Flowers for Magdalenes 2017 – also Cork, Galway, Limerick, Waterford and Wexford – details to be announced

Alan Martin of Dublin Dockers Preservation Society wins Heritage Council’s Hero Award for Society’s outstanding photographic archive that records recent history of the port and its communities

 

The Heritage Council’s Heritage Hero Award celebrates someone who has made an outstanding contribution to the protection and promotion of heritage in Ireland. This year 86 individuals were nominated.

One of the winners was Alan Martin – Dublin Dock Workers Society, Dublin
Alan Martin always had a passion for preserving the industrial heritage of Dublin Docks. Initially he did this through his own photographs. Then he helped set up the Dublin Dock Workers Preservation Society, which appealed for old photographs. Alan maintains a website which displays the 3,500+ photographs that have been donated to date. Without him this rich heritage would have been lost.
www.bluemelon.com/alanmartin

 

Women at Work: The Role of the ILO

No More On The Docks – An Evening with Dockers Preservation Society

Saturday, February 11th, 2016, 8.30 pm The Ferryman, 35 Sir John Rogerson’s Quay

 

An evening of entertainment with song writer Paul O’Brien .Hosted by the Dublin Dock Workers Preservation Society and the East Wall History Group , this evening will celebrate the history and stories of the Docklands. We will remember the workforce and the community , the characters and the people who travelled from our shores , in an entertaining mix of songs and storytelling. In addition to the material based on experiences in the Dublin Docks, Paul has also travelled all over Port cities in Europe and has found inspiration in the similar histories found there . While celebrating the history of Dublin Port , we will also be remembering those who worked and lived there but are no longer with us.

This is a FREE EVENT , all welcome . If you have a song you’d like to perform or a story you’d like to share please fell free to take part.

Arbour Hill Prison and Graves

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Dalymount Park and Great War

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Outside Left Book Launch

Outside Left Launch

Under One Roof – Plaque to Newspaper Editor and Labour Leader

A commemorative historic plaque will be unveiled  this weekend at the birthplace of former newspaper editor Douglas Gageby  [he edited the Evening Press and later The Irish Times] and the former residence of trade union leader Jim Larkin [founder of the ITGWU, now Siptu] , in Ranelagh, Dublin 6.
gageby-larkin
Participants will include Jim Larkin’s grand-daughter, Mrs Stella McConnon; members of the Gageby family; Siptu president Jack O’Connor; Prof. John Horgan; and local historians. James Connolly’s great-grandson and local historian, Jim Connolly Heron, will also be  there.
The project has been funded by former Irish participants in the Journalistes en Europe fellowship programme in Paris. Mr Gageby had served as a member of the Journalistes en Europe Council.
The event is at:
54 Beechwood Avenue Upper – Ranelagh – Dublin 6
 at 2.30pm on Saturday,  14th January 2017

   THE FORGOTTEN HEROINES OF THE RISING by Joe Duffy (author of Children of the Rising)

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” History, despite its wrenching pain cannot be unlived , but , if faced with courage need not be lived again “

MAYA ANGELOU

Thankfully none of the 77 members of Cumann na mBan that have rightly featured so strongly in the revised narrative of the 1916 Rising centenary were killed during the rebellion.

They have been commemorated in 2016 by their central role in the RTE TV series, Rebellion, the Richmond Barracks project, the National Museum, books, murals; and a stunning bus montage by the acclaimed artist David Rooney which showed the ‘women of the rising’.

But as the centenary draws to a close and debate continues about how the “women of the rising ” were commemorated, “all failed to mention the 45 adult women who died violently in Easter Week 1916. In total at least 485 were killed in the Rising -the majority were civilians – 54 women and over 200 men.

(more…)

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