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Dr Tomás Mac Conmara Pic Arthur Ellis.

East Clare Continues Tradition of Commemoration


THE East Clare Memorial Committee will begin its second century of commemoration this Easter Sunday. 

The group, who have annually commemorated both the East Clare IRA and Scariff Martyrs across the last 100 years, have once again planned to remember those who fought for Irish independence. 

At the East Clare Memorial Park in Tuamgraney, where the East Clare IRA and Cumann na mBan Brigades are commemorated, a wreath will be laid at 10am.

This year, Chairman of the West Clare Brigade Commemoration Group, JT Larkin, will be called on to perform the ceremonial duty. 

Mr Larkin will lay a wreath in honour of the West and East Clare IRA Brigades who combined in April 1921 to attack the heavily militarised town of Kilrush.

In April 2021, members of the East Clare Memorial Committee travelled to West Clare to acknowledge the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the Kilrush Ambush. 

At the ground of Scariff Roman Catholic Church, a wreath will be laid at the grave of the Scariff Martyrs, Michael BrudMcMahon, Alphie Rodgers, Martin Gildea and Michael Egan.

The four men were shot dead by British forces on Killaloe Bridge in November 1920. The historian, Dr Tomás Mac Conmara published his 17-year research, The Scariff Martyrs, War, Murder and Memory in East Clare, into the story in September of last year, which has ignited significant interest in the story across East Clare and beyond.  

The Memorial Committee have arranged for the family of Paddy McDonnell to lay a wreath for the occasion.

McDonnell was a native of Kiltea in Tuamgraney and was a senior IRA Volunteer during the revolutionary period. 

For over two years, Paddy was on the runduring which time his home was raided over 15 times by Crown Forces. 

It was eventually burned down by members of the RIC, Black and Tans and Auxiliaries in late 1920.

On the night that the bodies of the four Scariff Martyrs were brought back to Scariff Church, Paddy, against the advice of his comrades, went in secret to the church to see the remains of his friends. 

Decades later he descried the condition of their bodies in an interview with Ernie OMalley. 

On Easter Sunday, his oldest son, Aindréas MacDómhnaill will perform the wreath laying duty in memory of his father, who died in Nenagh in 1962. 

Patrick Murphy, a member of the Tulla Pipe Band will continue a tradition, reaching back over 50 years, of leading the commemorations at both Tuamgraney and Scariff.  

The Chairman of the East Clare Memorial Committee, Councillor Pat Hayes emphasised the importance of continuing their annual commemoration.

“We have said for many years that while the landmark occasions are important, we are committed to remembering the men and women who fought for this countrys independence ever year,” he said.

“We have been overwhelmed by the meaning that the people who we invite gain from the simple process of laying a commemorative wreath.  It is their chance to honour their family members who they are rightly proud of.  It also helps us to learn more about the period and the various characters that make up the story of our past.”

The East Clare Memorial Commemorations will take place in Tuamgraney at 10am and outside Scariff Church at 11.30am.  For more information, call 087 9160373.  

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