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Dublin City Marshal

The Dublin City Marshal was an officer of Dublin Corporation in Ireland.

History edit

The origins of the office were analogous to those of the Knight Marshal in relation to the City of London. Until 1786[1] the Dublin Marshal was Keeper of Dublin City Marshalsea,[2] as the Knight Marshal was for the London Marshalsea. Prior to the Municipal Corporations (Ireland) Act 1840 the Marshal was elected annually by the common council from among the freemen; typically this was a formality with the incumbent returned unopposed.[3] The office was often a sinecure given to a relative of a senior member of the common council. The Marshal in 1838 considered his appointment effective "for life".[4] In 1876 Alexander Martin Sullivan called the Marshal "a perfectly needless office that might well be abolished".[5] In the 1880s the council discussed and printed reports on whether to make the office a full-time position; subsequently vacancies were publicly advertised, with election from among the applicants still done by the councillors.[6]

After the 1920 local elections there was a Sinn Féin majority on the council, which supported the self-proclaimed Irish Republic's independence war against the UK.[7] In 1921, when the town clerk suggested that the office of Swordbearer might be abolished, the Marshal wrote to the clerk defending the existing pawnbroking regulations, and the council agreed not to change them.[8] The 1926 report of the Greater Dublin Commission of Inquiry proposed to remove the ceremonial vestiges of the corporation, including the Marshal.[9][10] The report was not implemented,[10] and the office of Marshal survived until 1965.[11][12]

Functions edit

The Marshal had a ceremonial role, including leading the annual Lord Mayor's parade. In 1867, Michael Angelo Hayes "wore a scarlet tunic richly braided, and a cocked hat, a la Francaise, rode a decent-looking horse, and was admired by the crowd".[13] In April 1900, John Howard Parnell as Marshal held the cushion holding the key of the city presented to Queen Victoria by the Lord Mayor at her ceremonial entry into the city.[14]

The Marshal was an officer of the Lord Mayor and Sheriffs' Court,[15] held at the Tholsel and latterly in Green Street Courthouse;[16] in that role he took charge of the custody and sale of goods under attachment.[2]

Register of pawnbrokers edit

Two 1780s statutes sanctioned a previous informal arrangement between Dublin pawnbrokers and the Marshal:[17] the Pawnbrokers Act 1786[18] made the Marshal registrar of pawnbrokers' licences for the whole of Ireland;[2] by the Pawnbrokers Act 1788,[19] he was one of four people who could auction forfeited pledges. The others were the city Swordbearer and two nominees of the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.[20] The city wards were divided among the four (coterminous with the four police districts of the Borough Police[17]) with the Marshal and Swordbearer holding the more profitable divisions.[21] The 1838 select committee examining pawnbroking in Ireland said "the manner in which successive Marshals of the City of Dublin have discharged the duties imposed upon them by the Act, will be found by the evidence, and by the Report of the Commissioners of Municipal Inquiry, to have been exceedingly unsatisfactory".[22]

The pawnbroking divisions had been disregarded for some decades until 1941, when the new marshal lost a lawsuit against a pawnbroker on the basis that he did not have jurisdiction as her premises was in the district of the Swordbearer, an office which had fallen into disuse.[23] The Oireachtas passed an act in 1943 to abolish the divisions and allow the marshal to operate everywhere.[24] The registration of pawnbrokers was passed from the Marshal to the district court from 1 January 1965.[11] The office was then obsolete,[25] although the final incumbent, James Cockburn, was still described as "City Marshal" in Thom's Directory in 1972.[26]

Remuneration edit

An incoming Marshal had to pay surety (£2000 in 1836).[2] The main expense prior to 1786 was the upkeep of the Marshalsea, though the Corporation sometimes granted sums to the Marshal for repairs. After 1786, the right to the fees collected in his various duties made the office of Marshal profitable; the holder often farmed out the work to subcontractors, allowing him to enjoy a sinecure.[27] In 1833 his net income was £630.[20] Pawnbroking had increased greatly from the 1780s to the 1830s.[28] The reformed corporation elected in 1841 under the 1840 act was "determined ... that no officer should be considered as a sinecure", dismissed the incumbent Marshal, and hired a substitute on a fixed salary.[29] In 1849 Thomas Reynolds received £250 and complained that he had lost money by taking the post.[30] By 1876, the Marshal was paying the fees to the Corporation and receiving a salary of £300 from it.[31] However, the Court of Queen's Bench ruled that the fees as registrar of pawnbrokers were not due to the Corporation, so the Marshal could keep them himself.[32] Alexander Martin Sullivan condemned this.[5] In 1894 the total income was about £1000 and Fenian supporters tried to get Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa nominated to the position.[33]

