)
Snipers on House tops Take Pots hot at All Civilians; Firmly Believed in Popular Mind That German Submarines Have Been Landing Arms For Several Months; Countess in Uniform Shoots Guard; Looting Is Now Widespread London. April 27. (Thursday)
Parts of the city
of Dublin arc in flames, an Evening News
dispatch filed at Belfast
last night says. Street fighting continues and there is much looting. One
dispatch received from Ireland this afternoon says that Sackville and Grafton
streets in Dublin arc in flames and that artillery is being used on the houses,
the inhabitants having been removed. (It was made to sound like an ordered
evacuation of civilians. Both of the streets mentioned were the main shopping
districts)
Regulars now
command all the rebel positions, the tall of which is merely a question of
time. The streets of Dublin
were deserted to-day except for sentries and military guards. Business was at a
standstill. Civilians peeped anxiously from behind curtained windows. Field
guns were barking, machine guns rattling and rifle tire was pattering,
apparently from every quarter at the same time.
When the Associated Press (Robert Berry) correspondent landed early this morning at the quay near the customs house the pinging of bullet from rifles of snipers in the vicinity was frequent. Augustine Birrell the secretary for
"I wish you luck gentlemen. I don't know what will happen to you. Now that you are here"
Soldiers and rebels fired at each other from street corners, wharves, roofs and windows. Sentries with fixed bayonets on loaded rifles, stationed every few yards shouted their commands to halt. Naval guns joined in and added to the deafening gun fire. From the quay the respective positions could be seen. The rebels were
holding a square section of territory from the point where Liberty Hall stood before a gunboat destroyed it as for as
Rebel Flag Waves Over all this section there was considerable fighting the whole day. The distillery was the scene of one of the sharpest little battles of the uprising. The rebels were forced out of the flour mill by bombardment and many of them were seen, covered with flour making their way to the distillery.
Once there they hoisted the rebel flag which floated from the corner of a square tower. Soon a naval gun opened fire. The first shot hit the tower, and then half a dozen in succession struck the roof around it. The flag still flew and the rebels replied with rifles and a machine gun. The bombardment ceased after a dozen shots, but was renewed later. Hit after hit was scored, but the flag remained hanging from its pole. One shot hit a water tank just below it and for a time there was a miniature cascade down the walls of the distillery. When night fell and all firing except with rifles ceased the flag was still flying defiantly over the side of the little tower. (Was this bombardment for the benefit of the journalists based in a hotel on the North Wall Quay on the Liffey)
Barricades
Bombarded
Another brief
artillery demonstration was directed against the barricades in Sackville Street .
Clouds of thick smoke soon rose around various prominent objects in that part
of Dublin as the
shells burst, while between times the rattle of the machine guns seemed like a
continuation of the reverberation of the heavy pieces. So closely guarded were
the approaches to the lighting zone that it was impossible to gauge accurately what
damage was done and attempts by correspondents to pass a long street leading
toward the center of the city brought upon them a detachment of soldiers with
weapons ready for use. The' troops had early in the rebellion learned lo
distrust civilians, some of whom were found to be evidently in sympathy with
the Sinn Feiners if not in league with them. Wearing khaki meant the same as a
sentence to death.
Kill Unarmed
Soldiers
When the revolt
began at 1 o'clock Monday afternoon the soldiers walking
about the city were as usual, unarmed and numbers of them paid the full penalty without being able to defend themselves. Other governmental uniforms brought discomfort for their wearers. (This was perhaps a reference to the story of the killing of the GR’s atMount
Street ). The Dublin metropolitan police were exposed to
somewhat similar treatment to that accorded soldiers by the rebels and most of
the policemen went to their homes and changed to civilian clothing. Postmen on
duty at the general post office which was the first building seized by the Sinn
Feiners and later became their were sent away and told to come back in a week
for their wages which would be paid in Irish republican coinage. The rebels cut
all the wires, destroyed the apparatus and seized all money. (This
seemed to be very open reporting)
about the city were as usual, unarmed and numbers of them paid the full penalty without being able to defend themselves. Other governmental uniforms brought discomfort for their wearers. (This was perhaps a reference to the story of the killing of the GR’s at
Even Had
Entrenching Tools
Everything
except, failure seemed to have been foreseen by the rebels who, when they
started the revolt were as well uniformed as were the regular soldiers. Their
clothing, arms and equipment were good and they were even provided with
entrenching tools which they used when they marched on St. Stephens Green. The
ammunition supply of the rebels appeared to be plentiful and was used
unsparingly. Some bullets which entered the hotel where the correspondents
assembled were certainly of German manufacture. Other weapons used by the
rebels were 12-bore shotguns and cartridges filled with ugly leaden slugs. (The
hotel was the North Western Hotel on the North Wall Quay)
The battle was
thickest to-day around an entire block of business houses in the Sackville street
quarter. These buildings had been occupied by the rebels at the start and
breaches had been made in a party wall between the stores so that the men could
retreat righting from one room to another in the event of the places being
stormed. To-night the Irish capital was brilliantly lighted by the flames from an
Important central block of houses a couple of acres in extent. Frequent
explosions occurred followed by salvos of machine gun and rifle tire turned on
the rebels who were making their way from one building to another.
Bodies lying in
streets
No exact idea of
the number of casualties was obtainable but many bodies were lying about the
streets unburied. Houses contained many others. The authorities said the troops
had not suffered nearly as much as had the rebels whose strong holds was under
fire at all times both day and night. (This was clearly a British military slant
on casualty totals emanating from their spin doctors as military casualties
were double those of rebel forces)
German
Submarines Are Believed to Have
Landed Armies inIreland By
Associated Press London ,
April 29.
Landed Armies in
Although the story
of the early hours of the Dublin uprising has
now been disclosed in considerable detail, England is still without authentic
information as to the progress of later events. Normal
telegraph, telephone and mail services with Ireland have not been restored and
the existing means of communication are subjected to such strict censorship
that it is possible to obtain only fragmentary information, such news dispatches
as came through this morning added little to the information contained in last
night's official advices and stories of eye-witnesses.
