On the morning of Good Friday, April 21st, 1916, a very young and excited Colm Ó Lochlainn, a captain in the Irish Volunteers, set out in Dublin on his bike, knowing that he would be leading a group of men to complete a mission that was thought would have had far reaching repercussions for Ireland.

Above, Ballykissane Pier, outside Killorglin, where, nearby, three Irish Volunteers perished en route to on a secret mission. Photo by David Medcalf, licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence.

Ó Lochlain served on the special staff of Joseph Mary Plunkett, director of military operations of the Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB). Having gained the trust of his commanding officer on other special assignments, Ó Lochlainn realized that his mission was of vital importance.

To get the details, he was to meet up with an officer of the Irish Republican Brotherhood on O’Connell Bridge (then named Sackville Street / Carlisle Bridge ) very early that Good Friday morning. As he cycled toward the bridge, he was approached by Michael Collins -- in his witness statement Ó Lochlainn said there were few words spoken between them – “Mick said, 'Here I will take the bike, here are your tickets, you know what you have to do. There’s the tram.' The orders were clear enough, I was in charge and we had to get to Killarney by train and meet up with two motor cars that would be waiting for us.”

So off went Ó Lochlainn, a Kilkenny native and typographer by trade, to meet with the other men who would be traveling with him to Killarney. The team, chosen for their particular expertise, comprised Limerick man Thomas McInerney, who could drive a motor car; Charlie Monahan, a mechanic and a wireless (radio) installation expert; Donal Sheehan, from West Limerick, who had worked at the War Office and knew the British admiralty codes; Kerry native Dennis Daly, from Caherciveen, who knew the Caherciveen area; and fellow Caherciveen native Con Keating, a wireless-radio operator on a number of ships.

They set off by train to Killarney, where they were to pick up two cars that would be parked outside the train station, and then drive to Caherciveen. Their orders were clear: They were to take control of the wireless station at the nearby College .When they arrived at Killarney, they were met by a Limerick man, Sam Windham, who had experience with explosives -- he drove the first care with Dennis Daly navigating as he knew the way, with Colm Ó Lochlainn  as another passenger. The second car was driven by Thomas McInerney [who owned that car], with passengers Charlie Monahan, Donal Sheehan and Con Keating. McInerney was to follow the first car's tail lights.

The plan was to seize control of the wireless station at the nearby College in Caherciveen, by whatever means, so that they would be able to distract British ships that were surveilling the Kerry coastline. They would accomplish this by transmitting false information and then demolishing the wireless  transmitter. The plan was to signal the British navy that a German naval attack was imminent off the Scottish coast.

Once British naval forces had taken the bait, and moved from the waters off the Kerry coast, this would then facilitate the landing of the German freighter ‘The Aud’ at Banna Strand, with its cargo of 20,000 German rifles and 10 machine guns. The armaments were, of course, to be distributed around the country, in coordination with Austin Stack at Tralee, to better ensure sufficient weaponry was in place for the Easter Rising. 

Pictured, three RIC constables at a checkpoint.

Then the fateful mission began to unravel. The lead car, bearing Ó Lochlainn and Daly, broke down near a checkpoint, and a curious Royal Irish Constabulary officer went to its aid. When this plan had been hatched in Dublin, the assumption was that there would be no security surrounding Caherciveen or the wireless station at the College. Unknown to them, of course, was that the Royal Irish Constabulary had received intelligence of their own -- they were out in force, with the British army as backup, surrounding the Caherciveen area and the wireless station in the College, in particular.

Having managed to convince the officer that they were medical students and tourists, they then realized that the area was securely fortified by the Royal Irish Constabulary and British army. Ó Lochlainn and Daly then set off, checking constantly to ensure that the second car was following them. Then, about three miles further on, they did not see any lights behind them. They waited for some length of time that would have allowed the other car to catch up with them, thinking either that the second car had broken down, or had been caught at the checkpoint. When the second car failed to materialize, they made the decision to abort the mission, and headed back over the hills to Killarney. They slept in the car through the night, and went back to Dublin the next morning to report the mission aborted, not knowing the fate of their four colleagues.

As so often happens in all walks of life, the best laid plans went awry; the second car lost sight of the lead car and had stopped a young girl to ask the way to Cahirciveen, which lay 25 miles to the southwest. The instructions she gave them were “to take the first turn on the right.” On that dark road, passing through Killorglin,with only the headlights of the car to outline the surface of the road, bearing in mind that this was very early days for motor cars and infrastructure, McInerney missed the first turn, which led to the quay, and headed straight for Ballykissane Pier, and beyond, the River Laune. 

