Category Archives: Places

The Last Days of Darrell Figgis (1)

Darrell and Millie Figgis spent almost a decade on Achill. They were friends of Emily and possibly knew her from before their arrival on the island in 1913. Emily was possibly related to Millie and may have shared a grandfather Richard McArthur, who was originally Northern Ireland as was Millie. Emily may have known Darrell Figgis too as her family were in the book trade as were some branches of his.

The Figgis’ and Emily lives were closely linked during the Revolutionary years and for a brief period after. The trio attended the historical funeral of Jeremiah O’Donovan Rossa at Glasnevin Cemetery in 1915, a well documented event. They even appear in photographs of the event, but not together.

 

When Figgis spent time in jail in 1918 Emily, who was a nurse by trade, took time out from her busy schedule to nurse Millie, when she was struck by the deadly virus, that claimed more that the previous war had. Millie who had a weak heart was not expected to live. Emily forthright as ever took it upon herself to write to the Chief Secretary of Ireland’s office to grant Millie’s husband compassionate leave from his internment. Unfortunately Emily’s word alone did not carry much weight as was noted by the authorities:

“Mrs Weddalll is a Nurse in the Meath Hospital; she belongs to Achill, and is a personal friend of Mrs Figgis. It is said that this Nurse holds Extreme Views.”

Darrell Figgis was granted leave and Millie survived. But the worst was yet to come.

 

Sources
Easter Rising Stories by Marcus Howard
Public Record Office of Britain CO 94/201/141

 

Islington

Edward Weddall took rooms at 64 Perthron Road in Islington, before his marriage to Emily. It is impossible to say how long he resided there or if the newlyweds lived there for a time. At the time Islington was a hub of activity for artists, writers and journalists, who Emily would have been right at home with, Edward less so.

Emily would certainly have enjoyed the vivacious artistic element of the area.

Map of the route of the Islington Carnival 1901

 

Sources
http://www.londontown.com/TransportInformation/LondonStreets/petherton_road_910.html
27 June 1900 – Islington Gazette – London, London, England

Emily M. Weddall 150

Happy Birthday Emily

On Wednesday 18th September 1867 at Windsor Terrace, Edenderry, Co. Offaly Emily Arabella Maynard Burke was born. Emily was the second daughter and third child of Rev, William John and Emily Burke. Her proud parents put the below announcement in the newspaper. On the day of her birth an incident took place across the Irish Sea in Manchester.

Three men William Philip Allen, Michael Larkin and Michael O’Brien were being transported to prison by van for their part in the Fenian Uprising the previous March. Fellow Fenians tried in vein to free them, but were fended off by the police. The trio, nonetheless were brought off to prison and put on trial. This incident is  documented in folklore as the ‘Smashing of the Van’ and the men, became the Manchester Martyrs.

Emily’s doting parents could not have predicted that the event that took place on their daughter’s first day of life would be related to another event that would take place nearly fifty years later involving their child. The Rising of 1916, would see Emily too being arrested and thrown into prison, but unlike the Manchester Martyrs she would be released to continue the fight for Irish freedom. Emily would receive another prison sentence and survive a attack by the Black and Tans, before Ireland gained independence from Britain. Besides being involved in the same cause there was a series of uncanny coincidences that matched the martyrs to significant events in Emily’s life.

Curious Coincidences

1867 was the year of the Fenian Uprising

The actual rising of that year took place in March , but failed for a number of reasons. It was the last big push to gain Ireland’s freedom before the Rising of 1916, in which Emily took part. In early 1867 the Fenians had planned to raid Chester Castle. The surprise attack was to go ahead in February but they were informed on and the operation was aborted. Undeterred the Finian Rising  went ahead in early March, but  it did not have the intended impact.

The Fenian rising of 1867 was the last of the rebellions against British rule in Ireland referenced in the Proclamation of 1916. In every generation the Irish people asserted their right to national freedom, the Proclamation declared, “six times during the past 300 years they have asserted it in arms”. Read more:

September 1867 was the month

After the raid the Fenians regrouped and a convention was held in Manchester in July, where Thomas J Kelly was elected as head of the organisation. They almost got away but after a nocturnal meeting held on the 10th September but were betrayed again and subsequently arrested. The three, William Philip Allen, Michael Larkin and Michael O’Brien were identified on evidence given by the informer, John Joseph Corydon.