Casualties Mat
Growing
So far as
official reports show the situation in Dublin
is gradually being brought under control. There seems to be no doubt that the
rebels still control various parts of Dublin
and that street fighting continues with a lengthening list of casualties. It is
reported the casualty list already exceeds 100. Of the situation outside Dublin little is known beyond the official admission that
the dissatisfaction has spread to various localities in the west and south of Ireland .
Field Marshal French's statement of last night described these disturbances as
local in character and so far as has been revealed by information which has
passed the censorship they have not been attended by heavy fighting. (This
paragraph is an excellent example of information and mis-information going hand
in hand)
Snipers Pick of
Civilians
Upwards of 100
persons have been killed or injured thus far in Dublin , a correspondent at Belfast Evening
News reports in a dispatch filed last night. He says the rioters hidden in
houses commanding important street junctions or covered by barricades in the streets
are keeping up a constant fusillade. The list of casualties continues to
lengthen. It includes many civilians who the correspondent says, have been
picked off by Sinn Fein snipers for no other reason than that they were
believed to be loyal. The cordon of troops is being drawn gradually but surely
around the rebel strongholds. The authorities are carrying on their difficult
task with the greatest forbearance. Every effort is being made to avoid unnecessary
bloodshed and damage. (Blame is already been apportioned with the
rebels being singled out as the aggressors and the force committing war crimes.
This is an attitude originating in Unionist Belfast ) (Avoiding a growing civilian
casualty list would be difficult as the British forces are the only side using
artillery)
Germans Landed Arms
"The thing that surprises me the most about the uprising in Ireland is the supply of munitions in the hands of the rebels," said an Irishman who arrived in London this morning, he spent ten hours in Dublin on Tuesday and, departing that evening, remained until last night in Kingstown.
"There is little doubt in the popular mind that Germans have been landing
arms from submarines for months," he continued, "and it is even said though I don't believe it—that a few Germans also landed and organized. "I learned that the rebels made prisoners of a large number of policemen and a few stray soldiers at the Royal Irish constabulary depot and at
"My walk through the center of the city Tuesday afternoon was very eventful and 1 was glad finally to reach Kingstown. I was challenged many times by both rebel and loyal sentries. The rebel sentries were threatening but allowed me to pass after searching for arms. (It was always the aim of Patrick Pearse that the rebellion should be conducted in a proper military fashion and that there should be no stain left on the flag of the new
Countess Shoots
Guard
"I heard
that the Countess Markievicz, the sister of an Irish baron, who was prominent
in the Larkin strike and a leading figure in the present movement, shot dead a
guard in front of Dublin
Castle in an effort to
capture the Castle. This effort proved abortive."
This informant, who is an engineer of the War Department and a strong Royalist, says a great majority of the people ofIreland are entirely without sympathy
for the rebels, whom they regard as a small and irresponsible minority. (True)
This informant, who is an engineer of the War Department and a strong Royalist, says a great majority of the people of
James Larkin Leading Irish Uprising; Aided by Uniformed Countess Dublin.
Tuesday April 25
(By Courier to Kingstown ), via London . (False, Larkin was in the US when the
Rising began)
Dublin now has
been held up for twenty-four hours by a combination of members of the Sinn Fein
Society and followers of James Larkin, head of the Transport Workers' Union and
well known as a strike leader. There has been the same violence in the city as
marked the big streetcar strike in 1913, the Associated Press, eyewitness of
the disorders declared.
This strike was
headed by Larkin but supplemented by the use of an armed force with military
pretensions and the seizure of strategic points designed to give the
disturbance the aspect of a revolution.
Gas Supply Cut
Off
The trouble has
gone on now for twenty-four hours and has completely dislocated the life of Dublin . No shops are open
and no business is being transacted. Street cars have ceased to run and the gas
supply has been cut off. Use of the telephone between the city and the suburbs
has been forbidden by the military, and the running of trains to and from the
country is very irregular. Monday, at midday, the Sinn Fein revolutionists were
assembled as if for one of their usual parades. They were supposed to be going
out for an Easter Monday march. Some of the rank and file even imagined that
this was their purpose. About 6OO of them, however, took possession of the
general post office in Sackville Street ,
which at the time was attended by the usual small holiday staff of clerks.
There the six hundred men remained all day and night and still hold forth.
Telegraph and postal- communication, insofar, as it goes through this the chief
post office in Ireland ,
has ceased
The raid was
beyond the power of the police to deal with. Small detachments of Lancers
appeared on the scene, but after two or three of their horses had been shot and
two or three of the men wounded they withdrew. Since then the Sinn Feiners in
the post office have been left alone and they have hoisted the flag of the Irish Republic
over the building. (The human interest side playing on the heart strings of the readers
creating a sense of animal cruelty being perpetrated by the rebels that this
despite thousands of horses being killed on the western front)
The Countess Markievicz,
the sister of an Irish baron, in a volunteer uniform was a prominent figure in
the disturbance. She was one of the leading sympathizers with James Larkin in
the 1913 street car riots and her house was raided in January by the police,
who are said to have seized a printing press and type with which alleged
pro-German literature was being printed. Her husband is said to be a Polish
nobleman.
Much Rifle
Firing
There has been much rifle and revolver firing, seemingly at nothing in particular and several persons out holiday-making have been killed or injured. The wounded were removed toSt. Vincent 's Hospital, on one
side of St. Stephen's Green. In the Portobello road, over the canal which forms
the boundary of the city, the Sinn Feiners seized a corner public house. Here
also holiday-makers suffered from promiscuous shooting. One platoon of the Royal
Irish Rifles succeeded in dislodging and taking prisoner these Sinn Feiners. During
Monday officers and men in khaki and also isolated Individuals were shot at in
the streets. Some of them are reported to have been killed or wounded. (The
British over playing their success in retaking J T Davy’s pub after three hours
of constant fire despite the fact that the rebels had left earlier via a back
door and no prisoners were taken in the pub when it was recaptured)
There has been much rifle and revolver firing, seemingly at nothing in particular and several persons out holiday-making have been killed or injured. The wounded were removed to
The Royal College of Surgeons, which faces St. Stephen's Green on the west, was seized by the Sinn Feiners and their flag flown from it. It is impossible as yet to ascertain or even approximate the number of persons killed or injured, but there is no doubt that the aggregation is considerable as the holiday crowds were large and the shooting by the Sinn Feiners was very wild and reckless.