List edit

List of Dublin City Marshals
Dates Name Notes
1493– Robert Rouse [34]
By 1534 Thomas Whitt [35]
By 1540–1541 or later Walter Long [36]
By 1546–1554 or later John Wilkin [37]
1555– Simon Umfrey [38]
1559– John Heyne [39]
By 1568–1582 Nicholas White Removed for "severall defectes of abilitie". Subsequent marshals had to pay a stipend to White.[40]
1582–1585 James Connell Merchant.[41]
1585–1586 Thomas Stephens Was "Keeper of the Marshalsea" from 1580. In 1585, Connell assigned his interest in the office of marshal to Stephens, who also took over Connell's contract with White. Stephens was dismissed "Upon complaint of divers persons".[42]
1586– Richard Duff Took over pro tem. upon Stephens' dismissal.[43]
By 1589–1596 or later Thomas Verdon Warned in 1589 that the office would revert to Nicholas White unless Verdon paid White the agreed stipend.[44]
1599–1604 Robert Caddell Received 53s.4d. arrears in 1609.[45]
1604–1610 George Ussher Merchant from an old Dublin family; brother and uncle of archbishops Henry and James Ussher respectively.[46] Warned in 1606 about complaints against him.[47]
1610–1618 Richard Proudfoot Merchant. Was keeper of the Marshalsea from 1606. In 1608 he secured the Reversion of the marshal's office, with Ussher paying him 50s. per year for keeping the Marshalsea. "Surrendered his interest and right" to the Corporation in 1618, but not replaced until 1620.[48]
1620–1621 William Thomas Merchant.[49]
1621–1637 John Butcher [50]
1637–1640 Robert Blower [51]
1640– John Butcher [52]
1649–1653 or later William Barloe [53]
1654–c.1665 Oliver Walsh Died in 1665.[54]
1665–1683 Edward Harris A goldsmith.[55]
By 1686 Robert Dowglass In March 1688 he paid £100 for the office to Thomas Sheridan,the Chief Secretary for Ireland, through agent Henry Wilson via Henry Echlin; Sheridan was shortly thereafter deposed for corruption.[56]
By 1687–1689 or later John Bermingham [57]
1696–1701 George Stevenson Died in office [58]
1701–1704 Roger Gunne Imprisoned and suspended in 1704.[59]
1704–1707 Richard Blundevill Was reimbursed the expense of replacing the Marshalsea in 1705. Discharged for "irregularities and misdemeanours".[60]
1707–1722 George Walton Resigned[61]
1722–1723 Joseph Bentley Died in office.[62]
1723–1733 John Forrest Removed from office for refusing to pay £500 rent arrears for the Marshalsea.[63]
1733–1751 John Cooke Cooke was required to pay rent to Forrest for the Marshalsea. A council committee in 1740 recommending dismissing him for £520 arrears. He negotiated a repayment schedule and a guarantor. In 1750 he owed £740 and proposed ceding the office of Marshal and its debts to another, but instead paid £400 with the balance written off. He died in office.[64]
1751–1771 or later William Delamain From a Huguenot family with a delftware business. In 1760 he was warned about rent arrears and poor performance. In 1765 his debt was forgiven on the grounds that prisoners in the Marshalsea were too poor to pay their fines and that jailers had infringed the Marshal's monopoly on sale of beer to prisoners "whereby the City Marshal is deprived of the greatest benefit that he had".[65] In 1771 he petitioned the Irish House of Commons that "by several Acts of Parliament for the Relief of Insolvent Debtors, the Petitioner has been so far abridged of his regulated and proper Fees, as to render said Employment scarce worth his Attendance. And praying Relief."[66]
1772–1811 William Osbrey Resigned.[67]
1811–1820 William Ferrall Upon election, he resigned as common councilman of the guild of sheermen and dyers. Died in office.[68]
1820–1831 John Stanley Died in office.[69]
1831–1842 John Judkin Butler Dismissed by the new corporation formed after the 1840 reform act.[29][70]
1842–1867 Thomas Reynolds Brother of John Reynolds, lord mayor and MP for the city. Henry O'Neill described him as "a sort of laughing-stalk [sic] to the idle gazers at corporation shows".[13] Died in office.[29][71][72]
1867–1873 Michael Angelo Hayes An artist mentioned in Ulysses[73] His wife's brother Peter Paul McSwiney was Lord Mayor in 1864.[74][75] Henry O'Neill regretted that Irish art buyers had "so neglected his talent that he finds it necessary to play the Jack pudding before the mob of Dublin".[13] Hayes failed to secure re-election.[76] The Corporation unsuccessfully sued him for the fees he collected as registrar of pawnbrokers.[77][32]
1873–1891 John S. Carroll Died in office. Son of Sir William Carroll, Lord Mayor 1868–1869.[78] Michael Angelo Hayes caricatured father and son, John in his Marshal's uniform; they sued unsuccessfully for libel. Died in office.[76][79]
1891 James J. Henry Assistant town clerk, appointed pro tem. but quickly resigned.[80] Appears in Ulysses, troubled by corns.[81]
1891 Edmund W. Eyre Secretary of the council's finances and leases committee; appointed pro tem. until the election of a permanent successor.[82]
1891–1894 Charles Kavanagh Died in office, whereupon the town clerk was acting Marshal pending the election of a successor.[83][33] In the Little Review edition of Ulysses, Leopold Bloom, after considering John Howard Parnell's lack of attention to the office of Marshal, remarks "Charley Kavanagh used to come out on his high horse, cocked hat, puffed, powdered and shaved."[84] Later editions change the name to "Charley Boulger".[85][86]
1894–1898 William E. Clancy Censured in 1897 for absence and degrading the office after being imprisoned for "a small debt". Resigned in 1898.[87][88]
1898–1923 John Howard Parnell Brother of Charles Stewart Parnell, Irish nationalist political leader.[89] His participation in the Corporation's ceremonies marking Victoria's 1900 royal visit were criticised by others in the Irish Parliamentary Party.[90] Died in office.[91][92] He appears at intervals in Ulysses, set in 1904; according to Leopold Bloom, "They say he never put on the city marshal's uniform since he got the job."[85] Later, Parnell presents Bloom with the freedom of the city in a hallucinatory episode of the "Circe" chapter.[93]
