Bombing of Dublin in World War II

The first bombing of Dublin in World War II occurred early on the morning of 2 January 1941, when German bombs were dropped on the Terenure area of south Dublin.[1] This was followed, early on the following morning of 3 January 1941, by further German bombing of houses on Donore Terrace in the South Circular Road area of south Dublin.[2][3] A number of people were injured, but no one was killed in these bombings. Later that year, on 31 May 1941, four German bombs fell in north Dublin, one damaging Áras an Uachtaráin but with the greatest impact in the North Strand area, killing 28 people.[4][5] However, the first bombing of the Republic of Ireland[9] had taken place several months earlier, on 26 August 1940, when the German Luftwaffe bombed Campile, County Wexford, killing three people.

Background

At the start of World War II, Ireland declared its neutrality and proclaimed "The Emergency". By July 1940, after Germany's military conquests of Poland, Denmark and Norway (Operation Weserübung), as well as France and The Netherlands (Battle of France), Britain stood alone, with her Commonwealth and Empire against Germany. By May 1941, the German Air Force had bombed numerous British cities, including Belfast in Northern Ireland during "The Blitz". As part of the United Kingdom, Northern Ireland was at war, but the independent state of Ireland was neutral. German area bombings aimed at the British Isles were reduced after the launch of Operation Barbarossa in late June 1941.

Timeline of German bombings of the Irish state

Despite its neutrality, Ireland experienced a number of bombing raids:

The Dublin bombings

Terenure

Around 10 am on 2 January 1941, two bombs were dropped in Rathdown Park, Terenure.[2] The first bomb, landed in soft ground behind the houses at the corner of Rathdown Park and Rathfarnham Road, creating a large crater but causing little other damage. The second landed behind the houses at 25 and 27 Rathdown Park, destroying both and damaging many neighbouring homes. Two other bombs were dropped on the corner of Lavarna Grove and Fortfield Road, close to the Kimmage Crossroads (KCR). Lavarna Grove was still under construction so the bomb fell on undeveloped ground, resulting in little damage, a single person injured and no loss of life.

Donore

Just before 4 am on the morning of 3 January 1941, a bomb fell at the rear of the houses located at 91 and 93 Donore Terrace in the South Circular Road area of Dublin.[2][3] Three houses were destroyed and approximately fifty others damaged. Donore Presbyterian Church, the attached school and the Jewish Synagogue in Donore were also damaged. 20 people were injured, but there was no loss of life.

North Strand

At approximately 2 am on 31 May 1941, four German bombs dropped on north Dublin.[4][20] One bomb fell in the Ballybough area, demolishing the two houses at 43 and 44 Summerhill Park,[4] injuring many but with no loss of life. A second fell at the Dog Pond pumping works near the Zoo in Phoenix Park, with no casualties but damaging Áras an Uachtaráin, the official residence of the Irish President (Douglas Hyde at the time).[4] A third made a large crater in the North Circular Road near Summerhill,[20] again causing no injuries. A fourth fell in North Strand destroying 17 houses and severely damaging about 50 others, the worst damage occurring in the area between Seville Place and Newcomen Bridge.[4][19] The raid claimed the lives of 28 people,[5] injured 90, destroyed or damaged approximately 300 houses, and left 400 people homeless.

On 5 June, a mass funeral was held for 12 of the victims with Éamon de Valera, the Taoiseach, and other government officials in attendance. De Valera made a speech in the Dáil Éireann (the lower house of the Irish Parliament) on the same day:

Members of the Dáil desire to be directly associated with the expression of sympathy already tendered by the Government on behalf of the nation to the great number of our citizens who have been so cruelly bereaved by the recent bombing. Although a complete survey has not yet been possible, the latest report which I have received is that 27 persons were killed outright or subsequently died; 45 were wounded or received other serious bodily injury and are still in hospital; 25 houses were completely destroyed and 300 so damaged as to be unfit for habitation, leaving many hundreds of our people homeless. It has been for all our citizens an occasion of profound sorrow in which the members of this House have fully shared. (Members rose in their places.) The Dáil will also desire to be associated with the expression of sincere thanks which has gone out from the Government and from our whole community to the several voluntary organisations the devoted exertions of whose members helped to confine the extent of the disaster and have mitigated the sufferings of those affected by it. As I have already informed the public, a protest has been made to the German Government. The Dáil will not expect me, at the moment, to say more on this head.[22]

After the war, what became West Germany accepted responsibility for the raid, and by 1958 it had paid compensation of £327,000. Over 2,000 claims for compensation were processed by the Irish government, eventually costing £344,000.[23] East Germany and Austria, which were both part of Nazi Germany in 1941, made no contribution. The amounts were fixed after the 1953 Agreement on German External Debts, allowing maximum compensation.