Redmond Sees
Menace in Revolt to Free Ireland London, April 29.(Thursday)—John Redmond,
leader of the Irish Nationalists in the House of Commons, last night gave the following statement concerning the uprising inDublin :
"My first feeling, of course, on hearing of this insane move, was one of horror, discouragement and utmost despair. I asked myself whether Ireland, as so often before-in her tragic history, was to dash the cup of liberty from her lips—was the insanity of a small section of her people once again to turn all her marvellous victories of the last few years into irreparable defeat and to send her rack, on the very eve of her final recognition as a free nation, into another long night of slavery, incalculable suffering and weary and uncertain struggling.
leader of the Irish Nationalists in the House of Commons, last night gave the following statement concerning the uprising in
"My first feeling, of course, on hearing of this insane move, was one of horror, discouragement and utmost despair. I asked myself whether Ireland, as so often before-in her tragic history, was to dash the cup of liberty from her lips—was the insanity of a small section of her people once again to turn all her marvellous victories of the last few years into irreparable defeat and to send her rack, on the very eve of her final recognition as a free nation, into another long night of slavery, incalculable suffering and weary and uncertain struggling.
For look at the
Irish position today.
In the short
space of forty years Ireland
has by a constitutional movement made an almost unbrokenly triumphant march
from pauperism and slavery to prosperity and freedom. She has won back the
possession of Irish land; she has stayed emigration she has succeeded in
placing on the statute books the greatest character freedom ever offered her
since the days of Grattan. Is all this to but lost?
Revolt Was
Kindled in Phoenix Park , Scene of Ireland 's
Darkest Days
By Associated PressLondon .
April 29.
By Associated Press
It was in Phoenix Park ,
the scene of some of Ireland 's
darkest days, that the first spark of the Irish revolt was kindled, says a Daily
Mail dispatch from Dublin .
On Monday morning the so-called Citizen army held a review in the park, paraded
and marched with, leaded rifles and fixed bayonets. Afterward they were
addressed by their leaders and marched in flamboyant. well-ordered ranks for
the return to Dublin ,
adds the Mail.
Passing the Vice Regal Lodge in silence, they entered the outskirts of the town where they met some of the troops of theDublin
garrison marching in the opposite direction. Two men in the first rank of the
Citizen army levelled their rifles and fired among the soldiers. Two officers
and several men fell. The attackers immediately flung up their arms but the soldiers
replied, killing three Sinn Feiners.
Passing the Vice Regal Lodge in silence, they entered the outskirts of the town where they met some of the troops of the
Signal For
Revolt
This was the signal for a general revolt and the news was carried like a flash to the heart of the city. (This may have been a reference to the attempt to blew up the munitions depot in the
Resultory firing began in different streets, obviously with the purpose of diverting the attention of the military from the main objects of the rebels attack the post office, hotels in the center of the city, the four courts, St. Stephens Green and
Constant
Fusillade of Shots by Rebels Keep Dublin Streets
Deserted
By Associated PressLondon ,
April 29.
By Associated Press
A graphic story lot'
the situation in Dublin , as told by I a clergyman
who got away from the city by motor to Belfast ,
is printed in the Daily Telegraph to-day. The clergyman said there was hardly a
soul to be seen in the streets of Dublin .
The rebels had entrenched themselves in St.
Stephens Green over night and on Wednesday morning were blazing away with their
rifles. He was unable to discover at what they were firing. All around St. Stephens
Green are the houses of gentry, judges and leading governmental officials,
while at one corner of the green is the Shelburne Hotel, the occupants all of
which are virtually prisoners. At the head of Grafton Street , Dublin 's
fashionable shopping thoroughfare, the rebels had erected strong barricades.
Rows of motorcars, commandeered in the streets the previous day, were thrown across
the road, shutting off access to the green.
At Dublin Castle
there were few traces of Monday's struggle. The entrance was barred up. It was
here that two of the earliest fatalities occurred, the policeman on duty at the
gate of the castle and the sentry inside, both being shot dead. (DMP
man James O’Brien and Guy Vickery Pinfield)
Shot At All in Uniforms
The offices of the Daily Express and the Evening Mail were early in the hands of the rebels, who utilized them as points of vantage for firing at every man seen in uniform. An establishment on the opposite side of the street also was captured. To reach the city from St. Stephens Green, the clergyman had to proceed by way of
SINN FEINERS
ARRESTED
By Associated PressCork .
April 29.
By Associated Press
A committee of Dublin
Sinn Feiners arrived here by automobile Monday and held a secret conference
with local leaders. Later the committee was arrested at Limerick
by the military before they had a chance to confer with the leaders there.
Brave Little
Irish Girl Runs Through Hail of Bullets to Aid Wounded
By Associated Press Holyhead, viaLondon ,
April 29.
By Associated Press Holyhead, via
Eye-witnesses
arriving here state that when they left Dublin
Thursday night Sackville Street
was completely in the hands of the rebels and was blockaded with barbed wire
entanglements. Hundreds of visitors in the hotels were unable to get away.
Looting of shops was in progress in many quarters and the horses were lying
dead in the streets. A resident of London
returning from Dublin
praised the heroism of an Irish girl l5 years old who ran from her home like a
deer in the face of a hail of snipers' bullets to rescue wounded soldiers. The
informant said: "She grasped a wounded soldier under the arms—a stranger
to her, for he had just arrived from England and dragged him to where others stood
ready to carry him to a hospital. Then back she ran for another of the stricken
soldiers. Her example inspired scores. She repeatedly led nurses and doctors
from a hospital almost in a rain of fire from buildings to places where the wounded
lay. Loud cheers greeted her.
Emphasizes
Organization of Rebels and Efforts of Leaders to Stop Riots
By Associated PressLondon ,
April 29.
By Associated Press
The Times publishes
an account of an eye-witness of the Dublin
uprising which emphasizes the excellent organization of the rebels and the fairly
successful efforts of the leaders to restrain rioting. This account says:
"Civilians were not molested in the streets and much of the firing was of blank cartridges. There was an effort to show that the movement was strictly military in character and directed only against the government not against the populace. There was a little looting, but only about ten or twenty shops were entered. There was no violence against private persons and as long as you did not wear a uniform you were as safe walking inDublin
streets as in the streets of London .
