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Each week, we look back at what was 鈥渋n the news鈥 the same week 100 years ago 鈥 as reported in the Cork Examiner in 1916.
By Nicola Stathers
Monday, January 17, 1916
- FLOODS IN IRELAND, GREAT DAMAGE
Following the recent heavy weather, the great Irish rivers Shannon and Barrow have overflowed their banks and wrought great havoc in the Midlands, the inundations being the greatest within living memory. In the Athlone, Westmeath and Banagher (King鈥檚 County) districts, floods are periodical, resulting in great devastation. The people in the flooded areas are at present in a hopeless condition, their decks and other belongings having been destroyed. An effort was made some years ago to obtain Government assistance for drainage works but the scheme fell through. Roads have also been washed away and people are cut off from communication with adjacent towns except by boat.
- GAELIC ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION, Cork County Board Annual Convention
Satisfactory reports from the Annual Convention of the GAA Cork County Board, presented by honorary treasurer, Mr M O鈥橲ullivan: 鈥淚 may incidentally remark in passing that there is a very fine team of footballers at present in the county, and I would wish the incoming committee would take them in hands as they could see from their display against Kerry the material is there, if only developed鈥.Turning to the income side, our gate receipts have increased as against 1914 by 拢80, but our affiliation and championship fees are reduced by 拢13, a fact to be regretted. The principal falling off in this respect is North and West Cork, and I think it advisable to send a man during the early part of this year to organise those divisions.鈥
- TIPPERARY NAVAL MAN鈥橲 DROWNING
Body Found (From Our correspondent) Tipperary, Sunday Mr Michael Falvey, weighmaster, Tipperary, whose son, Daniel, who joined the Royal Navy in September last, and who fell overboard the torpedo鈥 boat destroyer 鈥淭ipperary,鈥 and was drowned at Devonport some days after Christmas, has received a telegram from the naval authorities that the body had been found. The remains will be sent to Tipperary, where they will be interred in the New Cemetery.
Wednesday, January 19, 1916
- NEW ADDITIONS AT THE CARNEGIE FREE LIBRARY
New additions in the Lending Library: 鈥 Belloc, General Sketch of the European War 鈥 Balfour, Theism and Humanism 鈥 Rosenberg, Electrical Engineering 鈥 Bayley, Complete Photographer 鈥 Sommerville and Ross, In Mr. Knox鈥檚 Country 鈥 Wylie, Temple of Dawn. Reference Library: 鈥 Madden, History of Irish Periodical Literature, 2 volumes 鈥 Catholic Record Society鈥檚 vol. 17 鈥 Co-operative Wholesale Society鈥檚 Annual 1916.
The Carnegie Library was destroyed in the Burning of Cork, December 11, 1920鈥
Not in the 深夜亚洲福利久久
Many of the main players in the 1916 Rising featured regularly in newspapers of the time, but most of the activities relating to the Rising did not feature in the news and are only now known from information held in archives.
Compiled by Nial Murray, the Irish Examiner

Officers of the Irish Volunteers Cork Brigade with Se谩n MacDermott and Herbert Moore Pim on the day of the Manchester Martyrs鈥 commemoration/parade, November 28, 1915, at the Volunteer Hall, Sheares St, Cork. Front (seated): Se谩n Murphy (Brigade quartermaster), Tom谩s MacCurtain (Brigade commandant), Se谩n MacDiarmada, Herbert Moore Pim, Se谩n O鈥橲ullivan (city battalion commandant), Se谩n 脫 Muirthile. Centre: Tom O鈥橲ullivan and Diarmuid O鈥橲hea (with rifles), Tom Barry, Pat Corkery, Donal Barrett (captain City Volunteers B company), Donal 脫g O鈥機allaghan (suceeded Terence MacSwiney as Cork鈥檚 Lord Mayor), Tadhg Barry, Diarmuid Lynch, Con Twomey (one of two men with rifles on right) Back: Dick Murphy, Se谩n Nolan, Daith铆 Cotter, Se谩n Scanlan (captain City Volunteers A company), Fred Murray. [Picture: Cork Public Museum]
Monday, January 17, 1916
- Dublin Metropolitan Police (DMP) saw Se谩n McGarry, Charles Kickham, John Milroy and Michael O鈥橦anrahan, among others, visit the shop of Tom Clarke 鈥 Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB) Military Council member -at 75 Parnell Street.
