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Michael Collins remembered..

Aladdin

Well-Known Member


Commemorations yesterday of and at Beal na Blath .. the site of Collin's assassination.




Funeral of Michael Collins



Let's hope the government makes an effort to remember him properly.



Emmett Dalton remembers the civil war.


Michael Collins The Final Hour and Béal na Bláth

Film about the final moments ans movements of Michael Collins.

Eyewitness Account of Michael Collins Death, 1965

Eye witness account of the ambush.

In Memory Of Michael Collins (1922)
Pathe news on Michael Collins.

For all who wish to remember the massive contribution Michael Collins made to Ireland.

20220822_112756.jpg

Vilified by some.
Beatified by others.
... many believe he knew he was signing his own death warrant by signing the treaty.

Whatever was felt about him...he deserves recognition for his contributionto Ireland's fight for freedom and his death 100 years ago is being commemorated.
 
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Commemorations yesterday of and at Beal na Blath .. the site of Collin's assassination.




Funeral of Michael Collins



Let's hope the government makes an effort to remember him properly.



Emmett Dalton remembers the civil war.


Michael Collins The Final Hour and Béal na Bláth

Film about the final moments ans movements of Michael Collins.

Eyewitness Account of Michael Collins Death, 1965

Eye witness account of the ambush.

In Memory Of Michael Collins (1922)
Pathe news on Michael Collins.

For all who wish to remember the massive contribution Michael Collins made to Ireland.

View attachment 339058

Vilified by some.
Beatified by others.
Sent to his death by Dev...and many believe he knew he was signing his own death warrant by signing the treaty.

Whatever was felt about him...he deserves recognition for his contributionto Ireland's fight for freedom and his death 100 years ago is being commemorated.

recognition for his contribution to ireland's fight for freedom, and to the civil war in which he died.
 

An hour by hour account of the final hours of Michael Collins' life.

cropped_michael_collins___getty.jpg

And an article detailing how Michael Collins feared informers more than British Intelligence.


“The English Secret Service in Ireland,” Collins said, “with its unlimited supplies of money, had been unquestionably able to reach men of influence and position within our organization. Most of these traitors met their just desserts down through all the years.”

“Thus,” he continued, “every Irish youth for many generations had known in a general way of the English spy system, and how it had been always tremendously strengthened by the help of renegade Irishmen. But up to the end of 1918, we had done little to combat it.”

The size of the impending job did not frighten Collins.

“The English Secret Service in Ireland for centuries had broken every movement ever attempted by Irishmen to make Ireland an independent nation. The espionage staff of the British forces of control in Ireland, operating from their headquarters in Dublin Castle, was a body to which England had every right to point with pride. It was a costly organization to maintain, but it was maintained regardless of cost—the annual total in pre-war times having been approximately £250,000. This was the expenditure when there was little or no talk of an Irish revolutionary movement. Following the outbreak of the world war, even before the Easter Week rising, the cost of administrating the spy system has been reckoned to have totaled a million pounds a year.
“Now the time had come to turn our attention to the most important part of our job—the smashing of the English Secret Service. My final goal was not to be reached merely by beating it out of existence—I wanted to replace it with a better, and an Irish Secret Service. The way to do this was obvious, and it fell naturally into two main parts—making it unhealthy for Irishmen to betray their fellows, and making it deadly for Englishmen to exploit them.”

Then Collins said something amazing: “It took several months to accomplish the first job—actually the most important part—and hardly more than a month to disrupt the morale of the English Secret Service, to a point at which its efficiency ceased to be the proud thing that it always had been.”

In other words, handling the local informers had been a tougher job than disrupting the British Secret Service.

Spies beware!​

Collins wrote about his “two most urgent problems”:

Number one “beating the English Secret Service until it was powerless.”

Number two“cleaning our own house until the last traitor Irishman had been identified and fittingly dealt with”

“It was a job of Herculean proportions,” Collins said, “and until and unless it was done thoroughly, freedom could never come to Ireland.

“Before we could turn our attention to the Black and Tans,” Collins continued, “we had to create our own organization and first use it to clean English spies out of the Irish Republican Army. This alone was no easy task, but before it was finished there were left within the Irish Republican Army only men who were whole-heartedly prepared to give their lives for Ireland.”
“Within the inner circle of the Irish Republican Army,” said Collins, “there was no unanimity of opinion that the new policy was wise—men like [Cathal] Brugha and [Austin] Stack, who cherished the delusion that we could by the use of force alone drive the English army out of Ireland, having no faith in Irishmen’s ability to outwit English brains. Perhaps, because I, more than anyone else, disputed this admission of inferiority, it was upon my shoulders that the heavy task of solving this twofold problem was laid.”

With the banishment of the domestic spies and touts, Collins went for the big prize—the British Secret Service. On the morning of November 21, 1920, at exactly 9 a.m. Collins’ Squad, supplemented by members of the Dublin Brigade including future Taoiseach Seán Lemass, struck. The end result was the assassination of 14 British spies brought into Dublin from all over the Empire for the sole purpose of getting Michael Collins.
In essence, the war was over. Collins knew it and so did British Prime Minister David Lloyd George. It would take eight long months for the British to find a way to extradite themselves from their Irish quagmire. The truce of July 1921 would end the carnage and bloodshed and on December 6, 1921, Collins signed the Treaty that created the Irish Free State which would by 1949 morph into the Republic of Ireland.

After 700 years of British occupation, Collins had basically in little more than three years, between 1919 and 1921, brought freedom to most of Ireland. It took a draconian policy of terror on the part of Collins, but it, in the end, succeeded by eliminating spies, both domestic and foreign, from the streets of Dublin.

Quotes from Hayden Talbot's book Michael Collins Own Story..as referred to in the article.
 
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