Militaria Archive

Pt 2. Independence era Scrapbool of Comdt. Vincent Byrne, E Company, 2nd Battalion, Dublin Brigade, Old IRA.

Scrapbook from the private collection of Comdt. Vincent Byrne, E Company, 2nd Battalion, Dublin Brigade, Old IRA. Vincent Byrne kept this scrapbook throughout his life and passed it on to his nephew in the early 1990's. It contains newspaper cuttings from the Easter Rising, Irish War of Independence and Irish Civil War and also from the period up to the late 1960's. Contained within are christmas cards, notes, letters, postcards, photographs and newspaper clippings. Included also within it's pages is a copy of the 'Irish War News - The Irish Republic' Vol 1. No .1, printed on the first day of the Easter Rising. Vincent (Vinny) Byrne Joined the Irish volunteers in 1915 at the age of 14. He fought in E Company, 2nd Battalion during the 1916 Easter Rising at Jacobs Biscuit Factory on Bishop Street, Dublin seeing for the first time a man killed by gunfire. At one point armed with a .22 rifle the 14 year old Byrne held 2 policemen prisoner. He fought here alongside men such as Thomas MacDonagh, John McBride (a veteran of the Boer War) and Mick McDonnell (later leader of the Squad). After the surrender order he escaped and was arrested in a British Army sweep on the following Saturday. A group of the younger rebels were then held in Richmond Barracks (generally treated well in comparison to those at the Rotunda). One of the DMP men who fingerprinted him at Richmond Barracks was Detective Johnny Barton (later killed by Collins Squad on 29th November 1919). During questioning he was asked 'Why did I not join the British Army. I said I would be fighting for England then and not for Ireland.' Due to their age they were released the following Friday evening (the older men being deported to Stafford Jail and then Frongoch Concentration Camp in Wales). In his statement to the Bureau of Military History he noted that 'It might be well to mention that, strangely enough, in later years I was officer commanding this same barracks where I was held prisoner.' Vincent Byrne went on the fight with Michael Collins counter intelligence unit 'The Squad', taking part in the standard guerrilla warfare activities of intelligence gathering, raids for weapons, vehicles and supplies, ambushes, attacks and assassinations all throughout the Irish War of Independence (January 1919 - Truce July 1921). He fought on the Free State side of the Irish Civil War and left the Irish Free State Army at the time of the ‘Army mutiny’ of 1924.

Speaking at the Abbey Theatre, Dublin, Sunday night October 17, on the occasion of a production of Terence MacSwiney's drama, 'The Revolutionist,' Mr. Richard Mulcahy T.D. said : Terry MacSwiney was our arch-soldier, because he was our arch-citizen and it was as our arch-citizen he laid down his life. He laid down his life because he would not be debarred from carrying out those duties of citizenship which he believed a good citizen should carry out. We in Ireland are on the threshold of big things - whether they are big things of peace of big things of war - and unless we face the future with the realisation that every one of us has certain duties in it, we are not going to win in the future. The few men doing great things could be undermined if the people of Ireland did not realise that those great things are to be done, and if the people of Ireland as a whole do not make themselves one in the work and in the outlook of these people.
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