- 脡amon de Valera, Michael O鈥橦anrahan, Tom谩s MacDonagh, and JJ O鈥機onnell met at Volunteer Office, according to the same police report.
- A meeting in Dublin鈥檚 Mansion house chaired by Eoin MacNeill was attended by many leading members of the Irish Volunteers, Sinn F茅in, and other nationalists. Under the auspices of the Gaelic League, it was held to protest against withdrawal of grants for education in Ireland.
Tuesday, January 18 1916
- At Irish Volunteers head office in Daswon St, police report a meeting took place of founder Bulmer Hobson, Eimar O鈥橠uffy, Michael O鈥橦anrahan (later executed after the Rising), Herbert Mellows from Galway and Tom谩s MacDonagh (a later member of the IRB Military Council that planned the Rising, and executed on May 3, 1916.)
- A Cuman na mBan concert in the Mansion House was an opportunity to meet for P谩draig Pearse, Eamonn Ceannt, Con Colbert, MacDonagh, and Joseph Plunkett, all executed within four months.
- Tom Clarke鈥檚 shop visited by Con Colbert, Joseph McGuinness, Herbert Mellows, Thomas McCarthy, and Ben Parsons.
Wednesday, January 19, 1916
- Alfred Cotton was among those who attended Volunteers headquarters in Dublin. He was second-in-command to Austin Stack, commandant of the Irish Volunteers Brigade in Kerry. As senior IRB figures in Kerry, they knew from Pearse of plans for a rising at Easter. Central to plans was the proposed landing of German guns at Fenit in Tralee Bay, Easter weekend at the end of April.
- James Connolly 鈥榙isappeared鈥 for several days, being taken to a house in Dolphin鈥檚 Barn where Pearse, Se谩n MacDiarmada and Plunkett convinced him to hold off his plans to instigate a rising with his Irish Citzen Army. He was brought into the loop about their own IRB plot, and the style of rebellion was also discussed. Connolly favoured an urban rising, having weeks earlier described in a lecture in Cork how to tunnel between the walls of terraced city houses.
Thursday, January 20, 1916
- Those visiting Irish Volunteers headquarters at 2 Dawson St in Dublin included Herbert Mellows, Michael O鈥橦anrahan, Tom谩s MacDonagh, and JJ O鈥機onnell.
Friday, January 21, 1916
- O鈥橦anrahan, MacDonagh, and MacDiarmada, Piaras B茅asla铆, and Thomas Hunter all attended meetings in Volunteers head office. (While the first three would be executed in May, B茅asla铆 and Hunter would become members of the first D谩il in 1919. B茅asla铆 was TD for East Kerry and Hunter for North East Cork. Before their election in December 1918, another attendee at this meeting, 脡amon de Valera had already won an East Clare by-election for Sinn F茅in in July 1917.)
- Visits to Thomas J Clarke at 75 Parnell Street by Pierce Beasley [Piaras B茅asla铆], John McDermott [Se谩n MacDiarmada], John O鈥橫ahony, [John] R Reynolds, John [S茅an] McGarry, Michael O鈥橦anrahan and FJ [Frank] McCabe, P谩draig Pearse, Se谩n MacDiarmada and WT Cosgrave (future president of the executive council of the Irish Free State), all seen by police in 41 Parnell Square, an address commonly used by both the IRB and the Irish Volunteers.
Sunday, January 22, 1916
- Officers training camp began at Volunteers鈥 Hall, Sheares St, Cork, instructed by JJ O鈥機onnell.
- The course was to cover 鈥榝ield work, elementary drill, physical drill, and lectures鈥, according to the notice placed in the Irish Volunteer newspaper.
- Most of the companies in the county 鈥 mainly formed in the previous six months thanks to organisers like Terence MacSwiney, Se谩n Nolan and Daith铆 Barry 鈥 were represented.
- Diarmuid Lynch from near Kinsale, Co Cork was among those who visited Tom Clarke鈥檚 Dublin shop, as were Con Colbert and Ned Daly, two of those who would be executed in May. (A key member of the IRB Supreme Council, Lynch had helped identify a suitable landing place in Kerry for German guns at Pearse鈥檚 behest the previous year.)
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