1923–1940 Jack Shaw Shaw was elected from 13 candidates, with Thomas Devin and Peadar Kearney second and third.[92][94] He was dismissed in November 1940, contesting this in 1941 in the High Court.[95]
1941– Patrick Meehan He resigned from office.[96][23]
By 1955–1964 James Cockburn Father of Don Cockburn, Raidió Teilifís Éireann journalist and newsreader.[25][97][98]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Irish act 26 Geo.3 c.27 s.34 cited in MCI 1835; p.36 s.80
  2. ^ a b c d MCI 1835; p.36 s.80.
  3. ^ MCI 1835; p.16 s.42
  4. ^ Select Committee on pawnbroking in Ireland 1838 p.121 qq.2157–2161
  5. ^ a b Select Committee on local government and taxation of towns (Ireland) 1876, p.262 q.4802
  6. ^ Dublin City Council Minutes: 1885 pp. 147, 169; 1886 pp. 257, 259; 1891 p.270
  7. ^ Yeates 2012, p. 85, Ch. 3.
  8. ^ Yeates 2012, pp. 322–324, Ch. 9.
  9. ^ Greater Dublin Commission of Inquiry (7 July 1926). Report (PDF). Dublin: Stationery Office. p. 6 §32. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
  10. ^ a b Callanan, Mark; Keogan, Justin F. (2003). Local Government in Ireland: Inside Out. Institute of Public Administration. pp. 126–127. ISBN 9781902448930. Retrieved 5 October 2017.
  11. ^ a b Haughey, Charles (18 February 1964). "Pawnbrokers Bill, 1963— Second Stage". Dáil Éireann Debates. Retrieved 30 September 2017. He is still there but we are doing away with his pawnbroking functions.; "Pawnbrokers Act, 1964". Irish Statute Book. Sections 6, 10. Retrieved 30 September 2017.; "S.I. No. 290/1964 - Pawnbrokers Act, 1964 (Commencement) Order, 1964". Irish Statute Book. 10 December 1964. Retrieved 25 July 2020.
  12. ^ Dublin City Council Minutes 1962 p.282
  13. ^ a b c O'Neill, Henry (1868). Ireland for the Irish: a practical, peacable and just solution of the Irish Land Question. London: Trubner. pp. 96–97. Retrieved 19 October 2017.
  14. ^ McCarthy, Michael John Fitzgerald (1901). Five years in Ireland, 1895–1900. London: Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent. pp. 476–478.
  15. ^ MCI 1835; p.36 s.80, pp. 50–51 s.111
  16. ^ Lewis, Samuel (1837). "Dublin Courts and Prisons". A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland. Retrieved 30 September 2017.
  17. ^ a b Raymond 1978 p.17
  18. ^ Irish act 26 Geo.3 c.43 s.40; short title assigned by Short Titles Act 1962
  19. ^ Irish act 28 Geo.3 c.49 s.9; short title assigned by Short Titles Act 1962
  20. ^ a b MCI 1835; p.37
  21. ^ MCI 1835; p.38
  22. ^ Select Committee on pawnbroking in Ireland 1838 p.xii
  23. ^ a b
    • "City Marshal's Summons; Alleged Forged Document". The Irish Times. 20 November 1941. p. 3.
    • "City Marshal and Pawnbroker; Case Dismissed in District Court". The Irish Times. 18 December 1941. p. 2.
    • "Pawn Office Dispute". The Irish Times. 7 April 1942. p. 1.
    • "No Dispute Between City Marshal and Pawnbrokers". The Irish Times. 8 April 1942. p. 1.
  24. ^ "Pawnbrokers (Divisional Auctioneers) Act, 1943". Irish Statute Book. Retrieved 30 September 2017.; "Pawnbrokers (Divisional Auctioneers) Bill, 1943—Second Stage". Dáil Éireann Debate. 3 March 1943. Retrieved 30 September 2017.
  25. ^ a b "Obituary of James Cockburn". The Irish Times. 8 January 1974. p. 13. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  26. ^ "Thom's Dublin Street Directory, City, County & Bray, 1972, pg.777". Ask About Ireland. Retrieved 1 May 2018. Washington Street ... 6 Cockburn, James City Marshal £16
  27. ^ MCI 1835; s.80 pp. 36–38
  28. ^ Raymond 1978 p.18
  29. ^ a b c Dublin Corporation; Grogan, Edward (11 April 1843). "Appendix 259: Petition against the Pawnbrokers' Trade (Ireland) Bill". Appendix to the Sixteenth Report of the Select Committee of the House of Commons on Public Petitions. Parliamentary Papers. H.M. Stationery Office. pp. 152–157 : 153 c2.
  30. ^ Hill, Jacqueline R. (1973). The role of Dublin in the Irish National Movement 1840–48 (PDF) (PhD). University of Leeds. p. 194. Retrieved 30 September 2017.
  31. ^ Select Committee on local government and taxation of towns (Ireland) 1876, p.140 qq.2592–2594, 2602
  32. ^ a b Select Committee on local government and taxation of towns (Ireland) 1876, p.237 qq.4414, 4415; Dublin Corporation v. Hayes IR 10 CL 226 (1876)
  33. ^ a b Kenna, Shane (1 August 2015). "10: A Journey of Personal Discovery". Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa: Unrepentant Fenian. Merrion Press. ISBN 9781785370175.
  34. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.1 p.378
  35. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.1 p.398
  36. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.1 pp. 408, 409
  37. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.1 pp. 415, 437
  38. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.1 p.445
  39. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.2 p.5
  40. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.2 pp. 51, 118, 168, 196, 205
  41. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.2 pp. 168, 196
  42. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.2 pp. 148, 196, 205
  43. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.2 p.205
  44. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.2 pp. 224–225, 295
  45. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.2 pp. 325, 423, 428, 523
  46. ^ Wright, William Ball (1889). The Ussher Memoirs: Or, Genealogical Memoirs of the Ussher Families in Ireland (with Appendix, Pedigree and Index of Names), Compiled from Public and Private Sources. Dublin: Sealy, Bryers & Walker. p. 35. Retrieved 2 October 2017.
  47. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.2 pp. 428, 462, 466, 481, 507–508
  48. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin: Vol.2 p.508; Vol.3 pp. 100, 126
