Dungarvan’s George Gerard Lennon (1900-1991), of O’Connell Street, Western Terrace (circa 1915) and Mitchell Terrace (1936), had a noteworthy revolutionary career.

Lennon's tenure encompassed some 17 engagements against enemy forces in Waterford, Limerick and Cork: a 14 year old “adjutant” in the newly formed Dungarvan Volunteers; as a Fianna he won a national essay contest (on Sarsfield at Ballyneety) and, with Barney Dalton, the developer of a successful early 20th Century I.E.D.; teenage member of the minority “physical force” Irish Republican Brotherhood (I.R.B.); Easter Week 1916 he and Pax Whelan stopped a goods train in a futile search for arms; the January 1918 theft, again with Pax Whelan, of a soldier’s rifle which led to incarceration at Ballybricken Prison; per the IRISH TIMES, he was met, upon being bailed, by 400 Volunteers at the Dungarvan train station; this was followed by a short speech at the Town Hall on St. Augustine Street; a poem written in his honour by “the poet of the Comeraghs;” “on the run” as an 18-year-old for nearly a year; after capture and sentencing, an eventful send off to Cork at the Lismore train station; likely suffering from “Spanish Influenza,” after solitary confinement in Cork Male Gaol (where he turned age 19), he was prematurely released; an early exponent of guerrilla warfare; under Liam Lynch, he and Mick Mansfield participated in the first attack (Fermoy) since Easter Week 1916 on British military forces; seconded to the first ASUs formed in East and West Limerick, he assisted in the summer 1920 formation of the famed North Cork Flying Column (“Men of the South” as portrayed by Sean Keating RHA); vice commanding officer of the West Waterford Brigade; the youngest (with Belfast’s Roger McCorley) commanding officer of a Flying Column; a prototype “mud bomb” developed with Pat Keating of Comeragh; some eight narrow escapes from enemy forces; serving, post-July 1921 Truce, as a paid County Waterford I.R.A. liaison officer and, under Pax Whelan in March 1922, he led his men into Waterford City -- for the first time in some 750 years part of “a nation once again.”

It has only been of late that he has acquired a measure of recognition arguably denied him during the 20th century. To wit: numerous exhibitions/presentations in New York state and the Deise; the family history, "Lennons in Time," Terence O’Reilly’s "Rebel Heart: George Lennon, Flying Column Commander," Tommy Mooney’s "Cry of the Curlew," Muiris O’Keeffe’s play, "Days of Our Youth," Cormac Morel’s Nemeton documentary "From War to Peace: The Life of George Lennon," Eamon Cowan’s "Siege of Waterford" and Dr. Pat McCarthy’s "Waterford."

Accounting for his initially forgotten role in Ireland involves unproductive conjecture. More relevant is an investigation into how positions he took were shaped by his family’s history, the revolutionary events of 1913-1923 and the ensuing Irish theocracy.

Unlike many of his na Fianna Eireann, I.R.B. and Oglaigh na hEireann comrades, George was born into an upper bourgeoisie family (Lennon/Crolly/Shanahan/Power/Walsh ) in Dungarvan. He was cosseted from the rougher “corner boy” element by his mother “Nellie” Shanahan Lennon and private tutor(s). A voracious reader, raised on tales of the Red Branch Knights and Sarsfield he was an award-winning Fianna boy whose “patriotism arose with … puberty.”

There were a few family ancestors of a military caste – most notably at the Boyne; more numerous, however,  were antecedents of a priestly and intellectual hue. O Leannains and O Luinins served as erenaghs at monasteries along the Erne in County Fermanagh. Others served as writers and historians at Maynooth (George Crolly) and to the Maguires.

An apotheosis of sorts was reached with a partially Unitarian educated great-uncle, Roman Catholic Archbishop Primate of Ireland Dr. William Crolly, who supported, to a degree, nearly 200 years ago, nondenominational education. During An Gorta Mor, he attributed the 1847 assassination of Anglo-Irish landlord Denis Mahon to the “harshness of the owners of the soil and … their evicted tenants.” Crolly’s liberal views did not sit well with Rome, who denied him a cardinal’s cap. The Church, upon Crolly’s 1849 death (cholera), took a different direction with his conservative successor, Cardinal Paul Cullen.

George exhibited a measure of skepticism regarding some members of the clergy, most notably the hierarchy. This no doubt traced to his widowed mother who, faced with priestly excoriation of her rebel son from the pulpit of the Lennon’s parish church, chose to walk out of Sunday Mass in early 1921. Noting the Church as better than its parish priests, she continued her weekly devotions at the nearby Friary Church.

