BANTRY IN THE CIVIL WAR

Sir,—My mother, Mrs Gladys Giltrap (née Kingston) was born on 14 August 1922. She has just turned 100 and remains in excellent health. She was born at 3 Marino Street, Bantry, to Jane Kingston (née Young) and George Kingston. Mum tells the story that when she was about three days old her mother was nursing … Read more

HENRY WILSON

Sir,—Apropos John M. Regan’s review of Ronan McGreevy’s Great Hatred (HI 30.3, May/June 2022). ‘I am an Irishman, born in County Longford’ stated Henry Wilson during the course of a speech given at Caxton Hall in London in May 1922 (Northern Whig, 10 May 1922). Wilson stated this throughout his life and to the best of my knowledge anything biographical … Read more

CORRECTION

An article on ‘The Radical Club: a 1920s forum for “progressive cultural activity”’ (HI 27.5, Sept./Oct. 2019) referred to a debate at that club on Joyce’s Ulysses in which Liam O’Flaherty and ‘MacManus’ (as identified in Rosamond Jacob’s diaries) were the antagonists. The article’s author, Brian Trench, named Francis MacManus as the debater but now … Read more

The ‘Great Game’

Sir,—Martin Greene (‘Bram Stoker’s “Great Game”?’, HI 30.4, July/Aug. 2022) refers to the term ‘Great Game’ being in use ‘among British military officials in India’ from the Afghan wars onwards (that is from 1838 up to the date of Kipling’s Kim (1901). The first recorded use is in 1840, when Capt. Arthur Conolly wrote ‘If … Read more

MICHAEL COLLINS A DICTATOR?

Sir,—Dr Thomas Tormey may have the better of me where he identifies a ‘democratic deficit’ during the Civil War, rather than the ‘military-dictatorship’ under Michael Collins I referenced in my review of Ronan McGreevy’s new book on Sir Henry Wilson. To be clear, no one has ever challenged the evidential basis on which my description … Read more