!8th September 1867 was the day

On 18 September 1867 about 50 Irish Fenians, led by William Allen, attacked a prison van guarded by a large number of unarmed police at Hyde Road in Manchester, England. Their aim was to release two important Fenian prisoners, Thomas J. Kelly and Timothy Deasy.

23 November 1867

Another curious coincidence took place on November 23rd there was a mock funeral for the Manchester Martyrs, as they were now known, to Glasnevin Cemetery, but there was no corpses to bury, it was a symbolic act. For the day before William Philip Allen, Michael Larkin and Michael O’Brien, were hanged in Manchester, they would not have been given a Christian burial, but at best interred in an unmarked grave inside the prison walls as was customary for those that met their end at the gallows. Eighty-five years later to the day in 1952 Emily M Weddall died. She was buried close to the Republican plot at Glasnevin, adding another layer to the strange series of coincidences that links her to the Manchester Martyrs.

 

Coincidence or not Emily’s favorite song of all time was Bold Fenian Men.

Some died on the glenside, some died near a stranger
And wise men have told us their cause was a failure
But they fought for old Ireland and never feared danger
Glory O, Glory O, to the bold Fenian men

— From ‘The Bold Fenian Men’ by Peadar Kearney

Happy Birthday Emily!

Sources
https://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/in-every-generation-an-irishman-s-diary-on-the-fenian-rising-of-1867-and-the-battle-of-tallaght-1.2991204
http://www.historyireland.com/18th-19th-century-history/the-manchester-martyrs-a-victorian-melodrama
/https://comeheretome.com/2015/11/23/the-funeral-procession-without-a-corpse-the-manchester-martyrs-and-glasnevin-cemetery/

London 1905

On Edward and Emily Weddall’s marriage certificate the address 64 Petherton Rd Islington, London as his address. The sea captain it appears took rooms there before his marriage to Emily. As he was retired at that stage he may have made London his home for a time. His health may have not been great and living in the city with access to modern medicine and physicians had it’s benefits. He and his new bride Emily, may have lived there for some time, as they are unaccounted for until the following year, when they moved to Ireland.

The leafy suburb was mostly rented out as rooms in larger houses and was probably a transient community.The below advert in the Islington Daily Gazette, from the turn of the century is an example of the accomodation on Petherton Road.

Sources
Islington Gazette 27 June 1900

A Difficult Year

1894 was an anno horribilis (horrible year) for Edward Weddall, loosing both his mother and wife within a few months. Eliza, his mother died in January and Emily his wife in May, leaving little time recover from one until the other occurred. He had some sibling living around the Pocklington area of Yorkshire but by and large their existence was a cold comfort to the sea captain as he was at sea most of the time.

The first Mrs Weddall’s gravestone in Hedon, Yorkshire

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

His loneliness was not destined to last forever, thought it took him some time to remarry, more than a decade in fact. Before hand a strange twist of fate would lead him to the second Mrs. Weddall. Some time after his first wife’s death  Captain Weddall contracted a tropical disease that caused him to retire from the life at sea. It was during his recuperation at Menetone, in the French Riviera that he stumbled up the vibrant young Irish woman, Miss Emily Burke.

Emily was staying at Hotel Splendid, in Mentone, when she made a collection for the families of the victims of the Kingstown Lifeboat Disaster. The sea tragedy occurred the previous Christmas Eve. As a fellow seafarer Edward Weddall made a generous contribution to the fund, which Emily praised in her letter enclosing the collection to the Irish Times. He may have been stuck in some way by the lively young Irish nurse, whose generosity and empathy towards others stood out. Their romance was a slow burning one, which would take more than ten years till they married.

Photo of Burnby Churchyard. Courtesy of http://www.pocklingtonhistory.com

Sources
York Herald 11 January 1894

 

Thanks
Special thanks to Andrew Sefton, Archivist
Image of Pocklington Church 1844 courtesy of http://www.pocklingtonhistory.com
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