Foremost and Ready: Kildare and 1916

Kildare Historian-in-residence James Durney looks at Co. Kildare’s involvement in the events of 1916

Aras BhrideKildare Town

Event Details

  • Wed 2 Mar  2016
  • 20:00

  • Cost: Free

  • Venue Details
    Aras Bhride

    Parish Centre
    Bride street
    Kildare Town


Kildare Historian-in-residence James Durney looks at Co. Kildare’s huge involvement in these momentous events and reveals a story that has not previously been told using many sources available for the first time, along with eyewitnesses’ testimonies.

On Easter Monday 1916 1,600 men, women and children went out to fight for an independent Ireland. They faced the most powerful empire in the world. The battle raged in Dublin for six days and resulted in 485 deaths and the destruction of many parts of the city. While mainly a Dublin affair many of the Volunteers were from outside the city; two dozen Kildare men and women took part in the Rising, including fifteen who walked from Maynooth to the General Post Office. Several Kildare natives and residents were killed on all sides in the Rising, while dozens more were wounded or imprisoned in the aftermath.

The subsequent execution of the leaders of the Rising awakened a generation to the cause of Irish freedom. In the succeeding War of Independence and Civil War the Kildare men of 1916, including Domhnall Ua Buachalla, Tom Harris, Pat Colgan, Michael Smyth and Eamonn O' Modhrain, would play their part.

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