Some sources would suggest that with the moonlight shining on the surface of the river, the reflection on the water may have been thought to be a continuation of the road. The car was, in fact, heading straight for the river. The car with all its passengers inside went over the unprotected edge and straight into the river, where it was at its deepest and widest. At this point in time, some sources say, McInerney must have managed to get out of the car, but was, however, disoriented and started to swim the wrong way. A local man by the name of Thady O’Sullivan shouted to him, guiding him back to shore with a lamp light.

While McInerney was being cared for by O’Sullivan, other local people such as Patrick and Michael Begley, son and father, the son being an Irish teacher based in Limerick, made dangerous and strenuous efforts to rescue the other passengers, but this proved to be an impossible task. All three men, Sheehan, Monahan and Keating, were thought to be trapped in the car, and at this point the decision to abandon the rescue was made.

At this stage, it was clear that the three other occupants of the car had somehow become trapped in the vehicle and had, sadly, in all likelihood, quickly drowned. O’Sullivan took the one disheartened and cold survivor McInerney back to his house, where he was given towels to dry himself and a hot drink..

McInerney was then advised to go to the Royal Irish Constabulary  Barracks and report the incident in the event that any of the other passengers had survived. While away, McInerney's wet overcoat was picked up to dry it, and a revolver was discovered in it. Patrick Begley soon realized that there was more to the night’s events than at first thought.

At that moment, the Royal Irish Constabulary  arrived at the cottage to inquire if they had seen anything untoward in the area. Begley hurriedly hid the revolver under a cushion and then sat on the cushion. When McInerney later arrived to retrieve his revolver, Begley advised him that the police had started asking questions about the car driving into the River Luane, and if they returned, as he had no doubt they would, it would be better if they did not find the revolver on him.

Unknown to McInerney at this time, the Royal Irish Constabulary had arrested a man in Tralee, who was connected to the Fenian movement, and putting two and two together, had information that the Fenian could be related to the activity of the sunken car and its passengers. So not to be outwitted by the local people, lo and behold, back to the O’Sullivan and Begley cottages the Royal Irish Constabulary went. Unsurprisingly, they found McInerney sitting in the kitchen,drinking tea. Despite the fact that McInerney stuck to his accounts of the car being full of students on a  tour, he was arrested and kept in custody until after the Rising was over. He was then transferred to Frongoch Prison in North Wales, which would house many of the Republicans who were captured after the Easter Rising surrender.

Local fishermen found the bodies of Keating and Sheehan the next day, on 22nd April 1916. They did not know who they were and an inquest was held. It was assumed that they were the bodies out of the car that had plunged into the river on the 21st.

Sheehan was buried as a stranger, in Dromavally Burial Ground, in Killorglin, amidst great sorrow, as the gathered crowd wept openly for a young man to have died, and none knew whom he was. Keating was buried in his native Caherciveen, as he had been identified.

Monahan was found on the banks of the Laune on the 30th October 1916 by a Mr. Sheehy, approximately a quarter of a mile from the quay. His head, one arm and two feet were missing. The trunk of his body, all that was left of him, was fitted with good quality clothes, waterproof trousers, a belt containing two gold sovereigns and a wad of soaked bank notes, more than an average amount of cash even for a man of gentrified background, as it was thought. Also found on his remains were nippers and a wrench, ready and able for the job he never got to carry out. His remains were identified as those of Charlie Monahan. The police did not think an inquest was necessary, so his remains were buried alongside those of Sheehan on Wednesday, the 1st November 1916, at Dromavally Graveyard. 

Then, on the 3rd February 1917, the missing bones belonging to Monahan were found by Thady O'Sullivan -- small amounts of tweed material which had rotted, and alongside the material, a six-chamber revolver with an American pattern with 20 rounds of ammunition and a small screwdriver. The bones were interred with his remains by a local priest at Dromavally graveyard. To add insult to injury in these tragic events, Austin Stack [waiting for the illicit cargo in Tralee] was arrested the same night of the car accident, which would have made the distribution of arms shipment nigh impossible as Stack had been the liaison between ‘The Aud’ and the local Irish Republican Brotherhood. As well, Roger Casement, who orchestrated the arms shipment from the German Government, had been captured earlier that day at Banna Strand, about 18 miles north of the accident site.

This tragic story only serves to illustrate the way in which human error, in this case, making assumptions about people and places unknown to planners, often plays a significant role in determining outcomes. Hindsight is a wonderful thing [mmm, or is it?]. In hindsight, we would all, indeed, be perfect.