"This shows a remarkable difference from theDublin riots two years ago when it was not
safe for anybody to walk in the streets for fear of violence. During last
Monday's and Tuesday's trouble the populace could go where they liked. There
was barbed wire around the past office, but the sentinels made no effort to
prevent people who wished to do so from crawling under the barriers.
"Civilians were not molested in the streets and much of the firing was of blank cartridges. There was an effort to show that the movement was strictly military in character and directed only against the government not against the populace. There was a little looting, but only about ten or twenty shops were entered. There was no violence against private persons and as long as you did not wear a uniform you were as safe walking in
"This shows a remarkable difference from the
Seize Money
"On the other hand, it was made clear that anybody in his Majesty's uniform would be shot at sight. Another illustration of the rebels excellent organization was the fact that, although food was commandeered from a big hotel, it was paid for. According to reports, the money came from the post office vaults, where it is alleged a large quantity of new money was seized. We planned to rise simultaneously with our
Prepared for
Anything
"'We might have been in possession of the post office but for the fact that
the military was there first. – added the leader. 'Now I do not think we will rise here, but if they come to demand our arms we shall shoot them. When the news of theDublin
rising trickled through here Monday we all retired to our armoured barracks, loaded
our rifles, polished bayonets, set in stores of provisions and prepared for
anything. The bishop of Cork
and the lord mayor came to the barracks at midnight and demanded admission,
which was granted after considerable parley. They implored us to lay down our
arms and not to resort to physical force. We refused absolutely. Sorrowfully
and with bowed head, the bishop said: "Then I leave you to your fate."
We told him we did not fear our fate, whereupon he departed
"'We might have been in possession of the post office but for the fact that
the military was there first. – added the leader. 'Now I do not think we will rise here, but if they come to demand our arms we shall shoot them. When the news of the
On Sunday morning the journalists
were taken again through the streets to HQ on Parkgate Street and brief by the
military. They were told that four hundred and fifty rebels had laid down their
arms at the Parnell Statue on Sackville
Street . An insurgent Lieutenant and ten men
carrying a white flag had entered the city from County Meath
with a view to the surrender of their forces in that county. He was given
permission to talk to the prisoner Pearse ‘Commandant General of the Republican
Army’ in order that the surrender could be confirmed. Afterwards the Lieutenant
was allowed return to Meath to make arrangements for his men’s surrender. The
journalists were also informed that ‘piles’ of rifles had been gathered up and
taken to Dublin Castle .
The battle for Dublin
was over. There was other fighting to be covered and within forty eight hours
most of the war correspondents, who made their way to Dublin were back on the Western Front.
Sunday, July 31, 2016
The Trials of the 1916 Press Pack - Part Five
Excerpt from the book 'The Easter Rising Press Pack' (c) Eddie Bohan
VII
VII
Despite the fact that by now the
journalists had been issued with Military Passes by the Officer Commanding the
North Wall area that would allow them to travel anywhere in the city by early
Friday Wilbur Forrest had only reached the Customs House, a couple of hundred
yards away from the hotel. He belied his lack of knowledge of the city when he
misidentified it as the Four Courts. By early afternoon the ‘guests’ had tired
of their confinement and dire warnings about the lack of security around the
city. The British were trying to control what news got out. In the afternoon George
Leach who had reached the hotel and Forrest evaded British sentries and rebel
barricades and meandered their way to the Shelbourne Hotel on St. Stephen’s
Green where they had received reports that a female rebel was involved in the
fighting.
Captain Butler informed the Foreign
Office on April 30th
‘we
do not know where they are or what they are doing’
As they reached the back of the
hotel on Kildare Street ,
the battle was still raging. The British troops on the roof of the fine
building were pouring fire across the twenty two acres of the Green towards the
Royal College of Surgeons where Michael Mallin and Countess Markievicz
commanded the Irish Citizens army battalion who were forced to abandon their
trenches in the Green for the security of a building.
Just as they entered the lobby of
the hotel a British major in charge was not pleased with their presence once
their identity and papers were checked.
‘Get
the hell out of here’ he boomed
After some five futile minutes
arguing their case that they should be allowed out onto the roof to report the
story the two reporters departed the same way they had come in and in defeat
headed back towards the North Wall.
They watched as the starving of the
city followed them as they walked through the back streets and alleyways
occasionally pausing to allow nearby gunfire to cease. Their civilian clothes
provided them some immunity especially from any sympathetic Sinn Feiners in
upper windows who fired on uniformed soldiers as they struggled to regain
control of the city. In one doorway as they hid from the bullets whizzing down
the street, they noticed a women huddled with her children in the hallway of a
tenement block. She looked gaunt and exhausted. With tears flowing down her
wrinkled face even though they guessed she was not that old, the woman cried
out
‘No
food, no food, my God when will it end’
The firing stopped and they left
the family to their woes. The two men ducked from doorway to doorway make slow
but steady progress. When they eventually returned to the hotel there was some
good news as bread would now be served with their evening meal. On several
corners they were stopped and questioned by sentries and even on occasions
despite their press passes they were thoroughly searched.
Early on Friday morning, another
bright sunny day in Dublin while Forrest and
Leach dodged the rebel bullet and their dangerous route back to the hotel, six
of the journalists were taken in an open military truck that offered them very
little protection with a military escort to the British army headquarters at Parkgate Street
near the Phoenix Park . This group whose military pass was
signed by the British officer commanding the North Wall, Major Harold
Somerville, included Berry of AP, Thomas Naylor of the Daily Chronicle,
Phillips of the Daily Express, Bidwell representing the British based Press
Association wire service and Baldwin Herbert, a war photographer with the
Central News Agency.
While the foreign correspondents
enjoyed their meal being handed to them in the hotel dining room, they were
probably unaware that two fellow journalists had been summarily executed by a
British officer in Portobello Barracks on the Tuesday and the British military
were intent on covering the killings up. The two men were thirty eight year old
Patrick McIntyre editor of the Searchlight newspaper and thirty one year old
Thomas Dickson editor of The Eye Opener magazine in Dublin . He two men had been arrested on the
same day as the pacifist Francis Sheehy Skeffington.