  49. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.3 pp. 126, 132
  50. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.3 pp. 132, 333
  51. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.3 pp. 333, 366
  52. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.3 p.366
  53. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.3 p.493, Vol.4 p.42
  54. ^ Dudley, Rowena (Autumn 2000). "St. Stephen's Green: The Early Years 1664-1730". Dublin Historical Record. 53 (2). Old Dublin Society: 157–179 : 160. JSTOR 30101260.; Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.4 p.73
  55. ^ Ní Mhurchadha, Maighréad (23 January 2013). "Dublin after Dark: Glimpses of Life in an Early Modern City". Sixteenth Sir John T. Gilbert Commemorative Lecture. Dublin City Library & Archive. Retrieved 30 September 2017.; Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.4 p.341
  56. ^ McNeill, Charles (March 1930). "Rawlinson Manuscripts (Class A)". Analecta Hibernica (1). Irish Manuscripts Commission: 12–117 : 48. JSTOR 25510904.; Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.5 p.462, Vol.6 p.146
  57. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.5 pp. 462, 502
  58. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.6 pp. 146, 246
  59. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.6 pp. 246, 302, 306
  60. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.6 pp. 306, 339, 373
  61. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.6 p.373; Vol.7 p.189
  62. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.7 pp. 189, 222
  63. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.7 p.222; Vol.8 pp. 99, 110
  64. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.8 pp.xi, 110, 379–381; Vol.9 pp. 336, 348, 356, 371
  65. ^ Parkinson, Danny (Autumn 1996). "The Delamain Family in Ireland". Dublin Historical Record. 49 (2). Old Dublin Society: 156–160 : 158. JSTOR 30101149.; Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.9 p.371, Vol.10 pp. 413–414, Vol.11 pp. 54, 287–288, Vol.12 p.27
  66. ^ "19 November 1771". Journals of the House of Commons of the Kingdom of Ireland. XV. House of Commons: 116. 1772. Retrieved 23 August 2019.
  67. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.12 pp. 227, Vol.16 p.285
  68. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.16 pp. 285–286 [surname misspelled "Farrell"], 514, 516; Vol.17 p.308
  69. ^ Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, Vol.17 p.308, Vol.18 p.5; Raymond 1978 p.19; Select Committee on pawnbroking in Ireland 1838 p.208, p.113 q.2004
  70. ^ Raymond 1978 p.18; Select Committee on pawnbroking in Ireland 1838 p.205, p.113 q.2004
  71. ^ Hill, Jacqueline R. (2007). "The 1847 election in Dublin City". In Blackstock, Allan; Magennis, Eoin (eds.). Politics and Political Culture in Britain and Ireland, 1750–1850: Essays in Tribute to Peter Jupp. Ulster Historical Foundation. p. 52. ISBN 9781903688687.
  72. ^ Select Committee on local government and taxation of towns (Ireland) 1876, p.175 q.3455
  73. ^ Gifford and Seidman 2008 p.324; Joyce 1922 p.285
  74. ^ Select Committee on local government and taxation of towns (Ireland) 1876, p.98 q.1912
  75. ^ "Michael Angelo Hayes". Artists. National Gallery of Ireland. Retrieved 30 September 2017.
  76. ^ a b "Caricature And The Caricaturable". The Spectator: 11–12. 20 June 1874.
  77. ^ Select Committee on local government and taxation of towns (Ireland) 1876, p.175 q.3454
  78. ^ Select Committee on local government and taxation of towns (Ireland) 1876, p.98 q.1914
  79. ^ "[Sir William Carroll] Civic celebrities No.1". Holdings. National Library of Ireland. Retrieved 30 September 2017.; "[John S. Carroll] Civic celebrities No.4". Holdings. National Library of Ireland. Retrieved 30 September 2017.; Dublin City Council Minutes 1891 p.234
  80. ^ Dublin City Council Minutes 1891 pp. 234, 237
  81. ^ Gifford and Seidman 2008 pp. 279, 478, 519; Joyce 1922 pp. 236, 237, 460, 545,
  82. ^ Dublin City Council Minutes 1891 p.271
  83. ^ Dublin City Council Minutes 1891 p.307, 1894 pp. 274, 275
  84. ^ Joyce, James (January 1919). "Ulysses, Episode VIII". The Little Review: 23–50 : 39. Retrieved 17 October 2017.
  85. ^ a b Joyce 1922 p. 157
  86. ^ Gaskell, Philip; Hart, Clive (1989). Ulysses: A Review of Three Texts : Proposals for Alterations to the Texts of 1922, 1961, and 1984. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 201, Ref.506.8. ISBN 9780389208747. Retrieved 17 October 2017.
  87. ^ Dublin City Council Minutes 1894 p.280, 1897 pp. 86, 139, 152, 183, 302 1898 p.56
  88. ^ "The Dublin City Marshal". Drogheda Independent. 8 May 1897. p. 3.
  89. ^ "Parnell Gets An Office.; Nationalist Elected City Marshal of Dublin to Save His Estates". The New York Times. March 1898. Retrieved 30 September 2017. Dublin City Council Minutes 1898 p.102
  90. ^ Meleady, Dermot (8 November 2013). John Redmond: The National Leader. Irish Academic Press. p. 183. ISBN 9781908928573. Retrieved 20 October 2017.
  91. ^ Dublin City Council Minutes 1923 pp. 365, 382
  92. ^ a b O'Neill, Marie (Spring 1994). "Dublin Corporation in the Troubled Times 1914-1924". Dublin Historical Record. 47 (1). Old Dublin Society: 56–70 : 69. JSTOR 30101057.
  93. ^ Gifford and Seidman 2008 pp. 172, 280, 471; Joyce 1922 pp. 157, 162, 238, 243, 456, 545
  94. ^ Dublin City Council Minutes 1923 p.431, 1935 pp. 181, 214; "Dublin City Marshal". The Irish Times. 7 July 1923. p. 7. Retrieved 24 October 2017.
  95. ^ "City Marshal's Action". The Irish Times. 22 May 1941. p. 6.; "High Courts". The Irish Times. 28 October 1941. p. 2.
  96. ^ "Mr. P. Meehan". Irish Independent. 21 March 1969. p. 13.
  97. ^ "Shy newsreader who was one of Ireland's best-known faces". The Irish Times. 9 September 2017. Retrieved 3 October 2017.
  98. ^ "Funeral of Mr. Sean Nolan". Irish Independent. 20 September 1955. p. 2.

