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Thomas Fleming | Royal Irish Regiment | 9777

Thomas Fleming 9777 War Certificate

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CONTRIBUTOR

Gerard Fleming

DATE

1908 - 1915-05-07

LANGUAGE

eng

ITEMS

5

INSTITUTION

Europeana 1914-1918

PROGRESS

START DATE
TRANSCRIBERS
CHARACTERS
LOCATIONS
ENRICHMENTS

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METADATA

Source

UGC

Contributor

europeana19141918:agent/c8dcca20f5ad50517e37550d21733c93

Date

1908
1915-05-07

Type

Story

Language

eng
English

Country

Europe

DataProvider

Europeana 1914-1918

Provider

Europeana 1914-1918

Year

1908

DatasetName

2020601_Ag_ErsterWeltkrieg_EU

Begin

1908

End

1915-05-07

Language

mul

Agent

Thomas William Fleming | europeana19141918:agent/5952f05a507c6ec5c45e3115b7423749
Gerard Fleming | europeana19141918:agent/c8dcca20f5ad50517e37550d21733c93

Created

2019-09-11T08:07:12.644Z
2020-02-25T08:02:56.554Z
2020-02-25T08:02:56.555Z
2012-05-08 22:04:13 UTC
2012-05-08 22:19:02 UTC
2012-05-08 22:19:08 UTC
2012-05-08 22:19:09 UTC
2012-05-08 22:19:22 UTC

Provenance

INTERNET

Record ID

/2020601/https___1914_1918_europeana_eu_contributions_4018

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Jeremiah Cullinane | Royal Irish Regiment | from Fermoy | Co. Cork

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Jeremiah Cullinane was born in Fermoy, Co. Cork, Ireland, in 1890 to a working class family, who had lived in the town for several generations. “Jerry” was the much revered elder brother of my grandfather, John Cullinane. Jerry joined the British Army in on 3rd December 1913, an almost natural consequence of living in a garrison town and being poor. Jeremiah died in 1927 in Manchester, England, after a short illness. Jerry enlisted in the Royal Irish Regiment (No. 7109402) and early in the war he was sent to Europe as a member of the British Expeditionary Forces who went to Belgium. Jerry was involved in the Battle of Mons and was captured. He was sent to Limburg an der Lahn, a prisoner of war camp near Frankfort in Germany. Limburg was the camp where men belonging to Irish Regiments were collected together. This is also the camp where Casement spoke to the men to encourage them to fight for the Germans. Casement met with very little success. Today there is a Celtic cross erected at the site to commemorate the Irish soldiers who lost their lives there. Jerry was put on farm labour duty. He seems to have been very well treated and got along with his farm supervisor. He had many photographs taken at this time and has also left us a photograph of the man we believe to be his farm supervisor. He seems to have integrated as much as possible with the German culture. An ardent Catholic, he appears to have been attended by a German Chaplin and was in possession of prayers and religious mementos in German. I have been unable to ascertain Jerry’s service records and surmise they were among those lost during enemy action in the Second World War. Jerry was mentioned in the local Fermoy papers as being one of three Fermoy men in Limburg. They included Lance Corporal, Peter Nevin, of Clancy Street, Jeremiah from Grattan Terrace and Private William Dooley, Royal Irish Regiment, who lost his fight for life after being exchanged for a German prisoner, having being shot through the lung at Mons. Private Dooley was given full (British) military honours and the Union Jack draped over his coffin. Jerry did survive the war but wrote (in pencil) to his sister Betty on 1st March 1927 to say he was in bad health and that if anything should happen he was “in credit” as he was on £2.00 per week out of hospital and 21 shillings in. He asked her to let him know if she was at Bath yet and signed it : your fond brother, Jer, 8B Ward, Withington Hospital, West Didsbury, Manchester. Jerry was buried by HE Townson and Bros. Tintern Avenue, Burton Road, West Didsbury in March 1927 for the sum of £11-5sch. £5 paid on account on 17 March and £6-5sh. on 24th March by Ministry of Pensions. His sister, Betty and brother, John, attended his funeral. Jeremiah was 36. He had qualified for 1914 Star, British War Medal and the Victory Medal. || Selection of photographs, newspaper reports, letters, certificate of discharge and medal index card

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A Piercestown soldier in the Royal Irish Regiment

3 Items

Michael Whelan was born at Hayestown, Piercestown in 1876, the son of John Whelan, a labourer and Bess Carroll. His service record was among those destroyed during the blitz in London in 1940 but he appears to have been a career soldier, joining the Royal Irish Regiment sometime after 1901. In 1911 he was serving in India. His niece, Mollie Whelan Murphy remembered him coming home on leave shortly before the outbreak of World War 1 to visit his fiancée whom he hoped to marry on his next home leave. His regiment deployed to France on August 13, 1914, departing Southampton and landing at Boulogne. After several gruelling military engagements, he was killed in action during the battle of La Bassée on October 19, 1914. His body was never recovered but his name is listed on the Le Touret Memorial in the Pas de Calais region of northern France. Coincidentally, another Michael Whelan, also in the Royal Irish Regiment and also from County Wexford (New Ross), was killed on the same day. Both Michael Whelans’ names appear beside each other on the Le Touret monument. || Photo of Michael Whelan in uniform; photos of Le Touret cemetery; photo inscription on memorial plaque; || || Photograph || Michael Whelan || Michael Whelan, Royal Irish Regiment || || 50.560066,2.7226779999999735 || Photograph || Le Touret Military Cemetery || || Both Michael Whelans remembered at Le Touret || Photograph || Michael Whelan

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Royal Irish Rifles

1 Item

painting of an officer of the Royal Irish Rifles in ceremonial dress

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