In 1924 her remains were conveyed to the family plot.

Regretfully, unknown to the emigrated Lennon / Shanahan families, the St. Mary’s gravesite was sold some 60 years later.

George’s patriotism reflected, in part, that of Pearse, MacSwiney, Lynch, O’Malley, and de Valera, one that rejected the perceived materialism found on the “mainland.”

His observation regarding I.R.A. Chief of Staff Liam Lynch might very well have described George himself: well suited to be the “superior of a … religious order.”

His Republican idealism, however, suffered grievous blows in 1921 and 1922. Moving through West Waterford with a mobile and effective force of some 40 trained guerrillas, he was faced with what he regarded as the “grave error” of the “premature” 11 July truce of 1921.  Lacking civic training (having left school at age 15 during Easter Week 1916) he became the 21-year-old “effective military governor” of a less-than-receptive Redmondite Waterford City in March 1922.

The ensuing “unmentionable” (his word) civil war saw him taking up arms against former comrades. With the first and last shots fired from his Ballybricken Prison redoubt, he was forced to retreat westward to Mount Congreve demesne where, over a period of three days and nights, they “drank … out completely” the “well-stocked wine cellar.” Feeling “disgusted” he resigned as vice commanding officer effective 1 August 1922, noting “we were not going to live off the good country people again.”

“Sleeping rough” with confinement in unheated jails led to a relatively mild bout of consumption (TB). Experiences from 1918 to 1922 resulted in “neurasthenia” / anxiety (PTSD) compounded by a manageable alcoholism; he eventually emigrated in early 1927. This made possible by the sale of the Lennon / Shanahan interest in the Town Park at the Lookout.

With former Sinn Fein organizer and Northern poet Joseph Campbell (“My Lagan Love”), he published in New York City a short-lived and before-its-time (1934) “magazine of Irish expression,” The Irish Review. Friendships maintained in the States included former Free State military foes General Prout and East Waterford Brigade O/C Paddy Paul.

A work-related breakdown in the States and a newly granted Military Service Pension led him to return to Ireland in August 1936. In Dublin, he became a leading member of Liam Deasy’s Old I.R.A. Men’s Organisation, which included members from both sides of the 1922-1923 divide.

Recognizing the Fascist threat, he criticized, in a letter to The Irish Times, the Roman Catholic Church for supporting Spanish dictator Franco. He noted that the Church "serve(s) God and mammon.”

Una Troy Walsh (sister-in-law of painter Sean Keating) fictionalized his return in a largely forgotten 1938 novel "Dead Star's Light." She echoed George’s position that the Church was “the best run and most powerful business institution in the country.” Few indeed were those who dared speak out about the depredations of the Church and its support of Franco.

The Walshes, Una, Joe, and daughter Janet (Helleris) were expunged from the roles in their Clonmel church after a letter from their parish priest observed that Una “had endangered her immortal soul” for espousing allegedly communist views.

George’s employment prospects were further clouded by lack of a modicum of Irish (in all likelihood he was privately tutored at home with only 6 months in Abbeyside National School in 1915-1916) and a 1939  Dun Laoghaire “mixed” Presbyterian marriage, conceivably in violation of the Ne Temere decree.

Friendships flourished with those in the largely leftist political, artistic and intellectual community. Most noteworthy were relationships with the U.S.A. “Minister to Ireland” David Gray, An Phoblacht deputy editor, and brother-in-law Geoffrey Coulter, painters Charles Lamb, Harry Kernoff and Sean Keating RHA (Rathfarnham neighbor and father of “humanist” Justin).

There was a “productive” Dublin lunch during the “Emergency” with alleged English spy and poet laureate to be John Betjeman. A reported I.R.A. “to kill” order was rescinded.

With the assistance of sympathetic Republican colleagues, he secured a responsible position with the Irish Tourist Association (or Board, later known as Bord Failte), guiding the publication of the hailed ITA Topographical Survey. He formulated what were to be largely ignored plans for developing the nascent tourism industry. Due to wartime exigencies he, along with others, was made redundant but then quickly secured a temporary position as secretary to the National Planning Conference. Plans for post-World War II economic development in Ireland were not well received by Taoiseach de Valera and government minister Sean MacEntee, for whom George's wife May Sibbald had, in the 1930s, served as secretary.  

“Disillusioned” and unemployed from the summer of 1944, he re-emigrated in February 1946 on a very expensive flight out of the newly opened Shannon Aeroport, transatlantic service having commenced some three months earlier. He noted, “it was midwinter, but I could not help feeling jubilant.”

