DUBLIN 1916: THE SIEGE OF THE GPO
CLAIR WILLS
HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 2009
HARDCOVER, $23.95, 260 PAGES, MAPS, PHOTOGRAPHS, CHRONOLOGY
The Easter Uprising of 1916 was an insurrection staged in Ireland during Easter Week, 1916. The Rising was mounted by Irish Republicans with the aims of ending British rule in Ireland and establishing the Irish Republic. It was the most significant uprising in Ireland since the Rebellion of 1798. Organized by the Military Council of the Irish Republican Brotherhood, the Rising lasted from Easter Monday 24 April 1916 to 30 April 1916. Members of the Irish Volunteers, led by schoolteacher and barrister Patrick Pearse, joined by the smaller Irish Citizen Army of James Connolly, along with 200 members of Cumann na mBan (women's auxiliary to the Irish Volunteers), seized key locations in Dublin and proclaimed the Irish Republic independent of Britain. There were some actions in other parts of Ireland but, except for the attack on the Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC)Barracks at Ashbourne, County Meath, they were minor. The defense of Rebel-held Dublin depended on a crescent line of strong-points with the GPO on O'Connell Street as its headquarters. The signal for the commencement of the Uprising was supposed to have been quite spectacular. The Magazine Fort, a large store of explosives owned the British Army in the Phoenix Park, was to have been blown up by a small party under the command of Gary Holohan. They broke in but failed to gain access to the main store (as the key was missing) and attempted to blow it up. It failed to explode the whole store. A party of the Irish Citizen Army under the command of Captain Sean Connolly at noon proceeded to Dublin Castle with orders to attack the castle. A policeman appeared and was shot. They failed to capture the castle (it turned out they could easily have done so as it was under-manned) and withdrew to City Hall. The GPO was captured without much grief around the same time and the proclamation of the Irish Republic was read out by Padraig Pearse, President of the Provisional Government. To the British forces in Dublin, the Uprising came as quite a shock. They were confident that with only a limited supply of arms the Rebels wouldn't rise, and on Easter Monday most were away enjoying a day out at the races. Rumors abounded throughout the city of a German landing, and a mass rising in the rest of Ireland. However, these rumors were all nearly untrue. The question was now: How long could they hold out? By Monday evening, British reinforcements were pouring in from all over Ireland and preparations were being made in England for sending many more over. General Lowe took charge of the British and martial law was declared. Dublin was surrounded quickly and by Thursday, 12,000 British troops had arrived. The Rebels hadn't one machine gun. All they could do now was to sit and wait for the attack and it did come. On Wednesday, the bloodiest battle of the whole week was in progress with the British using tactics from the trenches to try and get through. After eight hours of charges, the British had lost 230 killed and wounded. By Thursday, the British had over 12,000 soldiers in Dublin. A cordon had been established to isolate the Rebel positions. The British began to edge closer in on the Rebels so that by Friday, the GPO had to be evacuated because the roof and much of the building was burning as a result of the artillery bombardment. Much of O'Connell Street was also burning by now and the street was a death trap to any Rebel that ventured out because of the machine gun rounds filling it. The end was in sight for the Rebels. At noon on Saturday, 29 April 1916, it was decided that to avoid further civilian deaths, they must surrender. At 3:30 PM, Pearse handed General Lowe his sword and wrote the surrender order. Author Clair Willis takes us inside the GPO during that momentous week. One can almost feel the hunger of the Rebels marooned on the great roof or the acrid smell of burning beams and plasterwork. Shells crash into the great building; men scurry to escape the fires enveloping the building; exhausted, the Rebels surrender. The civilian deaths are soon forgotten as the national consciousness focuses on the "martyrdom" of the fifteen executed Rebel leaders of the Uprising. This rich and rewarding book recounts the dramatic events of Easter Week but she also tracks the obsession with Dublin's iconic GPO through literature, film and art, exploring the twists and turns that the myth of the GPO has undergone in the last century. It has stood for sacrifice and treachery, national unity, and divisive violence, for the future and the past.
Lt. Colonel Robert A. Lynn, Florida Guard
Orlando, Florida