I’ve had the image below for quite a well now, a fantastic old press snap of two Gardaí inside Connolly House (located on Great Strand Street) after the attack on the premises in March 1933 by an anti-communist mob. Accounts of the night are always chaotic, for example in Pat Feeley’s wonderful article “The Siege of 64 Great Strand Street” (Old Limerick Journal,Vol. 9, Winter 1981) it is noted that:
“As the house filled with smoke and the mob began to occupy it, the defenders were making their escape across the rooftops. The fire brigade tried to rescue two women who were in difficulties on the slates but they were prevented by the crowd who slashed their water hose”
The fact a Webley and Colt. 45 Revolver were found by the Gardai behind the shop counter perhaps best indicates the political tension and state of fear at the time.
Feeley’s article also mentions a meeting held a number of days later where Maud Gonne McBride condemned those behind the scenes at Connolly House, to which a voice in the crowd responded that those involved were Catholics. When she continued to speak, and condemned the broader attacks of the street mobs:
Again the voice repeated, “It was Catholics”. To which this time she replied, “They were hooligans”
Bob Doyle, one of the men who was in the mob that attacked Connolly House, would go on to join the International Brigade forces opposing fascism in Spain. In his memoirs Brigadista, he wrote that:
“I had attended the evening mission on Monday 27 March 1933 at the Pro-Cathedral, during the period of Lent where the preacher was a Jesuit. The cathedral was full. He was standing in the pulpit talking about the state of the country, I remember him saying – which scared me – “Here in this holy Catholic city of Dublin, these voile creatures of Communism are within our midst.” Immediately after the sermon everybody then began leaving singing and gathered in a crowd outside, we must have been a thousand singing “To Jesus Heart All Burning” and “Faith of our Fathers, Holy Faith”. We marched down towards Great Strand Street, to the headquarters of the socialist and anti-Fascist groups in Connolly House. I was inspired, of you could use that expression, by the message of the Jesuit. There was no attempt by the police to stop us”
This, and other insightful accounts, can be read on the fantastic ‘Ireland and the Spanish Civil War’ website located here.
Connolly House, the headquarters in Dublin of the Irish Revolutionary Workers Group was set on fire after an attack made on the building by several hundred young men. Twenty were injured in the disturbances.
Photo shows:- Police officers on guard in one of the rooms after the attacks. Note the tin of petrol left by the raisers.
Grif March 31st 1933 PN.
Two stamps on the back of the photograph point to News Media companies in both London and New York.
ACME, Newspictures, Inc.
220 East 42nd St. New York City
‘THIS PICTURE IS SOLD TO YOU FOR YOUR PUBLICATION ONLY AND MUST
NOT BE LOANED OR, SYNDICATED OR USED FOR ADVERTISING PURPOSES
WITHOUT WRITTEN PERMISSION FROM US.
COPYRIGHT
PLANET NEWS LTD.
3, JOHNSON’S COURT
LONDON, E.C 4
The Communist Party of Ireland site notes, in its biography to Charlotte Despard (an unlikely rebel, owing to her brother being none other than Lord Lieutenant of Ireland John French) that:
“On the 29th the mob attacked Charlotte Despard’s house at 63 Eccles Street, also home to the Irish Workers’ College and Friends of Soviet Russia, but a defence had been prepared in the form of a large crowd of workers, and it escaped with broken windows. Also attacked were the offices of the Workers’ Union of Ireland in Marlborough Street and the Irish Unemployed Workers’ Movement in North Great George’s Street.”
On a lighter note, notice the can of petrol left behind by the mob is ‘BP’, or British Petroleum. You couldn’t make it up.
This is a nice find Donal, I have some newspapers belonging to my Grandfather from the period worthy of a look too. There is a v.funny account of the getaway on the Ireland and the SCW site that mentions lads hiding out in an Italian chipper up the road.
From a Fire service point of view (I found the site via the Guinness Fire Brigade piece), the event is worthy of study as the fire brigade hoses were cut by the crowd to stop them tackling the fire, and the crowd were, by all accounts, a bit rowdy and hands on. I’d love to know if anyone in the fire service wrote about the event afterwards.
The two handguns belonged to IRA officer Charlie Gilmore (or rather he took them from an IRA dump) and he used them to fire on the crowd. Gilmore was arrested, and the IRA publicly announced that he was not acting under orders. Gilmore’s brother Harry, an IRA officer in south Dublin, then claimed that he had given Charlie authourisation to carry the weapons (their other brother George was on the Army Council). This was all played out in rival press statements. The whole affair was symptomatic of an growing divide in the IRA about political direction. It happened at around the same time as the Gralton affair in Leitrim, which also divided the IRA.
(There was a photograph of those Gardai in one of the national papers at the time, from a different angle).
[…] Green and glorifying General Franco, and when the Saint Patrick’s Anti-Communist League were smashing the windows of Connolly House, the name certainly leaps out from the archives of Irish […]
Is there a picture of the outside of this house or the inside. My Grand parents lived in the house next door. Just interest in what conditions people lived in back then..