Sources edit

  • Commissioners Appointed to Inquire into the Municipal Corporations In ireland (MCI) (1835). Appendix To The First Report : Report on the City of Dublin, Part I. London: William Clowes for HMSO. Retrieved 30 September 2017.
  • Dublin City Archives. "Index of City Council Minutes". Retrieved 2 October 2017.
  • Gifford, Don; Seidman, Robert J. (14 January 2008). Ulysses Annotated: Revised and Expanded Edition. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520253971. Retrieved 30 September 2017.
  • Gilbert, John Thomas; Gilbert, Rosa Mulholland, eds. (1889–1922). Calendar of ancient records of Dublin. Vol. 1–18. Dublin: Dollard. OCLC 558008333.
  • Joyce, James (2 February 1922). Ulysses. Paris: Shakespeare and Company. Retrieved 2 October 2017.
  • Raymond, Raymond James (December 1978). "Pawnbrokers and Pawnbroking in Dublin: 1830 – 1870". Dublin Historical Record. 32 (1). Old Dublin Society: 15–26. JSTOR 30104102.
  • Select Committee on local government and taxation of towns (Ireland) (11 July 1876). Report together with the proceedings of the Committee, minutes of evidence and appendix. Parliamentary Papers. Vol. HC 1876 (352) 10. H.M. Stationery Office.
  • Select Committee on pawnbroking in Ireland (3 August 1838). Report together with minutes of evidence, appendix and index. Parliamentary Papers. Vol. HC 1837-1838 (677) 17.
  • Yeates, Pádraig (28 September 2012). A City in Turmoil – Dublin 1919–1921: The War of Independence. Gill Books. ISBN 9780717154630. Retrieved 17 October 2017.

