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The National Association of Old IRA
Entidad colectiva · 1923-c. 1980s

The National Association of Old IRA was a non-political organisation founded in 1923 to end the schism within Irish republicanism and bring about peace among former comrades. It also looked after the welfare of veterans and commemorated events important to its members. The name Old IRA was chosen to distinguish the Association from the anti-Treaty IRA, which by the 1930s had become an illegal organisation.

The Association’s mode of organisation was identical to that adopted by the IRA during the War of Independence. For example, county Limerick had been organised in West, Mid and East Battalions, and the Old IRA in Limerick likewise had West, Mid and East branches. The Association took the form of a social club organising social gatherings and sporting events. It also aided its members in the application for military pensions for the active participants in the conflicts of 1916-1921. It proved immensely popular and attracted prominent members, among them Simon Donnelly, Frank Thornton, Donal O’Hannigan and Liam Deasy. The Association avoided becoming embroiled in politics, although it did at one stage consider founding a political party. It enjoyed its heyday in the 1940s and 1950s, when it took a leading role in campaigns to end partition.

The National Association of Old IRA survived until the 1980s, when its mantle was assumed by the Organisation of National Ex-Servicemen (ONE).

Entidad colectiva · 1715-1969

The 10th (Prince of Wales's Own) Royal Hussars was a cavalry regiment of the British Army. It was formed in 1715, when it was known as Gore's Regiment of Dragoons. It was renamed the 10th Regiment of Dragoons in 1715 and, after two further name changes, became known as the 10th (Prince of Wales's Own) Royal Hussars. The regiment saw action during the Peninsular War, Crimean War, Second Anglo-Afghan War, Madhist War and Second Boer War and was subsequently stationed in India and South Africa. In October 1914, the regiment returned to Britain to join the British Expeditionary Force for service on the Western Front during the First World War. On its return to Britain in 1921, the Regiment was retitled The 10th Royal Hussars (Prince of Wales's Own). In October 1969, it amalgamated with the 11th Hussars (Prince Albert's Own) to form the Royal Hussars (Prince of Wales's Own).

Entidad colectiva · 1689-1922

The 6th (Inniskilling) Dragoons was a cavalry regiment in the British Army. It was first raised in 1689 as Sir Albert Cunningham's Regiment of Dragoons. It was renamed Echlin's Dragoons in 1691, 6th (Inniskilling) Regiment of Dragoons in 1751 and 6th (Inniskilling) Dragoons in 1861. The regiment fought in the Battle of the Boyne in July 1690 and also saw action at the Battle of Waterloo, the Crimean War, the Second Boer War and the on the Western Front during the First World War. In 1922, the regiment amalgamated with the 5th (Princess Charlotte of Wales's) Dragoon guard to form 5th/6th Dragoons in 1922.

Persona · 1936-1997

Seamus Kemmy, better known as Jim Kemmy, was born in Limerick on 14 September, 1936, as the eldest of five children to Elizabeth Pilkington and stonemason Michael Kemmy. He was educated at the Christian Brothers’ primary school in Sexton Street and in 1952 followed his father into the Ancient Guild of Incorporated Brick and Stonelayers’ Trade Union to commence his five-year apprenticeship. When his father died of tuberculosis in 1955, the responsibility of providing for the family fell onto Kemmy’s shoulders. Having qualified as a stonemason in 1957, he emigrated to England in the hope of a better income. The different social conditions and the freedom of thought and expression he encountered there challenged and changed his traditional Catholic values and opened his eyes to the issues of social injustice and inequality, which he was to stand up against for the rest of his life.