Cause of the North Strand Raid

Several reasons for the raid have been asserted over time. German Radio, operated by the Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda, broadcast that "it is impossible that the Germans bombed Dublin intentionally".[24] Irish airspace had been violated repeatedly, and both Allied and German airmen were being interned at the Curragh. A possible cause was a navigational error or a mistaken target, as one of the pathfinders on the raid later recounted. Numerous large cities in the United Kingdom were targeted for bombing, including Belfast, which like Dublin, is across the Irish Sea from Great Britain.[25] War-time Germany's acceptance of responsibility and post-war Germany's payment of compensation are cited as further indications that the causation was error on the part of the Luftwaffe pilots.

Another possible reason was that in April 1941, Germany had launched the Belfast blitz, which resulted in Belfast (part of the United Kingdom) being heavily bombed. In response, Ireland sent rescue, fire, and emergency personnel to Belfast to assist the city. De Valera formally protested the bombing to the German government, as well as making his famous "they are our people" speech. Some have contended that the raid served as a warning to Ireland to keep out of the war. This contention was given added credibility when Colonel Edward Flynn, second cousin of Ireland's Minister for Coordination of Defensive Measures, recalled that Lord Haw Haw had warned Ireland that Dublin's Amiens Street Railway Station, where a stream of refugees from Belfast was arriving, would be bombed. The station, now called Connolly Station, stands a few hundred metres from North Strand Road, where the bombing damage was heaviest.[25] Flynn similarly contended that the German bombing of Dundalk on 4 July was also a pre-warning by Lord Haw Haw as a punishment for Dundalk being the point of shipment of Irish cattle sold to the United Kingdom.

After the war Winston Churchill said that "the bombing of Dublin on the night of 30 May 1941, may well have been an unforeseen and unintended result of our interference with 'Y'." He was speaking of the Battle of the Beams, wherein "Y" referred to the direction finding radio signals that the Luftwafffe used to guide their bombers to their targets.[26] However, the technology was not sufficiently developed by mid-1941 to have deflected planes from one target to another, and could only limit the ability of bombers to receive the signals.[25]

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 "Houses Wrecked in Dublin Suburb", The Irish Times, 3 January 1941.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "More Bombs Dropped on Dublin", The Irish Times, 3 January 1941.
  3. 1 2 3 "Damage in Dublin Yesterday", The Irish Times, 4 January 1941
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Bombs in Dublin This Morning: Many Killed", The Irish Times, 31 May 1941
  5. 1 2 3 There appears to be some disagreement on this number. Initial reports quoted 34 people killed,[6] the formal inquest found 25 people killed with a further two bodies subsequently uncovered from the rubble;[7] some months later Lily Behan died of injuries sustained during the bombing, taking the toll to 28.[8]
  6. 1 2 "Dublin's Death-Roll May be Thirty-Five", The Irish Times, 3 June 1941
  7. "Formal Verdicts", The Irish Times, 4 June 1941
  8. "Dublin City & County", The Irish Times, p7, 20 August 1941
  9. For the technical difference in the names of the Irish state, see Names of the Irish state
  10. "Three Irish Girls Killed By German Bombs", The Irish Times, 27 August 1940
  11. Irish Times report, 27 August 1940
  12. "German Compensation for Bombing at Campile", The Irish Times, 14 February 1946
  13. "Bombs Fall in County Dublin", The Irish Times, 21 December 1940
  14. "Bombs Fall in Counties Dublin and Monaghan", Irish Independent, 21 December 1941
  15. 1 2 3 "How Three Women Died in Carlow", The Irish Times, 3 January 1941.
  16. "Official Statement", The Irish Times, 3 January 1941
  17. "Bombs Fall Near Drogheda", Irish Independent, 2 January 1941
  18. "Women Die in Wrecked Home", Irish Independent, 3 January 1941
  19. 1 2 3 "German Bombs were Dropped on Dublin", The Irish Times, 2 June 1941
  20. 1 2 3 "German Bombs Dropped on Dublin", The Irish Times, 7 June 1941
  21. "Bombs Fall at Dundalk", Irish Independent, 25 July 1941
  22. "The Dublin Bombing". Dáil Debates, Volume 83. Dáil Éireann. 5 June 1941.
  23. "Ceisteanna—Questions. Oral Answers. – North Strand Bombing Compensation.". Dáil Debates, Volume 254. Dáil Éireann. 8 June 1971.
  24. O'Donoghue, David (1998). Hitler's Irish voices: the story of German radio's wartime Irish service. Belfast: Beyond the Pale Publications. p. 61. ISBN 1-900960-04-4.
  25. 1 2 3 Fisk, Robert (24 January 1999). "Why the Nazis bombed Dublin". The Independent.
  26. Churchill, Winston (1949). The Second World War (vol 2). London: Cassell and Co. Ltd. p. 344.

References

External links

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