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list of women who were part of rebellions in Ireland

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This is a list of women who were part of rebellions in Ireland. A revolt is an organized attempt to overthrow an existing body of state authority through a rebellion or uprising.


Susie Goddard[4][5][6][7][8]

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RUTH RUSSELL in REVOLUTIONARY IRELAND [Ruth Russell https://www.markholan.org/archives/7121]


http://thewildgeese.irish/m/blogpost?id=6442157%3ABlogPost%3A20831 http://www.thedublinforums.com/showthread.php?289-The-Womens-Roll-In-Irish-History/page11

1916

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Members of the Provisional Committee include:

  • Mrs. John MacNeill (Rosetta (née McAuley) McNeill),
  • Mrs. Tuohy,
  • Mrs. MacDonagh O'Mahony,

http://www.labour.ie/download/pdf/seven_women_of_the_labour_movement1916.pdf

Other prominent members

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* Mary Hyland I can't find dates for her (married Michael Kelly)- See below

GPO women

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GPO Headquarters Battalion women 1916

There was a total of thirty-four women from the ICA and Cumann na mBan in the GPO.

1916 Easter rising

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Women listed as being involved

A. Wisely

Agnes Daly

Agnes McNamara

Agnes McNanice

Aine Ní Rian Reis's Chambers and Father Mathew Hall

Anastasia MacLoughlin

Annie Higgins Hibernian Bank GPO

Annie Kelly St. Stephen’s Green

Annie MacSwiney Cork

Annie McQuade Jacob’s

Aoife Taafe

Bessie Lynch (Mrs. Kelly) City Hall

Bridget Brady City Hall

Bridget Davis (Mrs. Duffy) City Hall

Bridget Gough (Goff) S1. Stephen's Green

Bridget Grace (GPO)

Bridget Hegarty

Bridget Murtagh St. Stephen's Green

Bridie Farrell

Bridie Walsh

Bridy Kenny

Caroline Mitchell (Ireland) Carrie Four Courts

Catherine Liston

Catherine Treston

Christina Hayes Father Mathew Hall

Dolly O'Sullivan Four Courts

Dora Harford Father Mathew Hall

Eileen Byrne

Eileen O'Hanrahan (Eily) (later Mrs. O'Hanrahan O'Reilly)

Eileen O'Hegarty Enniscorthy

Eileen Parker (other) Father Mathew Hall

Eileen Seton Pringle Secretary to Sir John Lumsden

Eilis Gray aka (Betsy)

Eilis Ní Chorra

Eilis Ní Rian (later Mrs. Sean O'Connell) Reis's Chambers and Father Mathew Hall

Eilis O'Connell (Ireland) Four Courts

Ellen (Nellie) Ennis Four Courts

Ellen Humphreys

Emily O'Keeffe

Esther Ryan worked with the Yeats sisters at the Cuala Press

Florence Mead (Flossie) Four Courts

Frances Downey

G. Colley

Grace O'Sullivan (Ireland)

Gretta Comerford Enniscorthy

Helen Donnelly

Ina Connolly

J. Milner

Josephine Kelly

Josephine McGowan

Josephine O'Keeffe

Josephine Spicer

Josie Pollard Jacob’s

Julia McAley

K. Kennedy

K. Ryan

Kate Brown (Ireland) (unclear whether she was mobilised in Dublin or Enniscorthy)

Kate Kelly (Ireland) Kate St. Stephen's Green

Kathleen Cleary St. Stephen's Green

Kathleen Fleming

Kathleen Kearney (later Mrs. Behan)

Kathleen Kenny Father Mathew Hall

Kathleen Maher

Kathleen Martin (Ireland) Father Mathew Hall

Kathleen Murphy (1)

Kathleen Murphy (2) (from Belfast)

Kathleen Ní Chorra

Kathleen Seerey (Mrs. Redmond) St. Stephen’s Green

Kathy Doran

Katie Barrett (formerly Connolly) City Hall;