In the dining room as if to make a
point to the complaining Forrest about their unwelcome entertainment the night
before, the Colonel entered with a red haired, black moustached prisoner who he
claimed was the sniper who caused them so much hardship the night before.
Forrest asked the rebel prisoner if he had realised he was shooting into his
hotel room. He said he knew exactly what he was doing and was proud to have
participated in Ireland ’s
bid for liberty. He only lamented that he wasn’t more accurate with his Russian
made rifle. Feeling assured that night, Forrest and Berry retired to their candle lit room. They
ambled about their room safe in the knowledge that they had seen the face of
their adversary and now all was under control.
The two journalists worked for a
while on their respective typewriters writing their version of events, sharing
their stories, Forrest having been in the thick of the action in St Stephens
Green and writing about the female rebel and how she is reported to have shot a
policeman dead in the early hours of the rebellion and Berry was recounting the
meeting in the Vice Regal lodge. They were just about to retire to their beds
when a bullet crashed through what little glass panels there was in their
bedroom window and missed Forrest by just a couple of life saving inches.
Immediately once again they grabbed their mattresses from the bed and settled
on the floor under the window sill.
By Saturday morning the British noose
around the rebels was tightening and the rebellion was crumbling. Later that
evening the first of the rebel prisoners following Patrick Pearse’s surrender
were marched down the North Wall passed the journalists hotel. They were to be
transported in cattle ships to England
and Wales
for internment. Forrest reported
‘They were the
rank and file of the succession movement. Here some of the low brow of the
slums of Dublin
indiscriminately mixed with their leaders. But standing out like brilliant
lights in the slow moving columns were idealist type, the intellectual, the
College professor, the patriot and the martyr glorying in his captivity.’
Percival Phillips described the
prisoner movement
‘the people in
the street watched the prisoners pass without any demonstration save an old
woman spat at them and called them dirty dogs’
(Despatches from the World)
That morning a group of them were
taken by motorcar through the disturbed streets of the city via the North
Circular Road into the Phoenix Park arriving at the Vice Regal lodge and a
press briefing from the King’s representative in Ireland the Viceroy Ivor
Guest, Lord Wimbourne. Included in that group was Berry
from AP and the INS correspondent Sidney
Cave .
Following the meeting in the Vice
Regal Lodge with the press pack Captain Butler reported that
‘the
US
journalists heckled poor Birrell and the Lord Lieutenant with alarming
acrimony.’
VIII
So how did they report it to the
press Stateside? Robert Berry of AP, whose piece was carried by the Bismarck
Daily Tribune of Dakota on April 30th 1916 reported
‘Dublin, April
29.—-Baron Wimbourne, lord lieutenant, of Ireland, expressed to the Associated Press at the Vice
Regal lodge today, the assurance that, the seditions movement, would be suppressed
in the course of a few days. The Viceroy was full of praise for the loyalty
displayed by the great majority of private people and considers the momentary
success gained and the damage done by the rebels as small, when viewed in
connection with the surprise of the outbreak and the evident preparation made
for it. The country outside of Dublin ,
except for a few isolated places, has, he declared, remained peaceful.
Baron Wimbourne,
when requested to give an account of what had happened, since the Irish rebels
had proclaimed an Irish republic last Monday afternoon, said:
"The outbreak began Monday morning at about 11:30 o'clock. About that time information was received thatDublin
had been attacked, St. Steven's green occupied and the post office seized by
the rebels. Telephonic communication with the Curragh camp was immediately
obtained by the authorities, and the reserve troops there were brought into Dublin that night and the
following morning.
"The outbreak began Monday morning at about 11:30 o'clock. About that time information was received that
Sniping Operations
"On Tuesday morning all the reinforcements we had called for from Curragh had reached
No German
Supplies.
"As to the landing of Sir Roger Casement.'' said Baron Wimbourne, "that, was arranged inGermany
with the connivance of the Sinn-Feiners. On the night of his arrest, a motor
car upset in the river and the occupants who were drowned both wore
Sinn-Feiner badges. The Germans do not seem to have supplied the rebels with
arms which are of all descriptions, including fouling pieces. A proclamation
issued by the rebels announcing the foundation of the Irish republic, was
signed by seven persons, including Clark .
Connolly, Pearce and Mac Dermott."
"As to the landing of Sir Roger Casement.'' said Baron Wimbourne, "that, was arranged in
Post office
Burned.
Field Marshal Viscount' French, commander of the Home forces, reports that the general post office atDublin ,
which has been the principal stronghold of the Sinn-Feiners, has been burned
down. Connolly, one of the leaders of the rebels, is reported to have been
killed. Many of the rebels have been taken prisoners and the move in Dublin is on the verge of
collapse. In the rest of Ireland ,
the situation is generally satisfactory.
Field Marshal Viscount' French, commander of the Home forces, reports that the general post office at
The newspaper added though under a
piece titled ‘Rebellion Not Quelled.’
‘Official statements
were lacking during the day, regarding the situation in Dublin . New dispatches reported the military
gaining the ascendency, but with the rebels still in possession of important
points, all of which, however, were declared to be commanded by the regulars.
Fires of a serious nature have broken out, according to the current telegrams,
and street fighting is continuing.’
The Trials of the 1916 Press Pack - Part Four
Excerpt from the book 'The Easter Rising Press Pack' (c) Eddie Bohan
VII
VII
Despite the fact that by now the
journalists had been issued with Military Passes by the Officer Commanding the
North Wall area that would allow them to travel anywhere in the city by early
Friday Wilbur Forrest had only reached the Customs House, a couple of hundred
yards away from the hotel. He belied his lack of knowledge of the city when he
misidentified it as the Four Courts. By early afternoon the ‘guests’ had tired
of their confinement and dire warnings about the lack of security around the
city. The British were trying to control what news got out. In the afternoon George
Leach who had reached the hotel and Forrest evaded British sentries and rebel
barricades and meandered their way to the Shelbourne Hotel on St. Stephen’s
Green where they had received reports that a female rebel was involved in the
fighting.
