In this issue:
President Higgins to lead State commemoration of 1913 Lockout
Ballot of members in Dublin Bus completed
Dublin Central TDs call on Minister to meet with community workers’ union
Catholic Church threatens injunction against former employee
Listen to Radio Liberty Online
Rally in support of Milne Foods workers
Treatment of staff by Sunday Business Post management condemned
Industrial action at Crowley’s Pharmacy in Mahon, Co. Cork
Education & Development Support Scheme
SIPTU members in G4S vote to accept restructuring proposals
Supporting Quality campaign marks a successful first year
SIPTU condemns the use of strike-breakers by Kells Credit Union
Misrepresentation of SIPTU position on free travel indicates wider agenda
BCD workers to protest at All Ireland Football Semi-Final
SIPTU members in Marks and Spencer vote for strike action
1913-2013: The Hundred Years War Over Union Recognition
Commemoration of 1913 Sligo Dock Strike
1913 Lockout Exhibition
Dún Laoghaire commemorates 1913
A Weekend of Conversations
The Risen People By James Plunkett - PEG Drama Production
Support workers in Ireland
Lockout determined future of Irish society
The social economy and trade unions
Finance under foot
The Gathering Charity Run
From Dark Rosaleen to Dark Cow – in Memory of Francis Ledwidge
The James Connolly Songs of Freedom Band
Fair Hotels
Larkin Credit Union
SIPTU Membership Services - Travel Insurance
SIPTU Basic English Scheme
VHI Affordable Plans
Fair Hotel
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From Dark Rosaleen to Dark Cow – in Memory of Francis Ledwidge

(Text of speech by Padraig Yeates at Wreath laying and Poetry Reading in Memory of Francis Ledwidge, Poet and Soldier, National War Memorial Gardens, Islandbridge, Dublin, 4th August, 2013)

4th August, 2013, is 99 years to the day since Britain declared war on Germany in the conflict that became known as the First World War. It would devastate much of France and Belgium, northern Italy, the Balkans, Central and Eastern Europe, as well as destroy the Ottoman Empire, give birth to the Soviet Union and the international Communist movement, and facilitate the rise of the United States to super power status.


An estimated ten million people died in Europe alone and it created the conditions that led to the Second World War and the deaths of 50 million more across Eurasia within a generation. Most of the crises and conflicts we face today can trace their roots to the ‘guns of August’.

Francis Ledwidge was one of those millions of combatants who died in the Great War. He was ‘Killed In Action’ on 31 July, 1917, one of a group of Royal Inniskillings designated to work as pioneers on communications trenches and roads in preparation for the Third Battle of Ypres. ‘Killed In Action’ is of course a euphemism designed to obscure the obscenity of industrialised warfare and production line slaughter. He was reputedly drinking a cup of tea and smoking a cigarette when a German artillery shell sent him and four comrades into oblivion. It was probably as good a death as anyone could hope for on the Western Front in 1917, and my father used to say you weren’t supposed to hear the one that got you.

He endured similar bombardments in Italy and described them as the most terrifying experiences of his life. The silence that followed the shells was quickly filled with the screams of the injured and the maimed. The generation that fought in British Army uniform between 1939 and 1945 had far fewer illusions about war and less appetite for it than their predecessors of 1914. Their main objective was to come out the other side in one piece.

Download the full speech here

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