Irishmen
and the Victoria Cross:
Going back to the reign of Elizabeth First, and her
banishment of the nobel Irishmen
from Ulster, known as the Flight
of the Earls, many of those men became high ranking officers in
armies and navies across the world.
The Ulster
Scots who immigrated to America
because of the same Elizabeth,
fought and helped to conquer large areas of the continent.
It must be something in their blood or the
home-made whiskey (Poteen) that gives them the ability to fight one and all.
Ireland also provided large numbers of men for the
British Army and many
distinguished themselves in battle.
The Victoria
Cross (VC) is the highest military decoration awarded for valour "in the face of the enemy"
to members of the British
Army, soldiers of the Commonwealth countries and previous British Empire
territories.
It is not surprising therefore that many
medals of the Victoria Cross have been awarded to Irishmen. The
following may put it into perspective:
The first ever VC was awarded to an
Irishman.
The first ever VC awarded to a civilian was
to an Irishman.
The award to the youngest VC was to an
Irishman.
The first VC awarded in the Battle of the
Somme was to an Irishman.
II was introduced in
January 1856 by Queen
Victoria to reward such acts of bravery during the Crimean War (which
included the infamous Charge of the Light Brigade) and has continued ever
since. It has been awarded to 1,353 people. One
in seven of those who received it were Irishmen (188).
Traditionally it is claimed for some
unknown reason that the medals are minted from gunmetal from Russian cannon captured at
Sevastopol in the Crimea
but recent discoveries tend to throw doubt on this story.
There are many avid collectors of these medals due to their rarity
and it is highly prized by the same collectors. The price of one at auction can
reach over £400,000 ($750,000).
Irishmen have always been a source of ‘cannon-fodder’ for the
British Army and hundreds of thousands of Irish men and boys have died over the
centuries. There must be something in the ‘Irish
Fighting Blood’ that gives them the edge on other nationalities.
One in particular comes
to the fore: Michael O’Leary
was born on 29th September 1890 in Macroom,
County Cork. During the First
World War he joined the First
Battalion of the Irish Guards of the British Army. He became a
Lance-Corporal and was fighting in France.
On 1st February 1915, at
Cuinchy, France
he was one of a storming party, which moved against the enemy’s barricaded
position. He rushed ahead of his troops and killed five Germans who were the first
line of defence. He continued across open ground for about sixty yards and
attacked the second line of defence. After killing three more of the enemy, he
then took two more as prisoners. In fact, O’Leary for all intents and purposes,
took the position by himself and saved the remainder of his comrades from being
fired upon. For his actions,
he was awarded the VC.
The British Army in the hope that his actions would result in many more fellow Corkmen (and Irishmen) joining-up published the above recruiting poster. His father, after making a speech in his hometown, in which he praised his son for his heroic bravery was asked to make further speeches on recruiting platforms. His employment did not last long.
The following is the
gist of his first and only speech from an official recruiting platform: "Mr. O’Leary senior, father of the
famous VC, speaking in the Inchigeela district, urged the young men to join the
British army. "If you don’t", he told them "the Germans will
come over here and will do to you what the English have been doing for the last
seven hundred years".
Needless to say his
speech never made the papers once the censors got their blue pens on the
article.
After the war he and his
family emigrated to Canada
where he became an Inspector in the Ontario
Provincial Police. He returned to England in 1925.
He enlisted in the Middlesex Regiment during World War Two and retired
as a major in 1945.
He died on 21 August 1961 aged 70.
Personally, I am a
pacifist and against War. Not the infantry and ordinary servicemen but
the Generals who are safely esconsed in distance quarters, well away from the
actual fighting.................
----------Mike-------
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