The struggle for independence wasn't just happening in the hills or in big battles; it was inside people's homes, in the middle of the night.
Cornelius (Con) and Jeremiah (Jerry) Delaney were members of the 1st Battalion, Cork No. 1 Brigade of the IRA. On a night of terror in December 1920, British Auxiliaries broke into their family home on Dublin Hill and shot them in their beds without trial. Their deaths occurred during the same period as the Burning of Cork, and their funeral procession through the smoldering ruins of the city became a powerful symbol of defiance against British rule. Today, they are remembered through an annual commemoration at the Dublin Hill Memorial Monument.
The "unofficial IRA GPO" was a small newsagent shop located at 13 Brunswick Street (now 4 St Augustine Street) run by sisters Nora and Sheila Wallace. Far from being just a shop, it served as a vital intelligence hub and meeting place for high-ranking Republican leaders like Terence MacSwiney and Thomas MacCurtain. Sheila Wallace was a rare example of a woman holding a formal rank as a staff officer in the Cork No. 1 Brigade, and the shop was used to coordinate messages and distribute republican literature right under the noses of British authorities.
Local businesses served as the "nervous system" of the rebellion by acting as secret arms dumps and hideouts. For example, the Duggan sisters ran a flower shop on Parliament Street that was used to store grenades and hardware for the IRA. Even after authorities forced the shop to close, the sisters kept the keys and provided them to the 2nd Battalion so the vacant building could continue to function as a secret military base. This highlights how women and civilian business owners were essential to the logistical success of the movement.
The explosion at Watercourse Road in November 1920 revealed the dangerous "shadow war" being fought in civilian areas. An illegal ammunition factory was hidden in the upper room of O’Leary’s Undertakers, where IRA volunteers worked as carpenters making coffins as a cover. A grenade accidentally detonated, killing young volunteers William Mulcahy and Denis Christopher Morrissey. This event underscored the extreme risks rebels took while manufacturing munitions in cramped, secret urban spaces during martial law.
The British government used a combination of psychological warfare, official reprisals, and martial law. In December 1920, they imposed Martial Law on Cork, giving the military the power to execute people for aiding rebels. They also published threats in local newspapers warning citizens that sheltering "rebels" would lead to their homes being burned. "Official" reprisals involved the deliberate burning of houses in towns like Midleton following IRA ambushes, a tactic intended to break the community's support for the movement.
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