Pencil drawings from Western Front
Album of pencil drawings believed to have been made in 1918/1919.
This album was acquired at auction in 1999. It contains high quality drawings of the Western Front. The pencil drawings are believed to have been added in 1918/1919.
There are initials on the book which look like EMD - possibly the artist?
CONTRIBUTOR
Janet Abrahall
DATE
1917 - 1918
LANGUAGE
eng
ITEMS
16
INSTITUTION
Europeana 1914-1918
PROGRESS
METADATA
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From Ballycumber to the Western Front
16 Items
This story is about Denis Geraghty from Ballycumber, County Offaly (formerly the Kings County), Ireland. Denis joined the Connaught Rangers in November 1915 in Athlone Barracks, Ireland and he was killed in action near the town of Strazeele on the 13th of April 1918. He was my Mother's uncle, her Father's youngest and only brother. He was almost the forgotten one of the family as he was killed and buried far from home. Following the death of my own Mother I contacted a cousin of mine who had some postcards that Denis had sent from France. With these I started the research that resulted in producing this story of his short military career. Hopefully by telling his story in this way he will be remembered by family members and others for generations to come. May he rest in peace. || Memoir with text and images (16 pp) || || PDF Slides, Memoir with text and images (16 pp) || Tullamore, County Offaly, Ireland. || Memoir || Denis Geraghty
A Soldier's Diary from the Western Front
42 Items
This diary was found in a charity shop in North Yorkshire in c 1994. It lists the movements of the 10 KRRC (10th Battalion, King's Royal Rifle Corps)from 19 September 1914 to 3 August 1915 with a journal, possibly written in retrospect, from 18 April 1915 to 9 May 1915. (There is also a type-written note in the front dated 30 November 1917). The writer anglicises place names, 'Frelingham' and 'Armentierres'. The note book has also been used as a music theory exercise book. There are no clues as to the writer's name or home. || War diary || || A notebook kept as a war diary by a soldier in the 10th Battalion of the King's Royal Rifle Corps, also used as a music note book. || Diary || A soldier's war diary
Sheehan O'Connor family from Cork -- seven served on the Western Front
1 Item
Captain DD Sheehan (1873-1948) was a journalist, barrister and Member of Parliament (MP) for mid-Cork, Ireland (1901-1918). He served as Captain in the 9th Royal Munster Fusiliers (RMF) (Service) Battalion of the 16th (Irish) Division and the 2nd (Regular) RMF Battalion, with the British Expeditionary Force on the Western Front in France 1915-16. Daniel Desmond Sheehan, despite being aged 41 and father of a large family, enlisted at Buttevant, county Cork in November 1914. Born near Kanturk, county Cork, his family suffered eviction in 1880 during the Land War. He championed from an early age the labourers’ cause and co-founded in 1894, the Irish Land and Labour Association, later its President. Standing on a Labour platform, he was elected in 1901 as youngest Irish MP at Westminster. DD Sheehan actively implemented the 1903 (Wyndham) Land (Purchase) Act and the 1906 Labourers (Ireland) Act, providing ten thousands of cottages on an acre of land for rural farm workers. In 1909 he launched with William O’Brien MP a new political movement, the “All-for-Ireland League”, which sought an All-Ireland Dominion Home Rule settlement with the inclusion of Ulster. At the outbreak of the Great War in August 1914, DD Sheehan and his party voiced enthusiastic support for the Allied cause in Europe. In the spring and summer of 1915 he undertook the organisation of three special voluntary enlistment campaigns in Limerick, Clare and Cork and received Captaincy and company command in July. Sheehan served during 1915/16 in the trenches with the 9th RMF Battalion, which he had largely raised, on the Loos Salient in France. He was joined by six family members, including his three sons, 2nd Lieutenants Daniel J, Martin J and Michael J Sheehan. His two elder sons were killed on active service: Daniel with the Royal Flying Corps (RFC) piloting a Sopwith Pup, killed near Noyelles, France, in May 1917 and Martin as observer and gunner in a Royal Aircraft Factory R.E.8, killed near Cambrai, France, in October 1918. DD Sheehan’s brother-in-law Sergeant Robert O’Connor (Leinster Regiment) was killed July 1917 at Passchendaele in Belgium. His daughter Eileen (VAD nurse and ambulance driver) and his brother Private John Sheehan (Irish Guards) were severely disabled. His third son Michael, who enlisted at aged 15 1/2 (RMF), was at 16 the youngest commissioned officer in the army on the Western Front and was twice wounded (later Brigadier Michael J Sheehan OBE CBE, Indian Army, WW2 Burma Campaign). Whilst in the trenches at the front, DD Sheehan contributed a series of widely quoted articles in his own name to the Daily Express, Irish Times and Cork Constitution newspapers. Re-assigned for health reasons at the end of 1916 to the 3rd RMF (Reserve) Battalion, he acted as a Lewis gun and Anti-Gas Instructor. Due to ill-health and partial deafness from shell fire, DD Sheehan was de-commissioned from the army in January 1918, retaining the honorary rank of Captain. During the 'Irish Conscription Crisis' in April, he unequivocally denounced the British intention of imposing conscription on Ireland, in a dramatic anti-conscription speech made in the House of Commons at Westminster. He and his party did not contest the December 1918 Irish general election. Intimidations by militant extremists who opposed his earlier recruiting, necessitated that he and his family abandon their Cork city home and move to London, where Sheehan had just failed to gain election for Labour. After earlier circumstances ceased to be an impediment following the end of the Civil War, the family returned to Dublin in 1926, as his ailing wife died. || A museum display case (item 1) showing a collection of memorabilia, photographs and artefacts, relating to the seven Sheehan O'Connor family members who served in the Great War on the Western Front, followed by 24 photographs (items 2 to 25) with details of their individual stories.