• Thumbnail for Devoy Barracks
    Devoy Barracks (Irish: Dún Uí Dhubhuí) was a military installation in Naas, County Kildare in Ireland. The barracks, which were originally known as Naas...
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  • Thumbnail for Irish Army Apprentice School
    Apprentice School (Irish: Scoil Phrintisigh an Airm), was situated in Devoy Barracks, Naas, County Kildare. The school was established on 16 August 1956...
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  • Thumbnail for John Devoy
    John Devoy (Irish: Seán Ó Dubhuí, IPA: [ˈʃaːn̪ˠ oː ˈd̪ˠʊwiː]; 3 September 1842 – 29 September 1928) was an Irish republican rebel and journalist who owned...
    16 KB (1,920 words) - 15:59, 19 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Naas
    local administration including law courts, racecourses and the army's Devoy Barracks (closed 1998). In the Middle Ages, before it settled permanently in...
    43 KB (3,626 words) - 16:39, 23 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Kildare County Council
    the former Devoy Barracks site as its preferred location for new facilities. It moved to Áras Chill Dara on the site of the old barracks site in 2006...
    15 KB (459 words) - 23:19, 9 September 2024
  • were in poor condition, and the county council identified the former Devoy Barracks site, which had been vacated in 1998, as its preferred location for...
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  • Lucey secured a place in the first Army Apprentice School class at Devoy Barracks in 1956. After a three-year apprenticeship he became a fitter and a...
    6 KB (345 words) - 18:38, 17 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for William Mackey Lomasney
    possible rebellion with Devoy. However, as a wave of dynamite bombings occurred in Great Britain during early 1881, he and Devoy would correspond with each...
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  • Thumbnail for Fenian Rising
    backing from the people. In 1879, the leaders of the IRB, principally John Devoy, decided on a New Departure, eschewing, for the time, physical force in...
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  • warned Devoy that there would be "kickers" and he would have to have a heavy hand to control the Clan na Gael and succeed in the project. John Devoy devoted...
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  • Thumbnail for Tom Clarke (Irish republican)
    the Irish nationalist organisation Clan na Gael under its leader, John Devoy. In September 1903 Clarke helped Clan na Gael launch their own newspaper...
    28 KB (3,292 words) - 08:44, 28 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Éamonn Ceannt
    through to Dublin Castle, and so brought up more troops from Kilmainham Barracks. A ceasefire allowed casualty retrieval. The Volunteers drove back repeated...
    15 KB (1,766 words) - 08:48, 25 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Easter Rising
    law. Shortly after the outbreak of World War I, Roger Casement and John Devoy went to Germany and began negotiations with the German government and military...
    145 KB (16,412 words) - 23:44, 29 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Irish War of Independence
    ambushing RIC and British Army patrols, attacking their barracks and forcing isolated barracks to be abandoned. The British government bolstered the RIC...
    132 KB (16,022 words) - 22:35, 18 August 2024
  • DEATH, MOTHER OF HI FI VICTIM SAYS". Deseret News. Retrieved June 12, 2024. DeVoy, Beverly (August 23, 1989). "Hi Fi Tragedy Lives on for Victims' Family"...
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  • Thumbnail for Irish Republican Army (1919–1922)
    barracks. By the end of 1919, four Dublin Metropolitan Police and 11 RIC men had been killed. The RIC abandoned most of their smaller rural barracks in...
    37 KB (4,827 words) - 18:45, 9 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Fenian dynamite campaign
    into the 20th century. 1881 14 Jan 1881: A bomb exploded at a military barracks in Salford, Lancashire. A young boy was killed 16 Mar 1881: A bomb was...
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  • Thumbnail for Skiddy's Almshouse
    1606 – 1665 (Guildhall Library MS 15361, FCAA/61) John Crowley, Robert Devoy, Denis Linehan, Patrick O'Flanagan, Atlas of Cork city. Cork University...
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  • Thumbnail for Irish Citizen Army
    not by any measure socialists". The ICA was grossly under-funded. John Devoy, the prominent Irish-American member of IRB Fenians, believed the existence...
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  • included major Irish republicans and Irish-American nationalists like John Devoy, Joseph McGarrity, Roger Casement, Éamon de Valera, Father Peter Yorke and...
    116 KB (14,105 words) - 11:19, 25 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Kill, County Kildare
    818 people in the 2022 census. Kill is the birthplace of the Fenian John Devoy as well as home to two holders of the most senior ministry in the Irish...
    21 KB (2,443 words) - 10:29, 21 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for List of Irish state funerals
    2014). "Passing Of John Devoy (1928)". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved 19 May 2020.; "Lot 91: John Devoy Funeral Committee"....
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  • Thumbnail for Cork (city)
    Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 June 2011. Retrieved 12 August 2010. Devoy, R.J.N. (2008). Coastal vulnerability and the implications of sea-level...
    118 KB (10,419 words) - 15:44, 22 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Frank Robbins (trade unionist)
    John Devoy of Clan na Gael and Liam Mellows, who had also been involved in the Easter Rising and fled to America in the aftermath. Robbins and Devoy would...
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  • Thumbnail for Oliver Plunkett Street
    Kevin (2005). "Cork City in the Twentieth Century". In Crowley, John; Devoy, Robert; Linehan, Denis; O'Flanagan, Patrick (eds.). Atlas of Cork City...
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  • Thumbnail for Josephine Ryan
    of the week. After the Easter Rising, Ryan went to America to give John Devoy (the leader of the American based Irish republican organization Clan na...
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  • Thumbnail for John Daly (Fenian)
    Maud Gonne and in 1897 on a tour of American which was organised by John Devoy. He later founded a prosperous bakery business in Limerick, and went on...
    12 KB (1,363 words) - 10:28, 11 July 2023
  • Thumbnail for Joseph Plunkett
    Joseph Plunkett Tower in Ballymun which has since been demolished. Plunkett barracks in the Curragh Camp, County Kildare is also named after him. The Irish...
    14 KB (1,415 words) - 17:09, 14 April 2024
  • Burke Edward O'Meagher Condon John Daly Michael Davitt Timothy Deasy John Devoy Michael Doheny Thomas Clarke Luby John O'Mahony Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa...
    91 KB (11,413 words) - 15:38, 9 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Michael Collins (Irish leader)
    and taken into British custody. He was processed at Dublin's Richmond Barracks by "G-Men", plain-clothes officers from Dublin Metropolitan Police. During...
    124 KB (14,671 words) - 01:17, 7 September 2024