The Battle for Cork: July-August 1922
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About this ebook
John Borgonovo
John Borgonovo is an historian and is currently a lecturer in University College Cork. The author of Spies, Informers, and the Anti-Sinn Fein Society: The Intelligence War in Cork City, 1920-1921, he has written extensively on the Irish revolution in Cork city.
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The Battle for Cork - John Borgonovo
THE BATTLE
FOR CORK
JULY–AUGUST 1922
JOHN BORGONOVO
SERIES EDITOR: GABRIEL DOHERTY
missing image fileMERCIER PRESS
3B Oak House, Bessboro Rd
Blackrock, Cork, Ireland.
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© John Borgonovo, 2011
ISBN: 978 1 85635 696 1
Epub ISBN: 978 1 85635 977 1
Mobi ISBN: 978 1 85635 971 9
This eBook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This book was written with the assistance of a number of people. Thanks to Pat Gunn, who passed on a copy of his fascinating interview with his father George, an IRA veteran. Gerry White and Colman O’Mahony provided personal insights into their published work on these events, for which I am grateful. I would also like to thank Dr Donal Ó Drisceoil of the University College Cork (UCC) School of History for assistance with illustrations; Michael Murphy of the UCC Geography Department for generous map production; Cork Fire Brigade historian Pat Poland; Cork historian Antoin O’Callaghan; series editor Gabriel Doherty of the UCC School of History; and the staff at Mercier Press.
Kieran Burke and the staff at the Local Studies Department, Cork City Library, provided critical help. I would also like to acknowledge Commandant Victor Lange at the Military Archives, Dublin; the staff at the University College Dublin Archives; and Brian McGee and the team at the Cork City and County Archives. Thanks are also due to the Port of Cork for offering prompt access to its strongroom.
The National Archives of Ireland graciously granted permission to use the Hogan/Wilson photographs, which serve as an excellent documentary source for these events. Thanks to Sarah Buckley for offering her father’s photographs for publication. I am also grateful to Tony McCarthy, who provided a photograph of ‘Scottie’ McKenzie Kennedy, and a copy of the Timothy Kennefick Coroner’s Inquest, planting seeds that blossomed in this work.
Many thanks to Ronan Kirby and Denis Kirby, who offered welcome local knowledge of Douglas/Rochestown, as well as a fruitful driving tour. I am also grateful to John Dennehy of Cobh for his expert knowledge of the port, and to Martin Buckley, formerly of the Irish Navy, for further harbour advice.
Historian Tom Mahon of Hawaii earns special kudos for graciously copying Captain Somerville’s reports to the British Admiralty, which can be found in Kew National Archives. I am looking forward to Tom’s upcoming book on the Upnor raid.
LANGUAGE AND SOURCES
This book sets out to examine events in the city of Cork during July and August 1922, in the conventional phase of the Irish Civil War. Its structure and style are intended to appeal to a wide readership; it is not meant to offer the last word on Cork in the Civil War, or on the National Army’s amphibious offensive during August 1922. The Battle for Cork seeks to answer the question: How did a city so closely identified with militant Irish Republicanism from 1917 to 1921 pass so easily into the hands of the Irish Free State? Events are viewed deliberately from a Cork perspective.
My use of language deserves a brief mention. I call members of the anti-Treaty military force IRA Volunteers, and/or Republicans. Anti-Treaty Republicans enjoyed direct continuity with the Irish Volunteer organisation founded in 1913; that organisation became popularly known as the Irish Republican Army (IRA) in 1919, after it pledged allegiance to Dáil Éireann and placed itself under the control of the Dáil minister for defence. Between 1919 and 1921, the Volunteer (or IRA) organisation was led by its General Headquarters Staff (which included Richard Mulcahy and Michael Collins), elected originally by a Volunteer convention in 1917. No Volunteer convention met between 1918 and 1921, and overall control of the IRA/Volunteer organisation remained a contested and nebulous issue. After the ratification of the Anglo-Irish Treaty in 1922, a National Army was formed from pro-Treaty IRA units and other recruits who pledged allegiance to the Irish Free State. This set the stage for the IRA convention of March 1922, where Irish Volunteer organisation delegates voted to elect a new governing executive and to withdraw their allegiance to Dáil Éireann. Members of this organisation retained the title of Volunteer, and promised to defend the Irish Republic that had been declared in 1916. When describing these people or their IRA organisation, I deliberately avoid terms such as Executive Forces, Irregulars, anti-Treaty IRA or Mutineers.
Correspondingly, I describe their military opponents as the Free State Army, National Army, National troops or National soldiers. These combatants were full-time soldiers, paid by the Provisional Government of the Irish Free State, which was a non-Republican dominion of the British crown. Since the Irish Free State was not a republic, I do not refer to its officials or supporters as Republicans. I understand the implications and limitations of terms such as invade, attack, assault, defend and liberate.
Some confusion may arise as a result of Cork’s status as both a city and a county. For the purposes of this book, Cork is used to mean the city of Cork; when the county is intended, I use County Cork.
The Battle for Cork relies on three prominent histories of the Irish Civil War. More than twenty years after its publication, Michael Hopkinson’s Green Against Green: the Irish Civil War remains the authoritative work on the subject. Hopkinson builds on the work of two earlier Civil War historians, Calton Younger and Eoin Neeson. While preparing Ireland’s Civil War, Younger conducted extensive interviews with Free State Army leaders, most notably General Emmet Dalton and Commandant Frank O’Friel. For The Civil War in Ireland, Cork native Eoin Neeson met surviving Civil War IRA officers in the city, many of whom knew Neeson’s parents from joint service in the Republican movement. From the different conversations of Younger and Neeson, a discernible narrative emerges that encompasses both sides of the firing line.