In 1960, encouraged by the building boom, Kemmy returned to Ireland and found work on construction sites at Shannon. He also became involved in the Brick and Stonelayers’ Trade Union, and was elected Branch Secretary in 1962. A year later, he joined the Labour Party. Kemmy harboured no electoral ambitions during his early years in politics. Instead, he became involved in local party organisation, first as director of elections, and later as member of the party’s National Administrative Council. He also became increasingly involved in making representations on behalf of local residents to assist them in their domestic and personal difficulties. His employment as stonemason by Limerick Corporation from 1965 to 1981 gave him flexibility to take leave whenever his help was required. In 1965, to augment his practical experience, Kemmy enrolled in the School of Commerce on Mulgrave Street for a two-year extramural diploma in Social Science, and was conferred in September 1967.

In the course of the following years, political differences between Kemmy and other Labour Party members began to emerge. One of the issues on which he adopted a radically independent stance was the question of the status of Northern Ireland, on which he took up an anti-nationalist position. To compensate for his dissatisfaction with the Labour Party, Kemmy set up the Limerick Socialist Study Group, which aimed to generate awareness and discussion on current issues through organised monthly debates between well-known public figures, among them John de Courcy Ireland and Conor Cruise O’Brien. Kemmy’s disillusionment with Labour Party politics eventually led to his resignation in 1972. He then turned his energies to the launching of a new monthly newspaper, The Limerick Socialist, which served as a platform for his political ideals, carrying polemical analysis of local politics and politicians. In 1974, he registered as a non-party candidate in the local elections, advocating social and cultural reform, the availability of contraceptives, and the deletion of Articles 2 and 3 of the Constitution. He was elected to Limerick City Council and, in characteristic fashion, refused to wear the ceremonial crimson robes at the Council’s first sitting. The issues he advocated during his election campaign remained central to his political concerns after election. By 1975, he had successfully campaigned to set up a family planning clinic in Limerick. However, the clinic was so strongly opposed that in its first two years no member of the medical profession in Limerick would work there.

In 1977, Kemmy fought and lost the general election for the Limerick East Labour seat. Undeterred by this defeat, he continued his campaign to bring about a social and cultural revolution in the city. His activities were primarily directed towards changing the way people thought, and one of his fundamental beliefs was that culture should be accessible to all social classes. To this end, in 1979, he discontinued publishing The Limerick Socialist and launched The Old Limerick Journal, a local history periodical which he continued to produce until his death. Also in 1979, he was re-elected to the City Council, attaining the position of Alderman. His profound interest in culture became evident in 1980 when, having been appointed Chairperson of the City Council’s Art Gallery Advisory Committee, he revived and transformed the City Gallery. He also became Chairperson of the City Council’s National Monuments Advisory Committee.

Kemmy’s involvement in local politics and culture did not replace his commitment to national issues. He continued his participation in broad-front socialist organisations and became a leading member of the Socialists against Nationalism movement in 1980. He also continued his campaign for the amendment of the constitutional claim to Northern Ireland, his commitment to this cause reaching its zenith in 1981 through his evident lack of sympathy for the H-Block hunger strikers. In that year, Kemmy was also elected to the Dáil as an independent candidate. The election had resulted in a hung Dáil and Kemmy cast his vote in favour of Dr Garret Fitzgerald as Taoiseach at the head of the Fine Gael/Labour coalition. In Dr Fitzgerald, Kemmy found a kindred spirit, and in September 1981, the Taoiseach announced a constitutional crusade, one of the aims of which was the removal of Articles 2 and 3. The crusade, however, came to a sudden end in January 1982 when Kemmy voted against the budget, which removed several food subsidies and introduced a tax on children’s shoes, and brought down the government.

Kemmy was re-elected to the Dáil in February 1982. The socialist causes that he had championed in the 1970s, particularly women’s rights and women’s issues, remained in the forefront of his pursuits. Having been elected Chairman of the Limerick Family Planning Clinic, and lending his support to the Rape Crisis Centre, he became increasingly aware of the need for political and legislative measures to deal with these and other social issues. However, he also realised that as an independent TD his opportunities to influence policy making were non-existent. This realisation led him to play a central role in the creation of the Democratic Socialist Party. The first task of the new party was to draw up a number of policy documents, one of which related to abortion. At this time, the Pro Life lobby was campaigning for stricter legislative restrictions on abortion, and gained the support of Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael. The DSP policy, according to which abortion was justified where a woman’s life was endangered by pregnancy, where pregnancy had resulted from rape or incest, or when the foetus suffered from congenital abnormalities which made survival outside the womb impossible, threw Kemmy and his party in the centre of a controversy which was to cost Kemmy his seat in the November 1982 general election.