Captain Butler informed the Foreign
Office on April 30th
‘we
do not know where they are or what they are doing’
As they reached the back of the
hotel on Kildare Street ,
the battle was still raging. The British troops on the roof of the fine
building were pouring fire across the twenty two acres of the Green towards the
Royal College of Surgeons where Michael Mallin and Countess Markievicz
commanded the Irish Citizens army battalion who were forced to abandon their
trenches in the Green for the security of a building.
Just as they entered the lobby of
the hotel a British major in charge was not pleased with their presence once
their identity and papers were checked.
‘Get
the hell out of here’ he boomed
After some five futile minutes
arguing their case that they should be allowed out onto the roof to report the
story the two reporters departed the same way they had come in and in defeat
headed back towards the North Wall.
They watched as the starving of the
city followed them as they walked through the back streets and alleyways
occasionally pausing to allow nearby gunfire to cease. Their civilian clothes
provided them some immunity especially from any sympathetic Sinn Feiners in
upper windows who fired on uniformed soldiers as they struggled to regain
control of the city. In one doorway as they hid from the bullets whizzing down
the street, they noticed a women huddled with her children in the hallway of a
tenement block. She looked gaunt and exhausted. With tears flowing down her
wrinkled face even though they guessed she was not that old, the woman cried
out
‘No
food, no food, my God when will it end’
The firing stopped and they left
the family to their woes. The two men ducked from doorway to doorway make slow
but steady progress. When they eventually returned to the hotel there was some
good news as bread would now be served with their evening meal. On several
corners they were stopped and questioned by sentries and even on occasions
despite their press passes they were thoroughly searched.
Early on Friday morning, another
bright sunny day in Dublin while Forrest and
Leach dodged the rebel bullet and their dangerous route back to the hotel, six
of the journalists were taken in an open military truck that offered them very
little protection with a military escort to the British army headquarters at Parkgate Street
near the Phoenix Park . This group whose military pass was
signed by the British officer commanding the North Wall, Major Harold
Somerville, included Berry of AP, Thomas Naylor of the Daily Chronicle,
Phillips of the Daily Express, Bidwell representing the British based Press
Association wire service and Baldwin Herbert, a war photographer with the
Central News Agency.
While the foreign correspondents
enjoyed their meal being handed to them in the hotel dining room, they were
probably unaware that two fellow journalists had been summarily executed by a
British officer in Portobello Barracks on the Tuesday and the British military
were intent on covering the killings up. The two men were thirty eight year old
Patrick McIntyre editor of the Searchlight newspaper and thirty one year old
Thomas Dickson editor of The Eye Opener magazine in Dublin . He two men had been arrested on the
same day as the pacifist Francis Sheehy Skeffington.
In the dining room as if to make a
point to the complaining Forrest about their unwelcome entertainment the night
before, the Colonel entered with a red haired, black moustached prisoner who he
claimed was the sniper who caused them so much hardship the night before.
Forrest asked the rebel prisoner if he had realised he was shooting into his
hotel room. He said he knew exactly what he was doing and was proud to have
participated in Ireland ’s
bid for liberty. He only lamented that he wasn’t more accurate with his Russian
made rifle. Feeling assured that night, Forrest and Berry retired to their candle lit room. They
ambled about their room safe in the knowledge that they had seen the face of
their adversary and now all was under control.
The two journalists worked for a
while on their respective typewriters writing their version of events, sharing
their stories, Forrest having been in the thick of the action in St Stephens
Green and writing about the female rebel and how she is reported to have shot a
policeman dead in the early hours of the rebellion and Berry was recounting the
meeting in the Vice Regal lodge. They were just about to retire to their beds
when a bullet crashed through what little glass panels there was in their
bedroom window and missed Forrest by just a couple of life saving inches.
Immediately once again they grabbed their mattresses from the bed and settled
on the floor under the window sill.
By Saturday morning the British noose
around the rebels was tightening and the rebellion was crumbling. Later that
evening the first of the rebel prisoners following Patrick Pearse’s surrender
were marched down the North Wall passed the journalists hotel. They were to be
transported in cattle ships to England
and Wales
for internment. Forrest reported
‘They were the
rank and file of the succession movement. Here some of the low brow of the
slums of Dublin
indiscriminately mixed with their leaders. But standing out like brilliant
lights in the slow moving columns were idealist type, the intellectual, the
College professor, the patriot and the martyr glorying in his captivity.’
Percival Phillips described the
prisoner movement
‘the people in
the street watched the prisoners pass without any demonstration save an old
woman spat at them and called them dirty dogs’
(Despatches from the World)
That morning a group of them were
taken by motorcar through the disturbed streets of the city via the North
Circular Road into the Phoenix Park arriving at the Vice Regal lodge and a
press briefing from the King’s representative in Ireland the Viceroy Ivor
Guest, Lord Wimbourne. Included in that group was Berry
from AP and the INS correspondent Sidney
Cave .
Following the meeting in the Vice
Regal Lodge with the press pack Captain Butler reported that
‘the
US
journalists heckled poor Birrell and the Lord Lieutenant with alarming
acrimony.’
VIII
So how did they report it to the
press Stateside? Robert Berry of AP, whose piece was carried by the Bismarck
Daily Tribune of Dakota on April 30th 1916 reported
‘Dublin, April
29.—-Baron Wimbourne, lord lieutenant, of Ireland, expressed to the Associated Press at the Vice
Regal lodge today, the assurance that, the seditions movement, would be suppressed
in the course of a few days. The Viceroy was full of praise for the loyalty
displayed by the great majority of private people and considers the momentary
success gained and the damage done by the rebels as small, when viewed in
connection with the surprise of the outbreak and the evident preparation made
for it. The country outside of Dublin ,
except for a few isolated places, has, he declared, remained peaceful.
Baron Wimbourne,
when requested to give an account of what had happened, since the Irish rebels
had proclaimed an Irish republic last Monday afternoon, said:
"The outbreak began Monday morning at about 11:30 o'clock. About that time information was received thatDublin
had been attacked, St. Steven's green occupied and the post office seized by
the rebels. Telephonic communication with the Curragh camp was immediately
obtained by the authorities, and the reserve troops there were brought into Dublin that night and the
following morning.
"The outbreak began Monday morning at about 11:30 o'clock. About that time information was received that
Sniping Operations
"On Tuesday morning all the reinforcements we had called for from Curragh had reached
No German
Supplies.