The 'what if's' began as soon as these tragic events started to unfold in the newspapers;  'What if ' they had managed to divert the Royal Navy as planned? 'What if ' they had not lost sight of the lead car? Nevertheless, in the aftermath of the Easter Rising, it is a very interesting and not-often-enough-told story, which should serve as a warning to those who plan operations without having full knowledge of the specific details of planned targets and surroundings.

Suffice it to say, Thomas McInerney, Colm Ó Lochlainn and Denis Daly lived to tell their tales.

A memorial was erected to Con Keating and Donal Sheehan over their graves in 1919. In 1939, 23 years after the tragic accident took the lives of the three volunteers that fateful night, a monument was erected and unveiled at Ballykissane Pier, by J.J. O’Kelly. In 2006, a mural was unveiled at Short Strand, Belfast, to honor Charlie Monahan as one of the 1916 heroes.

* My thanks to Kieron Punch who provided invaluable information about the driver of the first car.

Views: 4128

Tags: Easter Rising, Irish Freedom Struggle


Heritage Partner
Comment by That's Just How It Was on March 11, 2016 at 3:57pm

Michael Ó with regard to Casement and his sexuality ... I quite agree with you that people's  gender  should not be an issue ... that they fought and died for Ireland is the real issue.. Nobody wants to know anything about their gender / sexuality... these wer rave mean and women , lets celebrate that    

From  my blog on Casement April 6th 2915 --- During the  trial and the appeal that took place shortly after, he had been condemned to death. The British Government had found his journals (known as The Black Diaries), and had circulated excerpts from them. Notables of the day who may well have intervened on his behalf, left him floundering for support when these diaries became widely distributed. His homosexuality had sealed his fate. In the fact of socially excepted norms and the illegality of homosexuality in this era, he was a doomed man.

Casement read out a statement at his trial which referred to the statute under which he was charged:

”When this statute was passed, in 1351, what was the state of men's minds on the question of a far higher allegiance - that of man to God and His Kingdom; and “ I was not tried by my peers."

On the day of his execution, as an adult he was received and baptized into the Catholic Faith. He was attended to  by Dean Ring and Father Carey. Father Carey called him a "saint."

Casement was hanged in Pentonville Prison on August 3, 1916, aged 51 years. Sir Roger Casement  was buried in quicklime: the British Authorities' way of showing their contempt for him.

Since his death, then there has been speculation, debate; forgery theories, and even forensic testing to determine if the handwriting in The Black Diaries was Casement's.

His sister Nora and cousin Gertrude Bannister went to their graves always adamant that while the handwriting may be his, the contents were accounts of the foul conduct he investigated at Putumayo, Peru. They both insist that the British government got the diaries and forged them to make it look like it was his own experiences he had written about.  

Sláinte 

Comment by Micheal O Doibhilin on March 12, 2016 at 4:07pm

TJHIW

Yes, what you say is true. I must admit that I believe the diaries to be Casement', but I don't care because I am only interested in and judging him as a patriot.

in the eyes of the British, many of whom were doing more 'unspeakable' things than Casement (and still are, as we can see by the latest scandals emanating from across the pond). Casement's real crime was that he conspired against England and that he was not, as all good Irishmen should be, grateful for 800 years of being put down, robbed, starved and humiliated. how dare he.

Comment by Micheal O Doibhilin on March 12, 2016 at 4:19pm

Nicely said Michael. I too like and admire Kathleen Lynn, but not at the expense of others. Countess Markievicz, whom you allude to, is accused of shooting dead an unarmed policeman without a scintilla of evidence. We are told she was shortsighted and could not be a markswoman, yet at the same time she pulled off this miraculous shot with a handgun? we need to get our stories straight. The evidence for the shooting relies in the main on the diary of a nurse. Read Ray Bateson's "The Rising Dead" for a forensic analysis of this diary - suffice it to say the nurse could not have seen what she claimed to have seen from where she was. Her diary must be treated with grave suspicion, perhaps another forgery from the same hand that might have worked on Casement's?

We gained most of legislation on this island from the British, including that which legislates for women. Stop Church-bashing - the Catholic Church accepted the Irish stance on most things (including married priests) before we invaded. Our new mores were imposed, not from the Church, but our invaders.


Heritage Partner
Comment by That's Just How It Was on March 13, 2016 at 1:21pm

 I think what we all forget in our own analysis of our Irish History, is that ,, all of these people we are analyzing, have put down on paper their own thoughts and feeling at that particular time.  Nurse Farrell for example, told her story as she perceived it, other's have told their stories as they have perceived it... Pierce spoke glowing of Connolly in his prison cell.. all their own perceptions..... That Historians/ armatures, and others like myself, continue to pick over the pieces,  to then write books, based on what that written word said, at that time, leaves all of us in a quandary..

