DAN DONNELLY – 200th ANNIVERSARY

by ehistoryadmin on August 20, 2015

This year, 2015, will mark the 200th anniversary of the Donnelly victory over Cooper on the Curragh of Kildare, not on the 13 December which is the date recorded in error in books and on the monument but on 13 November. In April 1953 the people of Kilcullen and the Curragh celebrated his famous fight as part of the An Tóstal festival. The Co. Kildare Federation of Local History Groups hopes to mark the occasion at the Hollow on Saturday 14th November. As part of Heritage week, Kildare Library & Arts Services will present a number of talks on the life of Dan Donnelly – Irelands first National Sporting Hero.

 

Series of Heritage Week Talks (listed below)

Full details of all the events can be found at

http://kildare.ie/CountyCouncil/Heritage/HeritageWeek/

For heritage week we are looking at the story of Dan Donnelly from his humble beginnings as a carpenter in Dublin to this dramatic rise and fall as a pugilist or bare-knuckle boxer. His talents were noted by Capt. William Kelly of Maddenstown House, Co. Kildare, and his boxing career took off. This of course reached a high point after his initial fight with Tom Hall in September 1814 at Belcher’s Hollow on the Curragh (after this fight the name changed to Donnelly’s Hollow) to his win there over the English Champion, George Cooper on 13 November 1815.

He became a national hero, but sadly his fame and brief financial success allowed him to indulge is vices of womanising, gambling and drinking. Facing debt and ruin after a number of failing pub businesses in Dublin he took to the ring again in England in a series of exhibition matches. He fought a semi-professional fight with Jack Carter which was deemed to be a draw and then finally was coaxed into a prize-fight with Tom Oliver in July of 1819. Donnelly beat Oliver in a gruelling 34 round contest and returned to Ireland as a national hero once more. After a brief period whereby he and his wife enjoyed the fruits of his success his life once again spiralled out of control and he died in 1820 at the very young age of about 32 years. Yet his fame lives on, through his extraordinary feats within the ring and the Hollow named after him on the Curragh of Kildare, but also because of the survival and preservation of his arm, firstly by the doctor who removed it courtesy of the grave robbers who had sold him the body and then through a series of doctors and collectors until it came into the possession of Jim Byrne and went on display in the Hideout Pub in Kilcullen. In more recent years it has formed part of the Fighting Irish Exhibition in the US and Ireland and forms as famous a part of the story of the Hollow and the boxer as Donnelly himself.

Saturday 22 August

Newbridge

Newbridge Community Library, 3.30 p.m.

Mario Corrigan: Ireland’s First Sporting Hero: Dan Donnelly

bookable

Wednesday 26 August

Naas

Naas Community Library, 11 a.m.

Mario Corrigan: Dan Donnelly – Ireland’s First National Sporting Hero

Friday, 28 August

Maynooth

Maynooth Community Library, 11 a.m.

Mario Corrigan: Dan Donnelly – Ireland’s First National Sporting Hero (1815)

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