I also drew on Gerry White and Dan Harvey’s valuable The Barracks: A History of Victoria/Collins Barracks, Cork. Another Cork authority, Colman O’Mahony, provided excellent material from his book, The Maritime Gateway to Cork: A History of the Outports of Passage West and Monkstown, 1754–1942. In the course of his research, O’Mahony interviewed a surviving member of the IRA garrison at Passage West, who provided insights regarding the landing of National troops there. Finally, I would be remiss if I did not acknowledge Anne Dolan and Cormac O’Malley’s ‘No Surrender Here!’: The Civil War Papers of Ernie O’Malley. This exhaustive and well-organised work serves as an essential reference source for IRA communications in 1922.
Readers will note the frequent mentions of Dr James Lynch’s first-hand account, ‘The Battle of Douglas’. As verified by the 1911 Census, Dr Lynch lived in the area of Douglas/Rochestown that saw the most severe fighting of the battle. His participation as a National Army medical officer was noted in The Cork Examiner, and many of the details in his narrative match different newspaper accounts. Lynch provides the best eyewitness testimony of the battle. Newspapers also provided information about the engagement, with The Cork Examiner offering first-hand accounts from its reporters on the scene. The Irish Independent printed another eyewitness report from a journalist in the city during the three critical days. Correspondents from The Freeman’s Journal and The Irish Times accompanied the invading National Army forces. Photographer W. D. Hogan also travelled with the Free State assault troops, and his pictures frequently verify newspaper details.
FOREWORD
‘How did a city so closely identified with militant Irish republicanism from 1917 to 1921 so easily pass into the hands of the Irish Free State?’
This is the central question posed by the author John Borgonovo in his introduction to this, the latest volume in Mercier Press’ Military History of the Irish Civil War series. It is a deceptively simple question, to which, as will become apparent, there is no single, or simple, answer. Social stratification certainly played a part, with religion, social class, gender and age all playing their respective roles, as did a variety of human qualities: bravado, courage, fear and, not least, luck.
There were, however, two over-arching and interrelated factors that together effectively determined the outcome. The first was that elusive quality of generalship – the effective direction of forces in combat. The second was that this engagement was indeed a battle – small in scale admittedly, but recognisably an instance of conventional warfare in an area of the country with greater recent experience of, and topographically suited to, guerrilla tactics. The author makes a very convincing case that in this confrontation the driving force behind the Free State attack on the city, Emmet Dalton, handled the resources at his disposal far more competently than did his opposite number Mick Leahy, who, in theory, had the easier task of organising a defence. That defence was not helped, of course, by the utterly inadequate number of men and amount of material under Leahy’s control – but this is where the second key issue comes into play, for to hold ground and engage in a set-piece firefight under such circumstances was, with the benefit of hindsight, decidedly unwise.
It is important to bear in mind that while the city of Cork itself fell with scarcely a shot being fired in anger, and with most of the city’s buildings, industry and infrastructure intact, the precipitate flight of Republicans to the west of the county followed a battle that, in scale, exceeded the famous victories registered in the county during the Anglo-Irish War, such as Kilmichael and Crossbarry. The fight for Rochestown/Douglas was fought over three days, with dozens of dead and wounded – yet knowledge (or at least discussion) of this is today scarce, even in the locality itself. This is all the more noteworthy given that battle was joined following not just one of the most daring manoeuvres of the entire war, but one of the most difficult of all military actions – the amphibious assault of Free State forces on the IRA-held port facilities in Passage West. Even if the scale was vastly different, the then recent debacle at Gallipoli had shown just how fraught with danger such an opposed landing could be. In skilfully planning and successfully executing this operation, as well as in their conduct during the subsequent engagement on the road into the city, Dalton and his troops more than earned the sycophantic adulation (amongst other forms of attention) showered on them following their ensuing triumphant entry into the city proper.
In conclusion one must remember, of course, that the fall of the city was by no means the end of the fight in County Cork, and the book’s coda – the death of Michael Collins at Béal na mBláth in west Cork on 22 August – in many respects signals the start of the second, longer-lasting and more vicious phase of the Civil War in the country as a whole, which was marked by a return to unconventional warfare by Republicans in their Munster fastnesses. In this respect there is a striking symmetry in the local arcs of hostilities in the months and years following the 1916 Rising and the outbreak of the Civil War in 1922. On both occasions Republicans in the city, led initially by MacCurtain and MacSwiney and subsequently by Leahy, for sound military reasons, either refused or felt themselves unable to give conventional battle. In both cases this apparently defeatist passivity was followed by an intense period of guerrilla warfare, albeit one that lasted for a shorter time and was attended with much less success during the latter period. Perhaps – and this can only be a supposition, for we are dealing here with psychological factors not easily verified by the standards of conventional historical investigation – it might be posited that the shameful memory of the one was one of the many causes of the other?
Gabriel Doherty
Department of History
University College Cork
missing image fileINTRODUCTION
Following Dáil Éireann’s approval of the Anglo-Irish Treaty on 7 January 1922, the fear of civil war grew throughout Ireland. The Irish Republican Army (IRA) gradually split into pro- and anti-Treaty factions, as its powerful provincial commanders demanded the right to sanction the settlement. After weeks of delays, the Dáil Éireann cabinet (ruling in tandem with the Free State Provisional Government) approved an IRA convention in Dublin, but fearing a coup d’état, the Minister for Defence, Richard Mulcahy, promptly reversed his decision, banned the