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Landmark moments in 125 years of the GAA

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Landmark moments in 125 years of the GAA Empty Landmark moments in 125 years of the GAA

Post  mossbags Wed Oct 28, 2009 5:24 pm

125 YEARS OF GAA : In
our series of articles from the GAA Museum, 'Bloody Sunday' is
recalled, the day on which 14 people in Croke Park were killed by
British forces, including Tipperary player Michael Hogan, after whom
the Hogan Stand is named

THE DUBLIN football team was scheduled
to play Tipperary, in Croke Park, on November 21st 1920; the proceeds
of this 'great challenge match' to be donated to the Irish Republican
Prisoners Fund.

The night before Michael Collins sent his
'Squad' out to assassinate the 'Cairo Gang'- a team of undercover
British agents working and living in Dublin. A series of shootings took
place throughout the night which left 14 members of the British Forces
dead.

The Crown Forces, led by the Auxiliaries (and supported by
the 'Black and Tans') mobilised in Dublin on the morning of the match
with orders to go to Croke Park and search the crowd for known gunmen
and weapons.

Throw-in for the match was scheduled for 2.45pm but
when three IRA men, Seán Russell, Tom Kilcoyne and Harry Colley, were
informed (by their contacts) of the planned search of Croke Park they
came to Croke Park and pleaded with Luke O'Toole, GAA general
secretary, to cancel the match.

O'Toole took the decision not to
cancel the match; the mood in Dublin, and the stadium, was very tense,
rumours of the previous night's exploits were circulating among the
crowd and thoughts of reprisals must have been prominent in peoples'
minds.

O'Toole judged that any announcement to clear the stadium
would lead to a panic-induced exodus among the 10,000 strong crowd and
that a crush could develop at the turnstiles.

Mick Sammon, the Kildare referee, threw in the ball at 3.15pm.

Accounts
given by eye-witnesses suggest that five minutes after the throw-in the
stadium was raided by the British forces with the shooting breaking out
almost immediately.

The British had entered the stadium at the
Canal End and when the shooting began the crowd surged away from that
end of the stadium hoping to make it over the wall at the railway end
of the stadium.

Ultimately 14 people lost their lives as a result of the shooting in Croke Park that day.

Included
in the dead were Michael Hogan, a player on the Tipperary team (after
whom the Hogan Stand is named); Thomas Ryan, shot on his knees
whispering an act of contrition to Hogan; Jane Boyle, due to be married
five days later and 14-year-old William Scott, so badly mutilated that
it was at first thought he had been bayoneted to death.

Two
military inquiries were established into the shootings and the findings
of these, made public in 2003, are the main primary source for the
events of that day.

Strangely the main historical records of the
Association, (the Central Council minute books), make no reference
whatsoever to Bloody Sunday.

The findings of the military inquiry and the statements released by Dublin Castle often contradict one another.

In
a series of 'official statements' the British authorities offered three
possible scenarios for the bloodshed; the first being that the raiding
party returned fire at IRA pickets placed outside Croke Park; the
second being that the raiding party came under fire in the ground
itself while the third explanation was that, upon the raiding party's
arrival, three warning shots were fired by an IRA man in the crowd and
this caused a stampede.

In all Dublin Castle scenarios however one thing is constant, the British had come under fire first.

Almost
immediately serious doubts were expressed about the official version of
events; the media picked glaring holes in the Dublin Castle statements;
in particular their claims about IRA pickets outside the ground, were
these not unofficial ticket sellers, a common match-day feature.

One
claim made by Dublin Castle, that 30 revolvers had been found in the
stadium, caused particular annoyance among the public and the media who
begged the question; if 30 arms were found why were they not presented
to the inquiry and why was no-one arrested when found with a gun. The
purported aim of the raid was, after all, to search for guns and gunmen.

The
events of the day had a profound impact on the people of Ireland; it
seemed as if the British authorities had deliberately chosen an easy
target - a stadium full of innocent people - to exact revenge for the
severe military loss suffered the night before the game.

Bloody
Sunday shocked the British public too and while it is too simple to say
that it helped end the War of Independence it must certainly be
considered a key factor.

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Post  mossbags Thu Oct 29, 2009 4:57 pm

16 Nov 1971
Congress abolishes rule 27

16 Nov 2001
Congress overturns rule 21

16 April 2005
GAA decrees other sports use Croke Park for a 'temporary period'

11 October 1988
The birth of Joe Canning
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Post  bocerty Thu Oct 29, 2009 5:41 pm

mossbags wrote:16 Nov 1971
Congress abolishes rule 27

16 Nov 2001
Congress overturns rule 21

16 April 2005
GAA decrees other sports use Croke Park for a 'temporary period'

11 October 1988
The birth of Joe Canning

September 2003 - when the GAA was really founded Laughing Laughing Laughing Laughing
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Post  Jayo Cluxton Fri Oct 30, 2009 1:30 pm

2007 - Ireland 43 England 13 .... Landmark moments in 125 years of the GAA Icon_cheers

24 February
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