"As to the landing of Sir Roger Casement.'' said Baron Wimbourne, "that, was arranged inGermany
with the connivance of the Sinn-Feiners. On the night of his arrest, a motor
car upset in the river and the occupants who were drowned both wore
Sinn-Feiner badges. The Germans do not seem to have supplied the rebels with
arms which are of all descriptions, including fouling pieces. A proclamation
issued by the rebels announcing the foundation of the Irish republic, was
signed by seven persons, including Clark .
Connolly, Pearce and Mac Dermott."
"As to the landing of Sir Roger Casement.'' said Baron Wimbourne, "that, was arranged in
Post office
Burned.
Field Marshal Viscount' French, commander of the Home forces, reports that the general post office atDublin ,
which has been the principal stronghold of the Sinn-Feiners, has been burned
down. Connolly, one of the leaders of the rebels, is reported to have been
killed. Many of the rebels have been taken prisoners and the move in Dublin is on the verge of
collapse. In the rest of Ireland ,
the situation is generally satisfactory.
Field Marshal Viscount' French, commander of the Home forces, reports that the general post office at
The newspaper added though under a
piece titled ‘Rebellion Not Quelled.’
‘Official statements
were lacking during the day, regarding the situation in Dublin . New dispatches reported the military
gaining the ascendency, but with the rebels still in possession of important
points, all of which, however, were declared to be commanded by the regulars.
Fires of a serious nature have broken out, according to the current telegrams,
and street fighting is continuing.’
Thursday, July 28, 2016
The Trials of the 1916 Press Pack - Part Three
Wilbur Forrest decided to go over
to the railway terminus hoping to find some eye witness accounts. He crossed Watling Street , now
a cul de sac toward the curved front of the railway building. Rebel snipers opened
fire on their quarry as he crossed the street. His trip back was negotiated
faster, taking a running start from the cover of the entrance. The rebel was a
second too late, the bullet hitting the street behind Forrest. It was almost a
sporting event.
The rebel kept firing this time
aiming at the static hotel building pot marking the outside wall. The Colonel
decided to place a number of soldiers on the roof to return fire but rather
than eliminating the sniper’s fire, it concentrated the rebel fire on the enemy
station on the roof. But the sniper was in no way accurate with shots crashing
through doors and windows sending those inside diving for cover and moving
towards the back of the building.
The British military spin doctors
arrived at the hotel to brief the holed up and bored pressmen but information
was light and was not tallying with some of the first hand accounts they had
already gleaned from locals and soldiers. The Foreign Office had continually
pressed for more details of the Rising but rigid War office censorship not only
prevented the rebels getting their interpretation on the Dublin troubles but also stifled much
potential propaganda. There was an internal British government conflict. There
was a lack of or tardiness in issuing military passes to the journalists.
Colonel Warburton Davies of the War Office wrote to Hubert Montgomery
‘There appears
to be a great deal of trouble as a result of the American correspondents’ trip
to Dublin . We
propose to put it down to the Foreign Office.’
Captain Butler also reported to the
Foreign Office that the lack of proper reporting facilities such as access to
telegraph or telephone was depriving the journalists of a scoop. The short
briefing seemed to take to tracts, firstly the military attempted to portray
the barbarity of the rebels while on the other hand they were lauding
themselves at the leniency in how the rebellion was being quashed.
The battle between news giving and
news withholding was raging within the British Government and press
‘Britain holds
the record as the worst press agent of the allies and many things could be
disclosed which could establish once and for all the predominant part she is
playing in the war and go far to remove the impression also in neutral states
that she is experiencing a bad time’
wrote W Orton Tewson in the San
Antonio Express April 30th 1916
Phillip Gibbs of the New York Times
wrote in his paper that it was a ‘splendid coincidence’ that on the night when
Sinn Fein were ‘trying to besmirch the honour of Ireland on the streets of
Dublin, Irish battalions at the front on France were on the fighting line and
by great gallantry gave proof of the world that the heart of Ireland was loyal’
In the midst of the Rising 538 Irishmen many of them Dubliners died at Hulluch
when the Germans launched a poison gas attack.
But the street, house to house
fighting in Dublin
was different to the open field battles of the Western Front, this was urban
warfare many of whom had never experienced this kind of close quarter combat
before. From the roof they press were able to identify the green flag with the
golden harp hoisted above the distillery beside the Victoria Bridge
on the Ringsend Road .
The men had a ringside view of the British artillery targeting the distillery
that despite the flag flying from its roof was now empty with the rebels having
been withdrawn to Boland’s Mills.
In Forrest’s despatch printed in
the Pittsburgh Press on Sunday April 30th he reported,
“A naval
destroyer landed a party of correspondents from England at 7am, Thursday at the
North Wall Quay almost in the heart of the ‘war zone’ and within a stone’s
throw of Liberty Hall former headquarters of the Sinn Feiners which was
literally blown to bits by naval guns at 1pm.
We watched the
bombardment from a window on the third floor of a hotel. Naval patrol boats
swinging in close to shore sent shells screaming into the city bringing the
rebel strongholds crashing down with loud roars.
One shell blew a
great hole in the side of the Dublin City Distillery where a large number of
Sinn Feiners had congregated. In response the rebels ran up the flag of the new
Irish Republic , green and gold emblazoned with
a harp. Another shell hit the distillery and the rebels burst from the doors in
mad flight.
The fighting
Thursday was the most desperate of the week. The rebels knowing that surrender
meant the enforcement of the death penalty for treason fought like cornered
rats. The Government troops in no mood for gentle handling of the rioters
attacked fiercely.
Soldiers were
posted in large force along the quays and in the warehouses across the street
from our hotel answering with sharp volleys to the sniping rebels. Shells from
the British 18 pounders were bursting accurately against the walls and roofs of
several buildings held by the Sinn Feiners. Through binoculars we watched from
the roof of our hotel successive infantry attacks as the Government troops
charged against the rebel barricades. The fighting was so near we could pick
out with ease individuals in the struggling groups.
Many of the
British soldiers facing fire for the first time in their lives displayed the
greatest daring in charging the rebel positions in the face of hot fire.
When dawn broke
on Friday the ruins of Liberty
hall and other buildings wrecked by artillery or burned to the ground were
clearly visible. The general post office and custom house seemed unscathed by
the flames.