Katie Byrne

Katie O'Connor

Katy McGuinness Father Mathew Hall and Four Courts

Laura Daly (later Mrs. O'Sullivan)

Lily Cooney

Lily Murnane Father Mathew Hall

Lizzie Allen

M. Elliott

M. O'Hanrahan

Madge Daly Limerick

Maeve Cavanagh

Maggie Derham Four Courts

Maggie Joyce St. Stephen's Green

Maggie McLaughlin

Maire Carron (or (May) McCarron) Four Courts and Father

Marcella Cosgrove

Margaret (Maggie) Walsh

Margaret Martin (Ireland) Father Mathew Hall

Margaret O'Flaherty

Maria Quigley

Marion Stokes (Ireland) Enniscorthy

Martha Brown (Ireland)

Martha Kelly (Ireland)

Martha Walsh (Mrs. Murphy) Imperial Hotel

Mary (May) Byrne Marrowbone

Mary Cullen (Ireland) GPO

Mary Devereux (Mrs. Allen) St. Stephen’s Green Allen Mary. (Devereux, Mary) Irish Citizen Army. Born on the 10 of May 1899 died on the 24th of January 1945, aged 16 at the time of the Rising. She was employed in Jacobs Biscuit Factory, Bishop Street, Dublin. She fought in the Royal College of Surgeons, Saint Stephen's Green areas. Mary Allen was sent home on Wednesday 26 April from the College of Surgeons on account of her age.medals listDocuments

Mary Hyland (Mrs. (Molly) Kelly) St. Stephen’s Green

Mary J 0 Walsh

Mary Liston

Mary O'Moore

Mary Partridge

Mary Shannon (Ireland)

Mary White (Ireland) Enniscorthy

Maura O'Neill Mackay Four Courts

May Gahan Imperial Hotel , Born Mary Gahan 22 Feb 1900 in Dublin Ireland, daughter of School teacher Robert Gahan and his wife Mary Murray.

She was a member of Cumann na mBan, the Irish republican women’s paramilitary organisation formed in Dublin on 2 April 1914 as an auxiliary of the Irish Volunteers.

She was in the General Post office at the start of the 1916 Easter Rising. May was imprisoned in Kilmainham after the rising.

She married John/Shaun O’Carroll from Silvemount Tipperary 6 May 6 1917 at St. Agatha’s Catholic Church, Dublin, Eire by the Rev. Father O`Rourke.

John and May O’Caroll went to Liverpool England in late 1923 or early 1924. They sailed for New Zealand with the two eldest children Robert Emmett and Eileen Marklewies. Mary lost four children before the O’Carroll family settled in Australia in 1929[11]

It had rained heavily on the march to Kilmainham.

Another woman to endure a difficult walk to Kilmainham was May Gahan O’Carroll. She had been pelted with horse dung and bottles en route. One of the 1916 leaders, Michael Mallin, had sent her as a dispatch rider to the GPO on Easter Monday, where she remained until Wednesday, when she was sent further to Cleary’s Department Store.

Despite hiding in one of the vaults in Marlborough Street Cathedral, she was arrested and taken, first to the Custom House, then to Richmond Barracks, and finally to Kilmainham. She was held in the prison for roughly ten days, having no change of clothing and sharing a cell with two other girls.

Living in Australia years afterwards, May told her daughter that their cell was located on the ground floor, and a young “Tommy,” as she described him, climbed up to the window to tell them some of the leaders were to be executed. Every single , male or female, held in Kilmainham during those early weeks of May 1916 all mention the chilling, loud shots ringing out at dawn and echoing through the building, leaving them to wonder which of the men had been executed. May Gahan O’Carroll was interned again in Kilmainham seven years later, during the Irish Civil War.[12]

More:[13][14][15][16][17][18][19]

May MacLoughlin

May Murray

Miss Adrian Ashbourne

Miss O'Neill (from Belfast)

Miss O'Rahilly

Miss Pollard (sister of Josie) Jacob's

Miss Smith (Ireland)

Molly O'Reilly (Ireland) (later Mrs. Corcoran) City Hall

Molly Reynolds (Ireland) GPO Agnes Ryan

Mrs. (Arthur) Griffiths (Uncertain whether she took active part in Rising.)

