An Cosantóir

April 2015

An Cosantóir the official magazine of the Irish Defence Forces and Reserve Defence Forces.

Issue link: https://digital.jmpublishing.ie/i/487195

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 28 of 37

www.military.ie the defence forces magazine | 29 Mr Hayter, a local grocer, was also killed as he attempted to cross the line of fire. In order to retake the metropolis from the rebels, the British directed artillery fire on to the city, with devastating results. Fires erupted throughout O'Connell Street, adding to the ones that had been set by the looters. The conflagration spread rapidly, destroying everything in its path, with the fire brigade unable to attend to the inferno as the battles raging through- out the city prevented them from leaving their stations. A number of bizarre events occurred during that week, the most unusual being the twice-daily truce, observed by both sides, as Mr James Kearney, the park keeper, entered St Ste- phen's Green to feed the ducks. As large parts of 'the second city of the Empire' burnt to the ground, rebel positions slowly began to capitulate and sur- rendering Volunteers were taken into captivity. It is a little-known fact of the Rising that there were more civilians killed during that week than British soldiers or Irish Volunteers, yet while the rebels are remembered each year in a public commemoration in O'Connell Street, the hundreds of non-combatants, men, women and children, that were killed that Easter week, have no memorial. Instead, they lie through- out Dublin's many graveyards, forgotten, a silent reminder of a city at war and of 'man's inhumanity to man'. about the author: Paul O'Brien is a military historian and author and a regular contributor to An Cosantóir. He has written many books on the 1916 Rising, including Shootout: The Battle For St Stephen's Green, 1916; Field of Fire: The Battle of Ashbourne, 1916; Cross- fire: The Battle for the Four Courts, 1916; Blood on the Streets: 1916 and the Battle for Mount Street Bridge; and Uncommon Valour: 1916 and the Battle for South Dublin Union. He has also written monographs on Dublin's oldest cemetery, Bully's Acre, (Kilmainham Tale 4) and Arbour Hill Cemetery (Kilmainham Tale 5). www.paulobrienauthor.ie

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of An Cosantóir - April 2015