Only
intermittent firing was heard after breakfast and a party of correspondents
accompanied by a British Officer attempted a tour of the business district near
the battle zone. The sniping became too hot and the party retreated.”
Forrest reported that it was ‘shell
number thirty eight’ that eventually felled the rebel flag. Their attention was
then turned to the right and the area around the rebel headquarters as
nightfall fell on the Thursday smoke was giving way to flames licking the sky
illuminating the city centre as nightfall set in.
It was the reflection of many of
these experienced journalists that the rebellion had been well planned and under
the noses of the British authorities.
VI
Thursday night arrived and Forrest
was sharing a third floor room with Berry
at the front of the hotel. They had eventually got some copy away out of Dublin , how long it would take to get to London was another matter. A military tug had
arrived in port to deliver military despatches and it returned the typewritten
reports across the Irish Sea . The electricity
in the hotel had been cut and light was now provided by candle. There was a single
candle in each room. Forrest and Berry
had just turned in as it had been a long forty eight hours since they met at
Paddington Station. Tiredness had enveloped the two reporters. Just as Forrest
was about to snuff out the candle a bullet
‘buzzed through
the window in the manner of a bumble bee in a hurry’ striking the back wall of
the bedroom. Another quickly followed and the two men tumbled from their beds
to the relative safety of the carpeted floor. As they waiting for the next shot
they noticed one of the fired bullets on the floor having failed to penetrate
the wall.
They pulled their mattresses from
the beds and lay beneath the window sill. Forrest decided to test the rebel
sniper’s accuracy. Using the light from the candle, he placed his brimmed hat
on his cane which he famously took everywhere and waved it in front of the
window drawing fire from the rebel sniper located a couple of hundred yards
away. His firing was not accurate whether it was a lack of experience or poor
weaponry the men could only speculate. Only one more bullet penetrated their
room, the rest cannoning off the brickwork outside. They were baiting the rebel
into wasting ammunition and he eventually tired and the shooting stopped. Berry blew out the
candle and the two men slept the night on the floor.
When the men made their way down to
breakfast early on the Friday morning they complained sarcastically to the
Irish born Colonel that it was an outrage to allow a sniper to interrupt their
nights sleep but another new problem was to face the journalists that morning,
one that faced the entire city, a food shortage. The only food available in the
hotel was some cod fish that had been landed further down the quay. To wash it
down there was a small supply of port wine from the cellar. There was no milk
and the water supply had been interrupted. The British reporter from the
Manchester Guardian stated
‘as
evidence of food shortages, it is only necessary to state we were served roast
beef and potatoes for luncheon and dinner and this for four days running’.
Arthur Draper reported that when
the fish had been landed the evening before a number of women draped in their
shawls gathered around the trawler when they were fired upon by rebel forces in
Boland’s Mills. A British soldier with the women waited for a second volley of
shots to identify the origin of the mussel flashes and he immediately returned
fire silencing the sniper and allowing the women to collect their much needed
yet meagre food supply.
The reporters watched as a local
bakery was cleared by British soldiers and the ovens fired up to begin
producing bread again. Once the bakery was producing bread local women and
children who had now struggled for food for four days and ravenous with the
hunger queued outside in an orderly fashion desperate for a small ration. There
was constant fire from the rebels with Forrest reporting that two children were
hit, killing one of them.
More U.S.
correspondents arrived on the Friday of the rebellion landing at Rosslare, County Wexford .
Among them was Vermont
born Dewitt McKenzie and the Canadian war correspondent Frederick McKenzie (no
relation to Dewitt). The Quebec born reporter
writing for The Star in Toronto ,
he was definitely not a friend of the rebel cause. He suggested that support
for the rebels came from three classes of people, the old irreconcilables, the
young intellectuals and Dublin ’s
Labour movement. He reported that ‘The Irish Volunteer’ newspaper edited by
Irish Volunteer leader Eoin McNeill in its April 22nd edition before
the rebellion dealt with how insurgents could hold a crossroads during
guerrilla warfare. It contained he said ‘full practical instructions in Civil
War’. He found his way to the hotel with the rest of the correspondents.
He ventured out onto the North Wall
Quay where a troop of Crown soldiers were behind a row of wooden beer barrels
returning fire towards the gas works and Boland’s Mills on the southside of the
Liffey. He reported from behind the barricade with enemy fire passing overhead
‘our
boys had machine guns’.
He later visited Sackville Street ruined by flames and
looting.
‘The
heart of one of our great cities wrecked by the work of our own people’.
Back in the hotel someone had a
copy of the Proclamation, one of the few not in military hands and already the
holder was asking for £250 for the sale of this historical document.
He also reported some hearsay
accounts from St Stephens Green where Countess Markievicz, he told his readers
was in a green military man’s uniform. He reported on what happened to British
prisoners of war in the Royal College of Surgeons.
‘‘They’re going
to shoot us old man whatever we do’ a young NCO said to a fellow prisoner. ‘We
might as well have a good time while we can’
He started
chatting to the rebel women cooking the meals. Chatting led to kissing. The
Countess was horrified when she saw the young soldiers arm around the girls
waist. The girls were banished to another part of the building by Markievicz
but they crept back to enjoy the company of the POW’s’
McKenzie believed that the right
place for a war correspondent is where he can see what he is supposed to
describe. What many of the correspondents did manage to see was a copy of the
new Republic’s own newspaper The Irish War News. The four page publication
first hit the streets on the Tuesday of Easter Week. Two journalist and
printers were in the GPO when it was seized and Patrick Pearse knowing their
backgrounds detailed the two men to seize a printing press and publish the new
states’ first newspaper. Waterford
born James Upton, an editor at the Kilkenny Journal and Joseph Stanley who was
the man behind the printing of The Spark at Liberty Hall left the rebel
headquarters and seized James O’Keefe’s printing press at Halston Street . There with the assistance
of Mathew Walker and his son Charlie, Tom Ryan and James O’Sullivan, 12,000
copies rolled off the presses. The front page article written by Patrick Pearse
was titled ‘If The Germans Conquered England’. The back page contained a ‘Stop
Press’ column that announced that a new Republic had been declared and the
provisional Government members were named.
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