Less exultant was his Kingstown-born spouse who was relatively isolated, with a rambunctious 2-year-old, near the Dublin Mountains in Rathfarnham during the ‘Big Freeze” of early 1947. Female spousal employment not being an option in the Irish theocracy of de Valera and Archbishop McQuaid. May and son Ivan relied upon George’s Military Service (1935) and Disability Pension (1944). They lived, post-Freeze, in the basement flat of May’s mother and sister at 8 Tivoli Terrace South, Dun Laoghaire.

In May 1947, an Abbey Theatre play ("The Dark Road," based upon Troy’s "Dead Star's Light") described the Lennon protagonist (“John Davern”) as “a communist, an anticleric, an agitator, a gunman.” Some five months later, mother and 4-year-old son reluctantly left Dun Laoghaire via the mailboat and, departing Southampton, joined George in New York City. He later noted his wife as “never having left Ireland, save in the physical sense.” She lies buried in Rochester’s historic Mount Hope Cemetery.

In Rochester, he involved himself in a personal religious quest encompassing, at various times, the Quakers, Unitarians and the writings of Ouspenski, Gurdjieff, the Berrigans and Martin Buber. With “Xerography” inventor Chet Carlson he became a founding member of one of the earliest Zen communities (Rochester Zen Center) in the eastern United States.

In the 1950s he continued the Lennon / Crolly / Shanahan tradition of outspokenness. Forthright on civil rights, he also became an early critic of French and U.S. involvement in Indochina, equating British involvement in Ireland with that of the Americans and French in Asia. A 1967 Rochester newspaper article was headlined “Ex-Rebel Holds Viet War Futile.” While a committed pacifist, he did acknowledge the right of all people to free themselves from colonial domination. “Informed” on once again, his views led to an early 1960s FBI investigation into alleged Communist Party membership.

Apparently not choosing to file a witness statement with the Irish Bureau of Military History, he unsuccessfully sought an outlet for his short remembrance "Trauma in Time" and a play, "Down By the Glenside."

George Lennon passed away, largely unnoticed, in 1991 with his ashes placed at Zen locales in Maine and Rochester, his arguably prescient positions seemingly no longer outside the mainstream in his native land.

Shown at the top is a mid-1960’s portrait (exhibited at Rochester’s Memorial Art Gallery) of George by Ruth Carver. Seen to the right is a family memorial plaque, denoting the nearby presence of George’s parents and grandparents, was mounted on the wall at St. Mary’s Roman Catholic Church in 2014.

RELATED LINKS:

The Clonbanin Ambush: “To Hell With Surrender!”

George Lennon and The Piltown Cross Ambush

"Rebel Heart: George Lennon: Flying Column Commander" by Terence O'Reilly (Book)

"Waterford: The Irish Revolution, 1912-23" by Pat McCarthy (Book)

"Cry of the Curlew: A history of the West Waterford, Déise Brigade IRA during the Irish War of Independence" by Tommy Mooney and Paul McLoughlin (book)

George Lennon from TG-4: part 1 - 3 parts (Parts 2 and 3 will load automatically)

Commemoration, the Piltown Ambush and Ireland 2016

The Cross of Old Piltown (song video) Martin ó Domhnaill singing "The Cross of Old Piltown," written by Pat Keating, at the unveiling a monument in memory of the Piltown Cross Ambush in 1920.

Ó Chogadh go Síocháin: Saol George Lennon (Video)

George Lennon - Wikipedia

History of the Lee-Enfield Rifle

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Views: 1349

Tags: Activists, Irish Freedom Struggle, Revolutionary

Comment by The Wild Geese on February 16, 2022 at 7:23pm

George Lennon, commander of the West Waterford Flying Column: An interview with his son, Ivan Lennon

Ivan Lennon recalls his father's role in Ireland's struggle for Freedom. At the age of 20, George Lennon became the youngest commander of a flying column during the Irish War of Independence, leading the West Waterford column in ambushes and actions in the face of heavy odds against British forces across the county.

Comment by Ivan Lennon on February 16, 2022 at 7:31pm

GRMA for according  a degree of  further reognition  for my  father -  no longer a "forgotten" ASU Commanding Officer thanks to you and others since 2009. 


Admin
Comment by Joe Gannon on February 17, 2022 at 7:03pm

Tá failte romhat, Ivan. We are happy to be a part of honoring the sacrifice of your father and all the other men and women who risked everything to secure Ireland's freedom. Too many of them, like your dad, have been denied the recognition they have deserved for the last 100 years

.

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