Mountains to Sea and Ennis Book Club Festivals

I had a wonderful time in lovely Ennis talking at the Ennis Book Club Festival about Rebel Sisters and my writing. Lots of teachers, librarians and history students came along. The Ennis Book Club Festival’s varied programme was really excellent, with something to appeal to everyone.

I wish that I could have stayed longer but I had to rush back up home to Dublin on the train as I was talking at the Readers’ Day in Airfield in Dundrum, which is part of the Mountains to Sea Festival.

Airfield is one of my favourite places and was a wonderful setting for the Readers’ Day with the beautiful backdrop of the estate and gardens. Once home to the Overend sisters, it is now enjoyed and visited by so many people. It was lovely to listen to my friends Sinead Moriarty and Sheila O’Flanagan talk about their writing before I joined the crowd for lunch.

It was great to meet and talk to fellow 1916 enthusiast and writer David Kenny whose own book The Splendid Years about his great-aunt Maire Nic Shiubhlaigh, the Abbey actress, has just been published. The two of us could have stayed all afternoon talking about 1916. It is very heartening to see such a huge interest in the lives of the women of 1916.

This Sunday, March 13th at 4.00pm the fun continues in the Pavilion Theatre in Dun Laoghaire for The Great Big Family Book Show as I join Eoin Colfer, Ryan Tubridy, Judy Curtin and Philip Ardagh to talk about our favourite children’s books!

Thank you so much to programme organisers Bert Wright and Sarah Webb from the Mountains to Sea DLR Book Festival for organising it all.

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GPO Book Launch

16livesspinesThe main hall of the GPO in Dublin was packed as O’Brien Press launched the last two books in the wonderful Sixteen Lives series, about the leaders and men of the Rising who were executed.

The GPO – what a fitting venue to launch Patrick Pearse by Ruan O’Donnell, Thomas Kent by Meda Ryan and 1916-The Rising Handbook by Lorcan Collins! Lorcan not only conceived the informative Sixteen Lives series, but also edited it – alongside Ruan O’Donnell. Justice Susan Denham did the honours by officially launching the books.

Everyone present could not help but reflect on the past and felt very privileged to be there. The GPO will soon open its new 1916 Visitors Centre. With huge numbers expected, it can be pre-booked. Authors Conor Kostick and Lorcan Collins are also kept very busy with the success of their Rebellion walking tours in Dublin.

Sixteen Lives has been a huge project undertaken by publishers O’Brien Press and they commissioned a number of academics, historians and a few 1916 relatives to write the individual books over the past few years.

The Sixteen Lives series is a excellent resource for all those interested in 1916 and to my mind, the collection should be an essential addition to every secondary school library in the country.

 

Pearse Museum and St. Enda’s Park

Pearse MuseumThis wonderful old Palladian style building was originally home to ‘Saint Enda’s’ (Scoil Eanna) the school for boys set up by 1916 leader Padraig Pearse. Visiting the headmaster Padraig Pearse’s study, the school-rooms, dormitory and the magnificent grounds, it is easy to see how it became the ideal place for Padraig Pearse to put his new type of Irish education for boys into practice. He first opened Saint Enda’s school in 1908 in Cullenswood House in Ranelagh, which was close to Dublin city centre.

A pioneering headmaster, Pearse believed that instead of just following the British curriculum, Irish boys and young men should learn about their own country; its history, geography, literature, poetry, music and culture. At St Enda’s he and his brother, the artist Willie Pearse, and teachers Thomas MacDonagh and Con Colbert set out to educate the boys in the Gaelic tradition. The pupils were bilingual and were made to feel proud of their Gaelic heritage and tradition and played traditional Irish games and sports.

Inside Pearse MuseumThe Gifford sisters first visited St Enda’s school with the well-known journalist and suffragette Norah Dryhurst. She introduced Muriel, Grace and Sidney to Thomas MacDonagh, telling him about how beautiful they were and advising him to marry one of the sisters. He gallantly remarked how difficult it would be to choose one of them.

In 1910, Padraig Pearse decided to move St Enda’s to a much larger property at The Hermitage in Rathfarnham. Situated on almost fifty acres of grounds there was plenty of space for the boys to play sports and for Countess Markievicz’s troop of boys, Na Fianna, to train and drill and exercise.

Garden Pearse MuseumThe Gifford sisters, like most of Padraig Pearse’s friends, were very impressed by his wonderful new school.

The Pearse Museum opens daily and gives a great sense of Padraig Pearse’s School and contains a selection of his writings and some Irish art work.

There is no entrance fee.

2 Dawson Street – Headquarters of the Irish Volunteers

2 Dawson Street Spring 2016

2 Dawson Street Spring 2016

It’s hard to believe that this modernised building was once headquarters of the Irish Volunteers. At one stage they had over a hundred thousand members training and drilling all around Ireland.

It was in 2 Dawson Street that at Thomas MacDonagh, Sean MacDiarmada, Padraig Pearse, Joseph Plunkett and many of their friends met and made their plans for the upcoming rebellion. The building was under constant surveillance by the police, who watched and marked down the comings and goings of the rebels.

Nellie Gifford ran her small employment bureau in a room there which Thomas MacDonagh and his fellow volunteers kindly agreed to let her use. She was determined to help young Irish men avoid being conscripted in to the British army. Nellie interviewed Michael Collins in her office in January 1916 and introduced him to Joe Plunkett, who offered Collins a job to help with the financial accounts and affairs of the Plunkett family.

It is easy to pass this building on Lower Dawson Street, across from Trinity College, without any awareness of its important place in history.

I am hoping that in time Dublin City Council will mark it with a plaque or some form of recognition.

Burke Medal and Rebel Sisters – number one bestseller

Marita with her Edmund Burke Medal from Trinity College DublinI was very honoured this month to receive the Burke Medal for Outstanding Contribution to Public Discourse through the Arts from the College Historical Society (the Hist) in Trinity College Dublin.

The Hist is the world’s oldest undergraduate society, and set the model for debating societies throughout the British Isles and United States; in Oxford, Cambridge, Harvard and Yale.

The College Historical Society was founded in 1770 and it was there that Edmund Burke, Theobald Wolfe Tone and Robert Emmet first made steps into political debate. Bram Stoker, Oscar Wilde and Samuel Beckett, were all former members and medallists.

The Hist is the venue for so many important speeches and debates in Trinity College and has been addressed by Douglas Hyde, Winston Churchill, Archbishop Desmond Tutu and many world renowned figures.

Marita and members of The Hist, Trinity College DublinPrevious Burke Medal recipients included writers W.B Yeats, Salman Rushdie, Jung Chang and Hilary Mantel and actor Ralph Fiennes.

Standing in Trinity College surrounded by such a history, I was very proud to receive the Edmund Burke Medal. I really enjoyed meeting and talking to the students of Trinity College and members of the Hist. I will always treasure this very special medal and honour.

There was more good news at the end of last week when I discovered that my new book, Rebel Sisters, is number one in the Original Fiction bestseller list in Ireland. Thank you so much to all my readers.