Localised successes at Mons

The focal point of the Battle of Mons (23 August 1914) was a loop in the canal that attracted fierce German assaults. Therein, a machine-gun section commanded by Lt Maurice Dease from Westmeath defended the crucial Nimy Bridge. Within hours, most of Dease’s comrades lay dead or injured. Despite suffering from multiple wounds himself, Dease … Read more

Battle of the Aisne

When the Allies reached the Aisne in mid-September, they found that the Germans had dug in on high ground overlooking the river. Having successfully crossed a shaky pontoon bridge under deadly shellfire, the Irish Rifles suffered badly in front of these positions. Recklessly continuing their advance across open ground, two companies, including a number of … Read more

Dublin/Monaghan bombings, 1974

Sir,—Dr Brian Hanley’s ‘“The forgotten massacre”: responses to the Dublin and Monaghan bombings’ (HI 22.3, May/June 2014) provides a very full account of both the political and media responses in the aftermath of the bombings. For those reading these responses for the first time, they will have found some of the reactions quite unexpected in … Read more

Iron and Coal—the Irish dimension

Sir,—Your readers may be interested to learn that the painting Iron and Coal by William Bell Scott, which illustrates Eoin Dillon’s article on modernity, economic crisis and international aid (HI 22.3, May/June 2014), has an Irish dimension. The painting is the last of a series of eight on the history of Northumbria commissioned by Sir … Read more