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The Dublin City Marshal was an officer of Dublin Corporation in Ireland Contents 1 History 2 Functions 2 1 Register of pawnbrokers 3 Remuneration 4 List 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 SourcesHistory editThe origins of the office were analogous to those of the Knight Marshal in relation to the City of London Until 1786 1 the Dublin Marshal was Keeper of Dublin City Marshalsea 2 as the Knight Marshal was for the London Marshalsea Prior to the Municipal Corporations Ireland Act 1840 the Marshal was elected annually by the common council from among the freemen typically this was a formality with the incumbent returned unopposed 3 The office was often a sinecure given to a relative of a senior member of the common council The Marshal in 1838 considered his appointment effective for life 4 In 1876 Alexander Martin Sullivan called the Marshal a perfectly needless office that might well be abolished 5 In the 1880s the council discussed and printed reports on whether to make the office a full time position subsequently vacancies were publicly advertised with election from among the applicants still done by the councillors 6 After the 1920 local elections there was a Sinn Fein majority on the council which supported the self proclaimed Irish Republic s independence war against the UK 7 In 1921 when the town clerk suggested that the office of Swordbearer might be abolished the Marshal wrote to the clerk defending the existing pawnbroking regulations and the council agreed not to change them 8 The 1926 report of the Greater Dublin Commission of Inquiry proposed to remove the ceremonial vestiges of the corporation including the Marshal 9 10 The report was not implemented 10 and the office of Marshal survived until 1965 11 12 Functions editThe Marshal had a ceremonial role including leading the annual Lord Mayor s parade In 1867 Michael Angelo Hayes wore a scarlet tunic richly braided and a cocked hat a la Francaise rode a decent looking horse and was admired by the crowd 13 In April 1900 John Howard Parnell as Marshal held the cushion holding the key of the city presented to Queen Victoria by the Lord Mayor at her ceremonial entry into the city 14 The Marshal was an officer of the Lord Mayor and Sheriffs Court 15 held at the Tholsel and latterly in Green Street Courthouse 16 in that role he took charge of the custody and sale of goods under attachment 2 Register of pawnbrokers edit Two 1780s statutes sanctioned a previous informal arrangement between Dublin pawnbrokers and the Marshal 17 the Pawnbrokers Act 1786 18 made the Marshal registrar of pawnbrokers licences for the whole of Ireland 2 by the Pawnbrokers Act 1788 19 he was one of four people who could auction forfeited pledges The others were the city Swordbearer and two nominees of the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland 20 The city wards were divided among the four coterminous with the four police districts of the Borough Police 17 with the Marshal and Swordbearer holding the more profitable divisions 21 The 1838 select committee examining pawnbroking in Ireland said the manner in which successive Marshals of the City of Dublin have discharged the duties imposed upon them by the Act will be found by the evidence and by the Report of the Commissioners of Municipal Inquiry to have been exceedingly unsatisfactory 22 The pawnbroking divisions had been disregarded for some decades until 1941 when the new marshal lost a lawsuit against a pawnbroker on the basis that he did not have jurisdiction as her premises was in the district of the Swordbearer an office which had fallen into disuse 23 The Oireachtas passed an act in 1943 to abolish the divisions and allow the marshal to operate everywhere 24 The registration of pawnbrokers was passed from the Marshal to the district court from 1 January 1965 11 The office was then obsolete 25 although the final incumbent James Cockburn was still described as City Marshal in Thom s Directory in 1972 26 Remuneration editAn incoming Marshal had to pay surety 2000 in 1836 2 The main expense prior to 1786 was the upkeep of the Marshalsea though the Corporation sometimes granted sums to the Marshal for repairs After 1786 the right to the fees collected in his various duties made the office of Marshal profitable the holder often farmed out the work to subcontractors allowing him to enjoy a sinecure 27 In 1833 his net income was 630 20 Pawnbroking had increased greatly from the 1780s to the 1830s 28 The reformed corporation elected in 1841 under the 1840 act was determined that no officer should be considered as a sinecure dismissed the incumbent Marshal and hired a substitute on a fixed salary 29 In 1849 Thomas Reynolds received 250 and complained that he had lost money by taking the post 30 By 1876 the Marshal was paying the fees to the Corporation and receiving a salary of 300 from it 31 However the Court of Queen s Bench ruled that the fees as registrar of pawnbrokers were not due to the Corporation so the Marshal could keep them himself 32 Alexander Martin Sullivan condemned this 5 In 1894 the total income was about 1000 and Fenian supporters tried to get Jeremiah O Donovan Rossa nominated to the position 33 List editThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items September 2017 List of Dublin City Marshals Dates Name Notes 1493 Robert Rouse 34 By 1534 Thomas Whitt 35 By 1540 1541 or later Walter Long 36 By 1546 1554 or later John Wilkin 37 1555 Simon Umfrey 38 1559 John Heyne 39 By 1568 1582 Nicholas White Removed for severall defectes of abilitie Subsequent marshals had to pay a stipend to White 40 1582 1585 James Connell Merchant 41 1585 1586 Thomas Stephens Was Keeper of the Marshalsea from 1580 In 1585 Connell assigned his interest in the office of marshal to Stephens who also took over Connell s contract with White Stephens was dismissed Upon complaint of divers persons 42 1586 Richard Duff Took over pro tem upon Stephens dismissal 43 By 1589 1596 or later Thomas Verdon Warned in 1589 that the office would revert to Nicholas White unless Verdon paid White the agreed stipend 44 1599 1604 Robert Caddell Received 53s 4d arrears in 1609 45 1604 1610 George Ussher Merchant from an old Dublin family brother and uncle of archbishops Henry and James Ussher respectively 46 Warned in 1606 about complaints against him 47 1610 1618 Richard Proudfoot Merchant Was keeper of the