Some words or sentences for example  in O'Lochlinn own statement after many years [writing about the tragedy ] have contradictory sentences.  Many years had passed before he wrote his statement and he referred to  O'Connell Bridge;[ not Carlisle Bridge] ...    

I suppose what I am trying to say is , that all of the books that have been written , all of the personal documents that were written by all of these courage's men and women, is written in the perspective of that person... So what we believe to be the facts, may or may not be factual..      

Comment by Richard R. Mc Gibbon Jr. on March 13, 2016 at 3:25pm

Why don't we all just hoist a pint to all that assisted in the Irish liberation with the hope that others will follow with clarity of thought and purpose. And another pint raising to all that try to record history. Time is much like a river and the person's that undertake the passion of trying to record it are on a boat on that river. The boat's can be many with slightly different position on that river and each one has a unique vantage point. Alas, its time to tune me guitar and sing some tunes, think I will start with; "A Nation Once Again" and from that point,... the river will take me along for a ride.   Slainte !

Comment by Micheal O Doibhilin on March 14, 2016 at 1:35am

TJHIW

Many of the major people in our history did, indeed, write their own "Apologia Pro Vita Sua", and told their history as they lived it. They gave their reasons for what they did, and they talked about others who joined them.

Whe they are talking about themselves, that is primary source material and as near as we will get in most cases to their motivations. I say this because, after all, they are writing with the benefit of hindsight and may try to justify something in the public mind.

When they write about others they are on shaky ground because they will attribute motives that we cannot verify.

But it really doesn't matter because it is their actions and their actions' consequences that we must judge. Of course, something wrong done with the best intention must be understood as that.

historians who try to interpret history by today's rules and standards are frauds - we can only understand our history when we understand the times in which it was created. The old adage "If you want to know me come and live with me" is as true in history as elsewhere. We must "live" with these people to truly understand them and the good historian will always put people and events in context. Second guessing, playing "what-if" or alternate histories are the tools of the failed or incompetent historian.

Comment by Micheal O Doibhilin on March 14, 2016 at 1:37am

Richard R. Mc Gibbon Jr.

I'll drink to that!

We are all standing on the shoulders of giants - the people who did what they did for us. let us be grateful to them, even when they made mistakes, because we would not enjoy our present-day freedoms were it not for them.

Comment by michael dunne on March 14, 2016 at 10:00am

The following link opens up the Trinity College Dublin Future Learn course for Irish History from 1912 to 1923. This free course can be done at ones leisure and I have found it to be the best MOOC course available to date. It starts this week and is well worth a visit.

https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/153729e62b361629

Comment by michael dunne on March 14, 2016 at 10:17am

Risteard,

As Larkin said so rightly..."The great are only great because we are on our knees...arise!" Our restricted present day freedoms you speak of were hard earned and we still have some way to go to enjoy them. Britain cut its colonial teeth on Ireland and made many of the basic mistakes typical of such policies of conquest. We resisted and bear the scars for doing so as do Britain for its folly. Could it rid itself of the North of Ireland and cut it adrift into the North Atlantic, in my opinion She would be glad to do so.

British Colonialism can be compared with Bart Simpsons analogy of family members and making pancakes...the first is often the worst, being misshapen, rough around the edges and sometimes scorched (The Emerald Isle). The second and subsequent pancakes are more successful or normal as the maker practices his craft. The  final pancake can also be imperfect as the maker is only using up the last of the batter. Arterial drainage...


Heritage Partner
Comment by That's Just How It Was on March 14, 2016 at 10:22am

I will drink to that  as well Michael Ó... [ mines a sparkling water !!]  One of my Grandmothers adages was ; "  If you want to know me, , come and live with me " It is nice  to see put into the context above... because.... "fine feather do not make fine birds" .... and " good looks never boiled the kettle yet" ... I could go on /on about all of the adages that she woudl say, to qualify the rational about an issue  that she was  trying to make... 

We are indeed all standing on the shoulders of Giants , and other one of her favorites [!!] , 

To some extend I agree with michael dunne , on the issue  around chaos.... communication was a real issue in that era, that these three men died on their way to scupper the radio singles in the College at Caherciveen. and only reported in a Newspaper as a accident the next day... The Aud ..already scuppered Casement arrested along with Stack and O'Lochlinn , with other's in and around also arrested , was not a coincidence- British Intelligence had some part to play in this..

The British had sufficient intelligence to arrest Patrick Pearse et.al.. but choose to wait for clearances or whatever ,  to do this on the Easter Tuesday...

Is there not just a tiny bit of  " chaotic poor planning ", in there somewhere ??  on both side ??       

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