Mrs. (Frank) Fahy Father Mathew Hall

Mrs. (Martin) Conlon Father Mathew Hall

Mrs. (Seamus) Murphy Father Mathew Hall

Phyllis Morkan Four Courts

Nora Daly (later Mrs. Eamonn Dore)

Nora Thornton

P. Morecambe

P.Hoey

Pauline Markham (Ireland)

Pauline Morkan Four Courts

Peggy Downey (later Mrs. Viant) GPO

Phylis Ryan (later Mrs. O'Kelly)

Priscilla Quigley

Rose Ann Murphy (later Mrs. (Henry) Morgan) Info1 info2 info3

Rose McGuinness Four Courts

S. Quigley

S. Twomey

Sara Kealy Jacob’s

Sheila O'Hanlon

Sorca McMahon

T. Simpson

Min Ryan's sisters as well

[edit]

http://www.irishtimes.com/culture/books/lives-and-loves-the-sexual-side-of-the-rising-1.1942917

http://www.historyireland.com/20th-century-contemporary-history/the-mulcahy-tapes-papers/

  1. ^ MacCarvill, Marika (2020-05-13). ""Most Effective Women": The story of Eileen McGrane".
  2. ^ https://twitter.com/PhilipMcConway/status/1058442382168018945
  3. ^ "1922 cumann na mban photo". @Antiqueight. 18 September 2019.
  4. ^ "Susie Poole, wife of HGG Goddard". www.theauxiliaries.com.
  5. ^ "Michael Murray," (PDF).
  6. ^ . military archives https://www.militaryarchives.ie/collections/online-collections/bureau-of-military-history-1913-1921/reels/bmh/BMH.WS1439.pdf. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  7. ^ "Mullingar was centre stage in Michael Collins' intelligence war". Westmeath Examiner.
  8. ^ "archives" (PDF). ucd.
  9. ^ "1916 Easter Rising - National Museums Liverpool, Liverpool museums, Liverpool museums". Liverpoolmuseums.org. Retrieved October 21, 2016.
  10. ^ "The Womens Roll In Irish History - Page 11". Thedublinforums.com. Retrieved October 21, 2016.
  11. ^ "O'Carroll: My Irish FamilyAustralian History Research". Australianhistoryresearch.info. Retrieved October 22, 2016.
  12. ^ "Women of 1916". Ianohio.com. Retrieved October 22, 2016.
  13. ^ Niamh O'Sullivan (30 June 2007). Every Dark Hour: A History of Kilmainham Jail. Liberties Press. pp. 159–. ISBN 978-1-909718-07-4.
  14. ^ Lorcan Collins (22 February 2016). 1916: The Rising Handbook. O'Brien Press. pp. 88–. ISBN 978-1-84717-848-0.
  15. ^ "Dr Dianne Hall: Women of the 1916 Dublin Rising". Drdiannehall.blogspot.ie. Retrieved October 22, 2016.
  16. ^ Bureauofmilitaryhistory.ie http://www.bureauofmilitaryhistory.ie/reels/bmh/BMH.WS1687.pdf#page=19. Retrieved October 22, 2016. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  17. ^ Bureauofmilitaryhistory.ie http://www.bureauofmilitaryhistory.ie/reels/bmh/BMH.WS1693.pdf#page=2. Retrieved October 22, 2016. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  18. ^ Bureauofmilitaryhistory.ie http://www.bureauofmilitaryhistory.ie/reels/bmh/BMH.WS0733.pdf#page=46. Retrieved October 22, 2016. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  19. ^ "President". President.ie. Retrieved October 22, 2016.