Marshalsea from 1606 In 1608 he secured the Reversion of the marshal s office with Ussher paying him 50s per year for keeping the Marshalsea Surrendered his interest and right to the Corporation in 1618 but not replaced until 1620 48 1620 1621 William Thomas Merchant 49 1621 1637 John Butcher 50 1637 1640 Robert Blower 51 1640 John Butcher 52 1649 1653 or later William Barloe 53 1654 c 1665 Oliver Walsh Died in 1665 54 1665 1683 Edward Harris A goldsmith 55 By 1686 Robert Dowglass In March 1688 he paid 100 for the office to Thomas Sheridan the Chief Secretary for Ireland through agent Henry Wilson via Henry Echlin Sheridan was shortly thereafter deposed for corruption 56 By 1687 1689 or later John Bermingham 57 1696 1701 George Stevenson Died in office 58 1701 1704 Roger Gunne Imprisoned and suspended in 1704 59 1704 1707 Richard Blundevill Was reimbursed the expense of replacing the Marshalsea in 1705 Discharged for irregularities and misdemeanours 60 1707 1722 George Walton Resigned 61 1722 1723 Joseph Bentley Died in office 62 1723 1733 John Forrest Removed from office for refusing to pay 500 rent arrears for the Marshalsea 63 1733 1751 John Cooke Cooke was required to pay rent to Forrest for the Marshalsea A council committee in 1740 recommending dismissing him for 520 arrears He negotiated a repayment schedule and a guarantor In 1750 he owed 740 and proposed ceding the office of Marshal and its debts to another but instead paid 400 with the balance written off He died in office 64 1751 1771 or later William Delamain From a Huguenot family with a delftware business In 1760 he was warned about rent arrears and poor performance In 1765 his debt was forgiven on the grounds that prisoners in the Marshalsea were too poor to pay their fines and that jailers had infringed the Marshal s monopoly on sale of beer to prisoners whereby the City Marshal is deprived of the greatest benefit that he had 65 In 1771 he petitioned the Irish House of Commons that by several Acts of Parliament for the Relief of Insolvent Debtors the Petitioner has been so far abridged of his regulated and proper Fees as to render said Employment scarce worth his Attendance And praying Relief 66 1772 1811 William Osbrey Resigned 67 1811 1820 William Ferrall Upon election he resigned as common councilman of the guild of sheermen and dyers Died in office 68 1820 1831 John Stanley Died in office 69 1831 1842 John Judkin Butler Dismissed by the new corporation formed after the 1840 reform act 29 70 1842 1867 Thomas Reynolds Brother of John Reynolds lord mayor and MP for the city Henry O Neill described him as a sort of laughing stalk sic to the idle gazers at corporation shows 13 Died in office 29 71 72 1867 1873 Michael Angelo Hayes An artist mentioned in Ulysses 73 His wife s brother Peter Paul McSwiney was Lord Mayor in 1864 74 75 Henry O Neill regretted that Irish art buyers had so neglected his talent that he finds it necessary to play the Jack pudding before the mob of Dublin 13 Hayes failed to secure re election 76 The Corporation unsuccessfully sued him for the fees he collected as registrar of pawnbrokers 77 32 1873 1891 John S Carroll Died in office Son of Sir William Carroll Lord Mayor 1868 1869 78 Michael Angelo Hayes caricatured father and son John in his Marshal s uniform they sued unsuccessfully for libel Died in office 76 79 1891 James J Henry Assistant town clerk appointed pro tem but quickly resigned 80 Appears in Ulysses troubled by corns 81 1891 Edmund W Eyre Secretary of the council s finances and leases committee appointed pro tem until the election of a permanent successor 82 1891 1894 Charles Kavanagh Died in office whereupon the town clerk was acting Marshal pending the election of a successor 83 33 In the Little Review edition of Ulysses Leopold Bloom after considering John Howard Parnell s lack of attention to the office of Marshal remarks Charley Kavanagh used to come out on his high horse cocked hat puffed powdered and shaved 84 Later editions change the name to Charley Boulger 85 86 1894 1898 William E Clancy Censured in 1897 for absence and degrading the office after being imprisoned for a small debt Resigned in 1898 87 88 1898 1923 John Howard Parnell Brother of Charles Stewart Parnell Irish nationalist political leader 89 His participation in the Corporation s ceremonies marking Victoria s 1900 royal visit were criticised by others in the Irish Parliamentary Party 90 Died in office 91 92 He appears at intervals in Ulysses set in 1904 according to Leopold Bloom They say he never put on the city marshal s uniform since he got the job 85 Later Parnell presents Bloom with the freedom of the city in a hallucinatory episode of the Circe chapter 93 1923 1940 Jack Shaw Shaw was elected from 13 candidates with Thomas Devin and Peadar Kearney second and third 92 94 He was dismissed in November 1940 contesting this in 1941 in the High Court 95 1941 Patrick Meehan He resigned from office 96 23 By 1955 1964 James Cockburn Father of Don Cockburn Raidio Teilifis Eireann journalist and newsreader 25 97 98 References editCitations edit Irish act 26 Geo 3 c 27 s 34 cited in MCI 1835 p 36 s 80 a b c d MCI 1835 p 36 s 80 MCI 1835 p 16 s 42 Select Committee on pawnbroking in Ireland 1838 p 121 qq 2157 2161 a b Select Committee on local government and taxation of towns Ireland 1876 p 262 q 4802 Dublin City Council Minutes 1885 pp 147 169 1886 pp 257 259 1891 p 270 Yeates 2012 p 85 Ch 3 Yeates 2012 pp 322 324 Ch 9 Greater Dublin Commission of Inquiry 7 July 1926 Report PDF Dublin Stationery Office p 6 32 Retrieved 21 June 2021 a b Callanan Mark Keogan Justin F 2003 Local Government in Ireland Inside Out Institute of Public Administration pp 126 127 ISBN 9781902448930 Retrieved 5 October 2017 a b Haughey Charles 18 February 1964 Pawnbrokers Bill 1963 Second Stage Dail Eireann Debates Retrieved 30 September 2017 He is still there but we are doing away with his pawnbroking functions Pawnbrokers Act 1964 Irish Statute Book Sections 6 10 Retrieved 30 September 2017 S I No 290 1964 Pawnbrokers Act 1964 Commencement Order 1964 Irish Statute Book 10 December 1964 Retrieved 25 July 2020 Dublin City Council Minutes 1962 p 282 a b c O Neill Henry 1868 Ireland for the Irish a practical peacable and just solution of the Irish Land Question London Trubner pp 96 97 Retrieved 19 October 2017 McCarthy Michael John Fitzgerald 1901 Five years in Ireland 1895 1900 London Simpkin Marshall Hamilton