Rescue at Knocklong

In one of the most dramatic events in the Irish War of Independence, a handcuffed young Tipperary volunteer, Seán Hogan, was rescued from a train while sat between four armed members of the Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC). Two RIC were killed in the attack and a number of the volunteers wounded. The rescue was undertaken by three of Hogan’s comrades from the Third Tipperary Brigade of the IRA and five members of the Galtee Battalion of the East Limerick Brigade. Hogan was one of the most wanted men in Ireland at the time of his rescue, due to his role in the Soloheadbeg ambush and would almost certainly had been executed if he hadn’t been rescued. The rescue took place on Hogan’s 18th birthday, 13 May 1919, while the Cork bound train stopped at Knocklong station in Limerick.

The rescue was a great boost for Republican morale in the early stages of the war and within a matter of weeks a number of popular ballads were being sung across Ireland regaling the events of the rescue.[1]

Background

Plaque at spot where Seán Hogan was arrested Goldengrove near Bouladuff Thurles

Hogan was a wanted man after his participation in the Soloheadbeg Ambush earlier in the year. He was on the run with his comrades from the Third Tipperary Brigade, Séamus Robinson, Seán Treacy and Dan Breen, known as the “Big Four”. These four men had spent much of the previous three months sleeping in the rough or in the houses of Republicans across Tipperary and Limerick, with a large reward on offer for their capture. Having spent the previous four nights with little sleep they attended a dance being held near Clonoulty, Tipperary. Hogan had gone on after the dance to Meagher's of Annfield, while his three comrades had earlier retired to a nearby house. Hogan fell asleep on a sofa in the kitchen but was awaken to cries that the 'peelers are raiding the house’. He leapt to his feet, grabbed his gun and ran out the back of the house, climbed over the back wall of the yard where he landed next to party of six RIC. He was wrestled to the ground and disarmed and taken to a nearby barracks before being transferred to Thurles barracks.

Sean Hogan 1919

Planning for the Rescue

After being informed of Hogan’s capture by Patrick Kinnane of the 2nd Tipperary Brigade, the other members of the "Big Four" — Sean Treacy, Dan Breen and Seamus Robinson — immediately decided to try and rescue their young comrade before he was sent to one of the bigger prisons, where it would be impossible to rescue him. They first travelled to the Maloney homestead at Lackelly a few miles from Emly and Knocklong railway stations. After a short discussion Mai Moloney volunteered to go to Thurles to ascertain the whereabouts of Hogan,having been assured that he was still in Thurles, she returned with the news to Robinson, Breen and Treacy. They decided to try and rescue Hogan from the train which was to take him to Cork prison.[2]

They contacted the Tipperary Town Battalion to send reinforcements to help in the rescue. However due to miscommunication, the reinforcements from Tipperary failed to arrive, at that stage help was sought from the Galtee Battalion of the East Limerick Brigade.[3] Ned O'Brien, James Scanlon, JJ O'Brien, Sean Lynch and Ed Foley of Galbally promptly arrived at Emly Station. Another Volunteer, "Goorty" MacCarthy from Thurles, travelled on the train from Thurles to identify Hogan's carriage. While waiting for further news from Thurles the rescue plan was changed from Emly station to Knocklong station.[4]