Rather than return to his old career as stonemason, from which he had resigned on being elected TD in 1981, Kemmy decided to commit himself to rebuilding his electoral base. He remained active as a council member and kept his constituency clinic open, although for several weeks no-one would turn up to seek his help. He also remained active in national politics through the DSP, and found common ground with Senator Mary Robinson in objecting to the Anglo-Irish agreement. In November 1985, when Garret Fitzgerald, during his second term as Taoiseach, signed another Anglo-Irish agreement without any commitment to amend Articles 2 and 3, Robinson resigned from the Labour Party and joined Kemmy on the platform at a DSP public meeting to protest against the anti-democratic character of that agreement. Kemmy’s dedication paid off in 1987, when he was returned to the Dáil as a member of the Democratic Socialist Party. Being aware of the limited impact made on Dáil politics by small parties, Kemmy committed himself to unifying the left. He attained his goal in 1990, when the DSP and the Workers’ Party merged with the Labour Party, but not without a price: with the merger, his hopes for a radical socialist party were finally put to an end and, whatever his own convictions were, he now had to align his views with those held by the Labour Party. However, the next twelve months were to be among the most rewarding of his life. He revitalised the Labour Party in Limerick and Clare, leading it into a dominant position during the 1991 local elections, and played a key role in the Labour Party campaign which saw Mary Robinson elected as President of Ireland. Also in 1991, Kemmy became the Labour Party’s spokesperson on transport, was voted into the position of Labour Party Vice-Chairman, and, perhaps the greatest personal honour of all, was unanimously elected Mayor of Limerick.

In his role as Mayor, Kemmy was described ‘like a thunderbolt’. His first gesture was to donate his £16,000 Mayoral salary to counterbalance cutbacks in city contributions to 25 local organisations. He opened the doors of the City Hall to ordinary people, holding receptions in honour of everyone and anyone who had represented the city well, from gifted students to local award-winning darts clubs. He was also the first Mayor of Limerick ever to attend at the War Memorial on Remembrance Day in his official capacity.

In 1992, when the general election resulted in a record number of Dáil seats for the Labour Party, it seemed inevitable that Kemmy would be given a ministerial position within the incoming Fianna Fáil/Labour coalition government. However, this was not to be. Instead, Kemmy was elected Chairperson of the National Labour Party, a position which provided him with the advantages of having a voice within the Dáil while at the same time giving him the freedom of speech associated with a marginal politician. Kemmy made the most of his station to indulge his notorious outspokenness, particularly during the 1994 Beef Tribunal, and the Brendan Smyth extradition case. However, his words were not always directed against the government: in 1993, he defended the much criticized tax amnesty on the grounds that it would bring money back into the economy. With Kemmy, common sense was always the key. In 1994, Kemmy unsuccessfully contested the European Parliament Elections in Munster, and in July 1995 he was elected as Mayor for a second term. In 1996, Kemmy faced into a difficult election but, unlike many of his Labour Party colleagues, managed to hold his seat.

In addition to numerous commitments and responsibilities, Kemmy also found the time to indulge in his lifelong ambition to write books. His literary achievements include Limerick in Old Picture Postcards, prepared jointly with Larry Walsh in 1996, The Limerick Anthology, published in 1996 in anticipation of the Limerick 800 celebrations, and The Limerick Compendium, published posthumously in 1997.

In August 1997, Kemmy was diagnosed with multiple myeloma. He was admitted to St James’ Hospital in Dublin, where he died on 25 September 1997.

