World War 1 Roll of Honour Example 2
Transcription
World War 1 Roll of Honour Example 2
County Cavan World War I Roll of Honour Duration of project : April 2011-July 2012 Cost of project: €11,000 Project supported by PEACE III Programme managed for the Special EU Programmes Body by the County Cavan Peace III Peace and Reconciliation Partnership Origins of Roll of Honour 1998 Peace Park and Round Tower in Messines Belgium was opened by President Mary MacAleese , Queen Elizabeth II and King Albert II. Commitment given to compile a Roll of Honour for each County in the Republic of Ireland. In 2010 and 2011 Cavan Peace Partnership funded through the SEUPB Peace III Programme two trips to the WW I Battlefields of Belgium and Northern France ,over 50 people from County Cavan attended. Participants on trips to Messines, Ypres and the Somme deeply moved by the scale and the role of Irish men in WW1 Working Group set up to discuss ways in which the memory of those Cavan men who died in WW1 could be honoured. Two main aims: Statue to be erected in Cavan town to remember the men and a Roll of Honour to be complied. Faugh a Ballagh’ Statue commissioned and erected in Cavan town in 2011.Funded by SEUPB Peace III programme. Working Group collaborated with the sculptor in design and naming of statue Origins of Roll of Honour Contd. Researcher engaged by Cavan County Council Local newspaper, radio and internet campaign seeking names and information. Peace Partnership recognised at the outset the need for balanced recognition of past deeds on all sides. Information slow to begin with but gradually built a momentum and great interest generated. Stories of granduncles, great grand uncles started to emerge. Lance Corporal Hugh Murphy buried in Laleu France grave not visited in 90 years from Ireland but Laleu commune have a memorial ceremony every year at his graveside since 1919. Mrs Margaret Naylor died in cross fire on the 29th April 1916 the same day her husband John was killed in action with the Royal Dublin Fusiliers Roll of Honour unable to fully capture the human side of the tragedy and horror of WW1 652 Cavan men named on Roll of Honour but the estimated figure of Cavan men who died in WW1 closer to 800 160 Cavan men killed from April 1916 to end of November 1916, 41 on the 1st two days of the Somme alone. Total national figures for Easter 1916 466 deaths including 254 civilians. Cavan fatalities in Easter rising 1916 :1, Cavan casualties in War of Independence and Civil War :10. Need for balance in commemoration and to recognise the deeds and sacrifices of all our traditions. Need to reflect on this forgotten portion of our history in Cavan and look how we embed it into our shared psyche and place it within context to the Easter 1916 and 1912 Ulster covenant commemorations. Launch 1st July 2012 Cavan Town