Category Archives: Dublin’s Hidden Republican History

Remembering the Croppy Acre

Remembering the Croppy Acre
By Daithí Ó’Riain

• The Croppy Acre in Dublin City Centre
‘No rising column marks the spot,

Where many a victim lies.

No bell here tolls its solemn sound,

No monument here stands.’

These are the words of Robert Emmet on the Croppy Acre Memorial.

Following the defeat of the 1798 Uprising, the bodies of the republican rebels were dumped into unmarked, mass graves across the country. These graves became known as ‘Croppy Pits’ or ‘Croppy Holes’, a reference to the United Irishmen who wore their hair cropped in the style of revolutionary France.

These Irish revolutionaries often carried barley oats as a source of nutrition to sustain them in battle. Several months after a Croppy grave had been filled and covered over, barley often began to grow up and mark the spot. If barley is cut down it only comes back stronger. Though it was lost on the British, the people quickly realised the significance and barley became a defiant symbol of republicanism.

You might be surprised to learn that one such mass grave is situated in the heart of Dublin City, just off Wolfe Tone Quay. A national monument now marks the Croppy Acre, but up until very recent times, this mass patriot grave had been subjected to decades of often deliberate neglect.

Early in the 20th century, British soldiers from the nearby Royal Barracks (now the National Museum of Ireland), disgracefully erected a football pitch on the site. The pitch continued to be used by another group of soldiers, when Royal Barracks was renamed Collins Barracks and taken over by the Irish Free State in 1922.

It’s believed that upwards of 300 ‘unknown republican soldiers’, members, supporters or suspected sympathisers of the United Irishmen, are buried in the Croppy Acre. Accurate records were not kept for the many mass graves across the country, and unfortunately only the names of 13 people buried here survive.

In the aftermath of the 1798 Rebellion, members of the United Irishmen descended on Dublin, in the hope that they could find anonymity in the city and perhaps, the chance to re-group. The rebels were pursued by the British army and by rampaging yeomanry. Those captured were tortured and hanged, often on a makeshift gallows on Carlisle (now O’Connell) Bridge. Many of those executed were thrown into Croppy Acre.

Two well known leaders of the United Irish Rebellion also rest in the Croppy Acre alongside so many of Ireland’s unknown soldiers.

Mathew Tone, the younger brother of Theobald Wolfe Tone and Bartholomew Teeling, were captured after the Battle of Ballinamuck, hanged in Provost Prison, Arbour Hill, and dumped without ceremony into the Croppy Acre.

Tone and Teeling had left Ireland for France in 1796, at a time when the British Government were attempting to suppress the United Irish Movement. Wolfe Tone arranged a commission in the French army for both men and they attempted to return to Ireland to stage a revolution that December, as part of General Hoche’s infamous failed landing in Bantry Bay.

In 1798 Tone and Teeling again returned to Ireland in the Army of General Humbert, and fought bravely during the Rebellion in Connaught. Once captured, as Irish revolutionaries serving in the French army, they were singled out for particular attention, tried for treason before a military tribunal and sentenced to death.

In a defiant address to his court martial, Bartholomew Teeling said: “If to have been active in endeavouring to put a stop to the blood-thirsty policy of an oppressive Government has been treason, I am guilty.

“If to have endeavoured to give my native country a place among the nations of the earth was treason, then I am guilty indeed.

“If to have been active in endeavouring to remove the fangs of oppression from the head of the devoted Irish peasant was treason, I am guilty.”

Teeling was hanged on September 24 1798, followed by his comrade Mathew Tone on September 30.

The Croppy Acre, now in the care of the Office of Public Works (OPW), is currently closed to the public.This mass grave tells the story of an important chapter in our history and has unlimited potential as a historical attraction in Dublin City Centre.

The Croppy Acre must be reopened for the public to enjoy.

•Daithí Ó’Riain is a Dublin based historian with a specific interest in social history and Ireland’s revolutionary period.

Hiding in Plain Sight- Hidden Republican History in Dublin

Remembering Captain Thomas Weafer

Plaque in memory of Captain Thomas Weafer, hidden on O'Connell Street, Dublin.
Plaque in memory of Captain Thomas Weafer, hidden on O’Connell Street, Dublin.

Dublin is full of Republican History. Almost every street and building in our capital has its own great story to tell. Much of this exciting, revolutionary history goes unnoticed from day to day and is hiding in plain sight,

One such hidden gem is the story of Captain Thomas Weafer, an IRA solider who was killed in action during the 1916 Rising. You might be surprised to learn that his story takes place on O’Connell Street, Dublin City’s main thoroughfare, and you’ve most likely passed it by on many occasions.

A plaque marking the spot were he gave his life for freedom is partially hidden from our view by a newspaper stand on the corner of O’Connell Street and Lower Abbey Street. As a result thousands of people pass the spot on a daily basis without so must as a second thought for our republican hero.

Captain Thomas Weafer, Irish Republican Army.

Like all of Ireland’s Patriot Dead, Captain Thomas Weafer deserves tobe remembered and his story should be more widely known,

Thomas Weafer was from Enniscorthy in County Wexford, but by 1916  he was living on the northside of Dublin with his wife.In the aftermath of the Howth Gun Running, Weafer joined ‘E’ Company of the 2nd Battalion,  Dublin Brigade, Irish Volunteers. The Company took its recruits mainly from around Seville Place and the North Wall area.

While there was a great increase of new recruits in the aftermath of the Howth Gun Running, Thomas Weafer seems to have stood out and was soon made a Captain. Interestingly, the Adjutant of ‘E’ Companyat the time of the 1916 Rising was Sean Russell, who would later go on to become Chief of Staff of the Irish Republican Army.

According to Frank Henderson, Captain of ‘F Company 2nd Battalion, Dublin Brigade, in his account to the Bureau of Military History, Weafer was involved in an arms raid on the London North Western Railway at the North Wall in 1915, which successfully procured a quantity of British Army rifles for the Volunteers.

Weafer played a decisive role in ensuring the Volunteers of the 2nd Battalion mobilised on Easter Monday.  Following Eoin MacNeill’s countermanding order, a number of Senior IRB men including Sean Lester had visited the Battalion area to warn against taking part in ‘unauthorised action.’

This led to uncertainty among the Company Captains over what should be done. Weafer as the senior officer went to see James Connolly for to gain orders for the local Volunteers. Connolly told Captain Weafer that his Battalion should make there way to the City centre immediately. Some 80- 100 Volunteers of the 2nd Battalion were remobilsed from their safe houses in Farview and Summerhill and marched to the city to take part in the Rising.

Captain Thomas Weafer fought as part of the GPO Garrison, the Headquarters of the Irish Republic, during Easter Week. As part of the rebel’s strategy to defend the O’Connell Street area, he was ordered to capture the Hibernian Bank on the corner of O’Connell Street and Lower Abbey Street and hold it for the Republic.

The building was of key strategic importance for the defence of O’Connell Street and soon came under attack by the British Army.

On Wednesday April 26 1916, while fighting in defence of the sovereign Irish Republic, Captain Thomas Weafer was shot and paid the ultimate sacrifice for freedom. Captain Weafer’s body was never recovered. The Hibernian Bank was destroyed by a fire that gripped most of Lower Abbey Street, reducing the area to rubble. Weafers remains were cremated in the fire. He was just twenty six years old at the time of his death.

So the next time you pass the junction of Lower Abbey Street and O’Connell Street, have a look for the plaque dedicated to his memory and spare a thought for this brave young Irish hero, who gave his life for our freedom.