Persona · 1884-1959

Stephen O'Mara was born on 5 January 1884 as the second-youngest son of Stephen O'Mara, managing director of O'Mara's Bacon Factory. He entered the family business in 1903, when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa. In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s. The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.

Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara played a prominent role in both local and national affairs. When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor. He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office. Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner. He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising. He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.

In 1921, Stephen O’Mara was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds. The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty. Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923. He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.

The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years. In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back. Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar. The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper, Irish Press. Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until 1935.

In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government. Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943. In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland. Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.

Stephen O’Mara married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.

Swythamley Historical Society
Entidad colectiva · Founded in 2003

Swythamley Historical Society (SHS) was founded on 1 September 2003 to promote interest in the history of the Swythamley Estate and the surrounding area of the Staffordshire Moorlands, north Staffordshire, on the Cheshire border in England.

Lilburn family of Limerick city
Familia · Settled in Limerick city in 1920

Hugh Lilburn was born on 6 November 1888 in Dromore, County Down into a farming family. In 1912, he emigrated to Australia, where he trained as an accountant and was actively involved in the Presbyterian church in Preston, Melbourne. On 25 December 1913, Hugh married Susan Stinson of Ballymoney, County Antrim (b. 18 February 1888), whom he had met in Ireland before emigrating, and who had travelled to Australia with her brother for the wedding. The couple had three children: Stewart, Jean, and Olive. The Lilburn family returned to Ireland in the early months of 1920 and initially settled in Dublin, where Hugh secured a position as an accountant with Craig Garner & Co. In November 1920, he moved to Limerick city to take over the auditing practice of C. W. Metcalfe & Co. In 1941, Hugh Lilburn and his colleague James Leslie Enright were made full partners and the company name was changed accordingly to Metcalfe, Lilburn and Enright on 23 May 1941.

Back in Ireland, Hugh Lilburn continued his strong association with the Presbyterian Church, serving as Honorary Treasurer of the Limerick Presbyterian Church from 1927 and as a ruling elder and clerk of sessions from 1928 until his death. He served as governor of Villiers school and was the author of Presbyterians in Limerick (1946). Hugh’s other interests included history and archaeology, and he was an active member of the Thomond Archaeological Society. Hugh Lilburn died on 27 November 1964, and his wife Susan on 15 October 1967.

Hugh Lilburn’s son, Stewart, was born in Melbourne, Australia on 13 January 1917. He studied at Trinity College, Dublin and, like his father, trained as an accountant. In 1944, he joined Metcalfe, Lilburn and Enright and was made full partner in 1954, when his father took a less active role in the company. Stewart was also an active member of the Limerick Presbyterian Church, serving as its accountant and Honorary Secretary for a number of years. A keen and talented hockey player, Stewart represented Munster and Ireland on many occasions. In 1949, Stewart Lilburn married Florence Eva Armstrong (b. 13 September 1925) of Clontarf, County Dublin. The couple had three children: David (1950-2021), Hugh and Gary. Stewart Lilburn died on 26 July 1998, and his wife Florence on 21 April 2005.

Familia · 1785-1898

Cornelius O'Callaghan (1740/41-1797) was an MP for Fethard between 1761 and 1785. In 1774 he married Frances Ponsonby. In 1785, he was created 1st Baron Lismore of Shanbally, county Tipperary. His eldest son, Cornelius O'Callaghan (1775-1857) was appointed Privy Counsellor of Ireland in 1835 and also held the office of Lord Lieutenant of county Tipperary from 1851 to 1857. He was created Viscount Lismore of Shanbally in 1806. Two year later, he married Lady Eleanor Butler, daughter of John Butler, 17th Earl of Ormonde. He was succeeded by his only surviving son, George Ponsonby O'Callaghan (1815-1898), as 2nd Viscount Lismore. The title became extinct upon the 2nd Viscount's death, his two sons having predeceased him. The family seat, Shanbally Castle, passed to his cousins, Constance and Beatrice Butler, daughters of the 3rd Marquess of Ormonde.