Added by Joe Gannon on March 23, 2024 at 4:14pm — No Comments
Volunteer Michael Kenny pulled up the collar of his mackintosh, tightened his scarf, and pulled down his cap against the cold breeze as he stood beside the Old Youghal Road near Dillon’s Cross in Cork City. As the clock neared…
ContinueAdded by Joe Gannon on December 10, 2022 at 10:00pm — 3 Comments
Dick Willis walked up to the Sheehan's farmhouse in Mourneabbey, County Cork, on the pleasant late summer afternoon of Sunday, September 26, 1920. Dick, a member of the Mallow Company of the Cork No. 2 (North) Brigade, could see numerous brigade members from the newly formed brigade…
ContinueAdded by Joe Gannon on September 25, 2022 at 6:00pm — 2 Comments
Slowly marching back and forth through the still night air in Ballneety, Co. Limerick, the Williamite sentry standing guard over King Williams siege train blinked and rubbed his sleepy eyes, hoping his relief would be there soon. King William’s army had Limerick under siege, and the eight heavy…
ContinueAdded by Joe Gannon on August 5, 2021 at 12:30pm — 1 Comment
DOMHNAIGH -- On May 5, 1981, Bobby Sands (right) died on hunger strike at Long Kesh prison. He had begun the strike on March 1, in…
ContinueAdded by Joe Gannon on May 4, 2019 at 7:00pm — No Comments
As the brilliant rays of the morning sun began to flash off the whitewashed adobe wall in Santiago, Cuba, 30-year-old William Albert Charles Ryan reflected that it would be yet another beautiful day on the tropical island he had come to love. He could hear the sweet songs of a few…
ContinueAdded by Joe Gannon on February 14, 2019 at 6:30pm — 5 Comments
Seán Moylan slowly moved his binoculars back and forth pointed to the west as he scanned the east Kerry countryside in the direction of Scartaglen. He was standing on some high ground in Thade Daly’s Glen in Tureengarriffe, along what is now the R-577 road. Moylan, commanding the Flying…
ContinueAdded by Joe Gannon on January 1, 2019 at 2:30pm — 5 Comments
In November of 1846, as the war between Mexico and the United States raged, an unusual unit of the Mexican army was formed by General Santa Anna, it was called the San Patricios or St. Patrick's Company. Commanded by John Riley, a deserter from Company K of the 5th U.S. Infantry, who probably gave it the name, it…
ContinueAdded by Joe Gannon on May 16, 2018 at 3:30pm — 2 Comments
As John Paul Jones, captain of the Bonhomme Richard, prepared to face two British ships off Flamborough Head on the coast of England on September 23, 1779, he had some very interesting allies on board his…
ContinueAdded by Joe Gannon on April 8, 2017 at 2:30pm — 2 Comments
DEARDAOIN - January 22, 1760, at Wandewash, India, General Thomas Arthur Comte de Lally's French army, including his regiment of the Irish Brigade, was defeated by…
ContinueAdded by Joe Gannon on January 21, 2017 at 10:00am — No Comments
Richard Hetherington O'Kane (below-right, in his Annapolis graduation photo) was born on February 2, 1911 in Dover, New Hampshire, a town near the Atlantic coast with a population of about 13,000 at the time. His father, Dr. Walter Collins O'Kane, was a professor of entomology at the University. Richard attended…
ContinueAdded by Joe Gannon on October 11, 2016 at 8:30pm — 2 Comments
Unlike most other Irish and Irish-Americans who fought in the American Civil War, Philip Kearny was born into a prominent and affluent family in New York City on June 1, 1815. The Kearny name, quite appropriately, came from the Gaelic "O Catharnaigh," derived from the word "cearnach," meaning "warlike" or “victorious.”…
ContinueAdded by Joe Gannon on August 11, 2016 at 7:00am — 2 Comments
(Above: Lt. Bourke saving bugler Elmer Snow in "Battle of the Rosebud" by Andy Thomas)
On June 17th, on the…
ContinueAdded by Joe Gannon on January 16, 2016 at 2:00pm — 6 Comments
Not many people in the United States or the world today know who Irish-American John Gregory Bourke was, and that is unfortunate. Few historical figures have ever had his rare combination of heroism in a major war; chronicling and participating in two decades of conflict with a fierce indigenous foe;…
ContinueAdded by Joe Gannon on January 15, 2016 at 9:30pm — 5 Comments
Where dear Sandusky’s waters glide
From storied falls, through meadows wide,
By verdant hills on either side
To seek Lake Eiries’s famous tide:
On proud Fort Stephenson
--- From the poem “Fort Stephenson,”
by Captain Andrew…
Added by Joe Gannon on November 21, 2015 at 2:00pm — 4 Comments
(Above: The Irish Brigade who fought alongside the Boers against the British army in the Anglo-Boer War. Col. John Blake is sitting in the front row 2nd to the left of the concertina player.
In far-off Africa to-day the English fly dismayed…
ContinueAdded by Joe Gannon on December 31, 2014 at 8:00pm — 7 Comments
Reading the blog post by Neil Cosgrove about LCpl Patrick Gallagher , "Courage Worthy of the Foremost Recognition," and this being the day in the US where we honor those who died defending our nation, gave me pause to consider something that…
ContinueAdded by Joe Gannon on May 26, 2014 at 11:30pm — 5 Comments
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