Ireland's Unfinished Revolution: An Oral History by Kenneth Griffith


Ireland's Unfinished Revolution: An Oral History
Title : Ireland's Unfinished Revolution: An Oral History
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 1570982538
ISBN-10 : 9781570982538
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 375
Publication : First published December 31, 1982

A unique first-hand account of the civil war that split Ireland in two.


Ireland's Unfinished Revolution: An Oral History Reviews


  • Mike Clinton

    I stumbled upon this book in my favorite used bookstore in Philly--A House of Our Own, near the Penn campus--and am surprised that it's not more well-known than it apparently is (or was to me, at least.) It weaves together an overview of the forces and events that produced and followed the 1916 Easter Rising through the end of the Irish Civil War, the personal experiences of nine people (including two women, a group often overlooked in accounts by the time this one was published in 1982), and a charged political statement supporting the "unfinished revolution" to reunify the six counties of Northern Ireland with the counties of the Republic. The book came out of a TV documentary that Kenneth Griffith produced, the backstory to which is itself an interesting look into British sensitivities about the Irish question during the 1970s; the interviewees featured in the documentary had far more to say than could be contained within the documentary itself, so this volume was conceived in collaboration with American author Timothy O'Grady to make those memories available. The result feels very much like a gathering of old vets of Ireland's 1916-24 revolution relating their stories in an intimate setting rich in language, humor, and anecdotes, with Griffith the sympathetic moderator providing the wider context. It's only part of the story, of course, with very little representing the perspectives of the British, Unionists, or even simply those Irish not nearly as politically engaged as those featured here. That doesn't detract from the book at all but rather makes it one valuable piece of a much larger complex puzzle that can be put together in any number of ways.

  • iosephvs bibliothecarivs

    One day as I was strolling through the used history book section of our local entertainment store, I came across Ireland's Unfinished Revolution: An Oral History (previously titled 'Curious Journey: An Oral History of Ireland's Unfinished Revolution'). It stood out because there are not many Irish history books to be found in my town. I took a look at it and was interested. It contained the first-hand experiences of several prominent participants in Ireland's Anglo-Irish War of 1916-1921 and Civil War of 1922-1923. I went home and considered it for a few days.

    By the time I returned, I had discovered that one of the authors, Kenneth Griffith, was the same man who had made the Michael Collins documentary Hang Up Your Brightest Colours which I saw a little over a year ago. I didn't really like Hang Up... but it was good to see once. When I flipped through the pages of this book again, I found that there were reminiscences of people who interacted with Collins. I was especially interested in the interviews with David Neligan, one of Collins' spies in the Castle. Now I knew I had to have it. I purchased it and began reading it right away even though I was already in two other books at the time.

    If you recognize and accept the authors' bias (they believe very strongly that the British should never have been in Ireland), then you can enjoy this book for what it is: first person narratives interlaced with historical information. It's a fantastic way to write history and makes for very compelling reading. This is the best book I have read on this period of Irish history.

    The oral history segments are extremely fascinating and the book is worth the price just for these. The participants (now old at the time of interview in the late 1970s) relate where they were when the Irish Republic was declared during Easter week, 1916, what they thought of the surprising 1918 election and the formation of the First Dáil, how they helped as the guerrilla war with Britain broke out, interesting insights into Collins and De Valera, and why they chose the side they did during the Civil War. Several times when reading these narratives, I was deeply moved by the speakers' honest accounts of the troubles, trials, politics and of the blood and violence of daily life during this period.

    Perhaps the most devastating of these accounts was Sean Harling's story of how he decided on which side to fight at the outbreak of the Civil War:

    'On the morning the shelling of the Four Courts started, me father woke me up around six o'clock and he said, "Sean, there's heavy firing in town. Listen to it." So I got up and I heard the big gun going off. I dressed meself; I put on me breeches and the leggings of me uniform and me Sam Browne belt, and I put a civilian coat on over it and went out.

    'Now when a civil war breaks out, it's brother against brother, and there's no saying what way you'd go. It all depended on which crowd you got into. That was the feeling of most of the lads. They were just depressed that there was any split at all, you see. So anyway, when I went out that morning I was in the middle of the Phibsborough Road, and I went up the road instead of down. Had I gone down the road the first group I would have met would have been the Free State side, and I probably would have fought with them. Going up the road I would be going towards O'Connell Street, to the Republicans, and I would fight with them. But my mind wasn't made up as to what I would do until I found meself in the Republican group. So I took part in the Civil War as a Republican' (page 285).

    When belligerents are decided by who you happen to meet in the street, you know there's an awful civil war coming, and it was indeed devastating. To read these memories takes you closer to the events than you could ever be otherwise.

    I highly recommend this book. It is one-of-a-kind and now holds a treasured place on my bookshelf.

  • Emma McDonnell

    This is unlike other history books in that it was originally meant to be a documentary for British television. In 1976 the author interviewed 9 Irish particpants in the Easter Rising, the Anglo-Irish War and/or the Civil War. Some of them are well known to any Irish history buff (Tom Barry), some you may never have heard of. I can only say it was an honour to read the words of these 9 amazing men and women.

  • Keith Mckenna

    A very good book seen through the eyes of different protagonists involved in the easter rising. outstanding foreward by Kenneth Griffiths

  • Jessica Raab

    Captivating look at Irish history from multiple first-person perspectives. A bit confusing at times, but that's likely due to the fact that these interviews were done with the idea that they'd be turned into a documentary, not a book.

  • Nia

    Interviews of nine former IRA members about their experiences from 1919-1922, primarily. Michael Collins, Lloyd George, De Valera. Republicans vs. Free State: the real tragedy of Irish history was the unnecessary civil war. British imperialism, divide and rule. Definite sympathetic bias for republicans.