B100dy Sunday- Dublin GAA remembers

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  • Опубликовано: 17 ноя 2020
  • On November 21st 1920 14 people went to a match at Croke Park.
    They never came home.
    100 years on, Dublin GAA remembers Bloody Sunday, as Dublin City Council Historian-in-residence Cormac Moore talks us through that fateful day.
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Комментарии • 9

  • @72mossy
    @72mossy 3 года назад +18

    God bless them all, may they rest in peace. Best wishes from Tipperary.

  • @draiocht0180
    @draiocht0180 3 года назад +7

    100 years later to the day Dublin won the Leinster title in Croker what a fitting tribute to all those from Dublin who lost their lives on Bloody Sunday

  • @davidmckenna972
    @davidmckenna972 3 года назад +2

    Very sad, may all of them be resting in peace. Meath man living in Denmark.

  • @eastereggs04
    @eastereggs04 3 года назад +10

    Lest we forget
    November 21st 1920

  • @Seanredmond2117
    @Seanredmond2117 3 года назад +3

    My great grand uncle played wing forward that day jimmy Doran

  • @benhur1959
    @benhur1959 2 года назад

    What was the significance of the plane that flew overhead before the game?

  • @mcollins2433
    @mcollins2433 2 года назад

    GAA should be made replace OUR heros real 1910 alireland meda all countys should go get this done asap its apaling way there try change our history

  • @edwardbourke5240
    @edwardbourke5240 11 месяцев назад

    DMP who were largely neutral were on duty and their men were mere witnesses. The shooting was done by Depot and Reserve companies of the RIC. They drove in convoy to Beggars Bush joining Auxiliaries and travelled to Croke Park. The Phoenix park based Depot police were probably Igoe (identification) gang who would recognize the Tipperary men that they assumed were involved in the earlier shootings. Both the army and Auxiliaries stated that they had not fired on the crowd. The army said their armoured car fired in the air. Many IRA men were in the grounds despite orders to keep away. My grandfather and three great uncles were at the game but were uninjured but are supposed to have stretchered out a man who was wanted but not injured. Tom Markham is pictured in the O'Toole team photo he was active in intelligence and examined documents in Dublin Castle possibly uncovering spies back to Fenian times. What became of the plaque that was on the old Hogan Stand.