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This is a great watch. As Patrick Cooney from the campaign to save Moore Street asks, in 2016 will visiting world leaders find the laneways of 1916 or a shopping centre?

While I find it difficult to pay too much heed to politicians of green or blue stock, the relatives and campaigners, along with ordinary Dubliners going about their business, make this video an excellent insight into the issues. Lord Mayor Gerry Breen seems more concerned about a retail gap on O’Connell Street than Moore Street. “I come from a business background” he notes, before asking “how relevant is 1916 to the Facebook generation?”

This is the same Gerry Breen who recently welcomed anti begging laws in the city centre by noting:

I would have encountered eight beggars on a short walk through the city now I’m seeing just one. Begging is much more random now and it is not as pervasive or aggressive as it was before the new Act came into force.

Over 4,000 people have joined the ‘Save 16 Moore Street’ group on Facebook. Why don’t you become 4,013?

The annual ‘Anarchist Bookfair’ is always a great event, taking place this year once more at Liberty Hall. In the past, the event has seen visiting speakers as diverse as historian Martha Ackelsberg and former blackpanter Ashanti Alston.

This year another diverse range of stalls and talks will make up the bookfair. PM Press, AK Press the Irish Labour History Society and more besides will be there on the day selling books, but the talks are always the real highlight of the event.

Among them will be a talk from Gabriel Kuhn, author of Soccer vs. The State, a work which provides a very different look at The Beautiful Game.

More details on the event are available here.

I’d been meaning to take the camera with me some day and photograph some of the more interesting pieces of street art appearing in West Dublin suburbia….

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8ft by 5ft. Can also double up at musical performances, though the choir aren’t up to much these days.

Everybody’s Drinkin’

Andy Quirke, uber rich boy with loads of times on his hands, brings out a surprisingly catchy and well made spoof music video looking at the two extremes of Dublin social life.

11,000 views in just under a fortnight so far but with last night’s showing on the Republic of Telly, I’ll reckon it’s going to be a big one.

Great credit is due to the North Inner City Folklore Project for its efforts to preserve, protect and cherish the history of its local area. Terry Fagan of the Project has written on everything from local republican women to the madams of Monto, and last year the group put a well deserved plaque on the home of the Connolly siblings of the Irish Citizen Army.

Yesterday, the group unveiled a new plaque, this time to Patrick Heeny who composed the music for The Soldiers Song. It can be seen on the side of the flat complex by Railway Street. Like the Connolly plaque, it’s great to see plaques outside of the city centre itself and in areas like this. The turnout of locals showed how appreciated the efforts of Terry Fagan and the North Inner City Folklore Project are in the area.

Prior to the plaque being unveiled, relatives of James Connolly and young Molly O’Reilly re-enacted the raising of the green flag at Liberty Hall. Writing on the decision to raise the flag over Liberty Hall in 1916, James Connolly wrote:

We are out for Ireland for the Irish. But who are the Irish? Not the rack-renting, slum-owning landlord; not the sweating, profit-grinding capitalist; not the sleek and oily lawyer; not the prostitute pressman – the hired liars of the enemy. Not these are the Irish upon whom the future depends. Not these, but the Irish working class, the only secure foundation upon which a free nation can be reared.

I couldn’t help but think of his words watching the government ‘parade’ on Sunday.

The likes of the Folklore Project empower ordinary people to read and research history. Long may it continue.

Our report from the unveiling of the Connolly siblings plaque in 2010 can be read here.

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…..and this is the League Cup!

May Day, May Day

While the CHTM! team will be in O’Byrnes this May 1st for the Sounds of Resistance gig, it’s interesting to see that other club promoters are tapping into labour/socialist imagery for their publicity, namely the Mongo all-dayer in Tripod.

I’m literally about to hop in a car to follow my beloved Pats up to Derry, will this lad be there? Who knows.

Taken on the northside of the Liffey, I’m calling this one an agent provocateur!

Previous ‘Plaques of Dublin’:
The Eagle Tavern, Lord Edward Carson.

With the weekend that is upon us, the latest in the ‘Plaques of Dublin’ series is a plaque related to the 1916 rebellion.

Sean Healy is one of the most remarkable characters in the story of the Easter rising, being the youngest casualty on the republican side. Born in Phibsboro in 1901, he was to lose his life in the same corner of the city he hailed from. He had been educated at Saint Peter’s National School in the area, and as early as thirteen was working as an apprentice to his father in the pluming trade.

Today, one finds the Volunteer hat of Sean Healy in the Soldiers and Chiefs exhibition in Collins Barracks. At fifteen, it is difficult to picture any youngster as a ‘soldier’ of course.

There is great detail of Sean’s experiences in the rebellion on the website of the National Graves Association where it is noted:

All day on Monday he waited expectantly for his mobilisation order. But he waited in vain, as the Fianna executive had decided that the younger boys were not to be called upon. On Tuesday morning he decided to go out and fight without orders. So he made his way across town and reported for duty to Commandant Thomas MacDonagh in Jacob’s Factory, near Aungier Street.

Some hours later he was given an urgent dispatch to carry to the officer commanding at Phibsboro Bridge. On his way he stopped at his home to let his mother know that he was safe and well. He left home within a few minutes and he had travelled only a short distance when he was shot at Byrne’s Corner, Phibsboro.

In Ben Novik’s excellent Conceiving Revolution, a study of Irish nationalist propaganda during the first World War, it is noted that early in 1917 a work entitled The Fianna heroes of 1916 was published by Cumann na mBan. This work featured an image of Sean on its back cover, and it was noted:

Young boys, little more than children, cheerfully offered their services and their lives in the sacred cause.

Image of Sean Healy from Ben Novik's Conceiving Revolution

Today, young Sean is buried in Glasnevin Cemetery, not far from his home.

Inside Clery’s, 1932

Clerys Mechanical Zoo, bargain basement and more besides. A great gem uploaded to Youtube by timminspj .

Living For The Weekend.

Ci is off to Yeats Country on Friday, but for me it’s Derry. Our northside and southside clubs are both out of town. Any visit to Sandino’s, the Bogside and Derry city is worth taking so I’m excited about that. The Irish Taliban have seen to it you can’t enjoy a drink tomorrow, so if you’re one of us red and white Dublin 8 types hop in a car and come north.

The highlight of this weekend in Dublin has to be the Tivoli Jam. Graffiti, DJ’s, fun in the sun and some of the best Irish and international artists in the field. It runs Saturday in the Tivoli carpark from 12-6, I’ll be there post-work from about 3. Say hello.

The good people at Crackbird are running their new Saturday night special again. 2 quid beers and 5 quid for chicken AND beer? Crackbird, never leave us.

For those lucky enough to still have jobs and money to waste on nice things, Urban Outfitters are doing a Good Friday Party, with 20% off all clothes and free beers in the shop. Can’t go wrong with that really.

If you can over the weekend, get down to The Art Park, “Dublin’s largest outdoor visual arts screen”, which is showing ‘Maser is Home Made’ – a six-minute graffiti projection by Maser. It’s down by the back of the Convention Centre.

With the weekend that is in it, there are events around the city to mark the anniversary of the 1916 rising. My picks of these would be the new ‘Blood Upon The Rose’ exhibition at Kilmainham Gaol, the walking tour of Dublin with Bill O’Brien on Good Friday organised by éirígí and the unveiling of a plaque on Monday to Patrick Heeney, with a midday meet up at Liberty Hall. That plaque is being unveiled by the North Inner City Folklore Project, a group I have a great deal of time and respect for. Researching my own family, I’d love someone on this side of the Liffey to match their passion!