The Rescue

JJ O'Brien, Lynch, Scalon and Foley went to Emly to await the train and when it arrived all four boarded the train with a view to ascertaining what compartment Hogan was in. When the train stopped at Knocklong they and Goorty McCarthy signalled Hogan’s position to Treacy and the others who were waiting on the platform. When the train pulled into Knocklong, Treacy and Ned O’Brien lead the charge into the first carriage, where Hogan was being held in the custody of four armed officers from the RIC. Despite calls to surrender, Constable Enright put his gun to Hogan’s head and was immediately shot dead by Ned O’Brien. Hogan leapt across the carriage and smashed his still handcuffed hands into Constable Ring’s face. Ring was thrown through a nearby window by another volunteer, while Treacy and Sergeant Wallace engaged in a desperate hand-to-hand battle. Treacy eventually prevailed and Wallace lay dead shot with the gun that he and Treacy had been grappling over. Treacy however was seriously wounded with a gunshot through the neck.[5] Constable Reilly who earlier in the fight had been knocked down by Jim Scanlon and presumed unconscious, had managed to make his way to the platform unnoticed, as the fight between Wallace and Treacy continued. Still dazed he open fire on the train in an erratic manner spraying bullets and nearly hitting a number of passengers. He sent a volley of fire into the carriage where the fight was taking place, causing glass and shrapnel wounds to Scanlon, Ned O’Brien and Treacy. Dan Breen drew his fire on the platform taking a bullet in the lung before returning fire and causing Reilly to depart the scene. Hogan was taken to the nearby butcher’s shop where David O'Byrne, the local butcher, split open the handcuffs with a meat cleaver.

Aftermath

Maher & Foley in Mountjoy Jail Dublin in 1921

The wounded volunteers were taken to Shanahan's of the Hill at Glenlora,Dr. William Hennessy and Dr. Fitzgerald attended the wounded. The Big Four were quickly moved to West Limerick as large numbers of RIC and military reinforcements were put in place in all nearby barracks and search parties were scouring all the local areas around Knocklong for the wounded volunteers. In the weeks after the incident, intensive police and army activity led to the arrest of many suspects, but they failed to capture any of the actual rescue party. At an inquest held in Kilmallock Courthouse, Inspector McLean instructed the RIC witnesses not to answer jurors' questions but to portray the deaths of Wallace and Enright as cold-blooded murder. A juror responded to Police claims by boldly stating, "You are simply trying to paint your own story in your own way." The jury not only failed to bring a verdict of murder but blamed the Government for exposing the RIC to danger and condemned "the arrest of respectable persons and the exasperating of the people."[6]

Hogan, Breen, Treacy and Robinson later travelled to Dublin where they participated with Dublin volunteers in a number of attacks on the British in the early part of the war. Robinson and Hogan returned to Tipperary to continue the fight with the 3rd Tipperary Brigade, Robinson in his role as Brigade O/C and Hogan initially as a Brigade Officer and then as O/C of the Brigade’s second flying column. Treacy and Breen alternated between Dublin and Tipperary throughout the war. Treacy was killed in action in Dublin in October 1920. JJ O’Brien and Sean Lynch went on the run and spent some time fighting with Dinny Lacey’s flying column in the 3rd Tipperary Brigade, before returning to the East Limerick Brigade. After a period on the run Ned O'Brien and Jim Scanlon met up with the Big four in Dublin before slipping out of Ireland to America, where they participated in activities to raise funds and support for the fight in Ireland.

In September 1919, Ed Foley and Patrick Maher (who had no part in the rescue), were arrested and after two civilian trials they were tried a third time in a military trial and found guilty. They were executed by hanging in Mountjoy jail on June 7, 1921, despite the best efforts of many people who looked for clemency including Sergeant Wallace's father. Foley and Maher were part of the forgotten ten, that were buried within the Mountjoy prison precincts, where they remained for eighty years. After years of campaigning the bodies of the forgotten ten were removed from the prison grounds. They received state funerals on October 14, 2001. Maher was buried at Ballylanders, Co. Limerick while Foley was buried at Glasnevin Cemetery, Dublin.

References

  1. Ryan, Desmond (1945). Sean Treacy and the Third Tipperary Brigade I.R.A
  2. The Rescue at Knocklong - http://web.archive.org/web/20080621033351/http://www.knocklong-rescue.com/
  3. Bureau of Irish Military History, Witness Statement 1721 Seamus Robinson
  4. Breen, Dan (1926). My Fight for Irish Freedom
  5. Ryan, Desmond (1945). Sean Treacy and the Third Tipperary Brigade I.R.A
  6. The Wild Geese - http://thewildgeese.irish/profiles/blogs/part-7-fight-on-struggle-on

External links

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