Kent pp 476 478 MCI 1835 p 36 s 80 pp 50 51 s 111 Lewis Samuel 1837 Dublin Courts and Prisons A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland Retrieved 30 September 2017 a b Raymond 1978 p 17 Irish act 26 Geo 3 c 43 s 40 short title assigned by Short Titles Act 1962 Irish act 28 Geo 3 c 49 s 9 short title assigned by Short Titles Act 1962 a b MCI 1835 p 37 MCI 1835 p 38 Select Committee on pawnbroking in Ireland 1838 p xii a b City Marshal s Summons Alleged Forged Document The Irish Times 20 November 1941 p 3 City Marshal and Pawnbroker Case Dismissed in District Court The Irish Times 18 December 1941 p 2 Pawn Office Dispute The Irish Times 7 April 1942 p 1 No Dispute Between City Marshal and Pawnbrokers The Irish Times 8 April 1942 p 1 Pawnbrokers Divisional Auctioneers Act 1943 Irish Statute Book Retrieved 30 September 2017 Pawnbrokers Divisional Auctioneers Bill 1943 Second Stage Dail Eireann Debate 3 March 1943 Retrieved 30 September 2017 a b Obituary of James Cockburn The Irish Times 8 January 1974 p 13 Retrieved 25 October 2017 Thom s Dublin Street Directory City County amp Bray 1972 pg 777 Ask About Ireland Retrieved 1 May 2018 Washington Street 6 Cockburn James City Marshal 16 MCI 1835 s 80 pp 36 38 Raymond 1978 p 18 a b c Dublin Corporation Grogan Edward 11 April 1843 Appendix 259 Petition against the Pawnbrokers Trade Ireland Bill Appendix to the Sixteenth Report of the Select Committee of the House of Commons on Public Petitions Parliamentary Papers H M Stationery Office pp 152 157 153 c2 Hill Jacqueline R 1973 The role of Dublin in the Irish National Movement 1840 48 PDF PhD University of Leeds p 194 Retrieved 30 September 2017 Select Committee on local government and taxation of towns Ireland 1876 p 140 qq 2592 2594 2602 a b Select Committee on local government and taxation of towns Ireland 1876 p 237 qq 4414 4415 Dublin Corporation v Hayes IR 10 CL 226 1876 a b Kenna Shane 1 August 2015 10 A Journey of Personal Discovery Jeremiah O Donovan Rossa Unrepentant Fenian Merrion Press ISBN 9781785370175 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 1 p 378 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 1 p 398 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 1 pp 408 409 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 1 pp 415 437 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 1 p 445 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 2 p 5 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 2 pp 51 118 168 196 205 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 2 pp 168 196 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 2 pp 148 196 205 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 2 p 205 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 2 pp 224 225 295 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 2 pp 325 423 428 523 Wright William Ball 1889 The Ussher Memoirs Or Genealogical Memoirs of the Ussher Families in Ireland with Appendix Pedigree and Index of Names Compiled from Public and Private Sources Dublin Sealy Bryers amp Walker p 35 Retrieved 2 October 2017 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 2 pp 428 462 466 481 507 508 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 2 p 508 Vol 3 pp 100 126 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 3 pp 126 132 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 3 pp 132 333 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 3 pp 333 366 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 3 p 366 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 3 p 493 Vol 4 p 42 Dudley Rowena Autumn 2000 St Stephen s Green The Early Years 1664 1730 Dublin Historical Record 53 2 Old Dublin Society 157 179 160 JSTOR 30101260 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 4 p 73 Ni Mhurchadha Maighread 23 January 2013 Dublin after Dark Glimpses of Life in an Early Modern City Sixteenth Sir John T Gilbert Commemorative Lecture Dublin City Library amp Archive Retrieved 30 September 2017 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 4 p 341 McNeill Charles March 1930 Rawlinson Manuscripts Class A Analecta Hibernica 1 Irish Manuscripts Commission 12 117 48 JSTOR 25510904 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 5 p 462 Vol 6 p 146 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 5 pp 462 502 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 6 pp 146 246 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 6 pp 246 302 306 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 6 pp 306 339 373 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 6 p 373 Vol 7 p 189 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 7 pp 189 222 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 7 p 222 Vol 8 pp 99 110 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 8 pp xi 110 379 381 Vol 9 pp 336 348 356 371 Parkinson Danny Autumn 1996 The Delamain Family in Ireland Dublin Historical Record 49 2 Old Dublin Society 156 160 158 JSTOR 30101149 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 9 p 371 Vol 10 pp 413 414 Vol 11 pp 54 287 288 Vol 12 p 27 19 November 1771 Journals of the House of Commons of the Kingdom of Ireland XV House of Commons 116 1772 Retrieved 23 August 2019 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 12 pp 227 Vol 16 p 285 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 16 pp 285 286 surname misspelled Farrell 514 516 Vol 17 p 308 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 17 p 308 Vol 18 p 5 Raymond 1978 p 19 Select Committee on pawnbroking in Ireland 1838 p 208 p 113 q 2004 Raymond 1978 p 18 Select Committee on pawnbroking in Ireland 1838 p 205 p 113 q 2004 Hill Jacqueline R 2007 The 1847 election in Dublin City In Blackstock Allan Magennis Eoin eds Politics and Political Culture in Britain and Ireland 1750 1850 Essays in Tribute to Peter Jupp Ulster Historical Foundation p 52 ISBN 9781903688687 Select Committee on local government and taxation of towns Ireland 1876 p 175 q 3455 Gifford and Seidman 2008 p 324 Joyce 1922 p 285 Select Committee on local government and taxation of towns Ireland 1876 p 98 q 1912 Michael Angelo Hayes Artists National Gallery of Ireland Retrieved 30 September 2017 a b Caricature And The Caricaturable The Spectator 11 12 20 June 1874 Select Committee on local government and taxation of towns Ireland 1876 p 175 q 3454 Select Committee on local government and taxation of towns Ireland 1876 p 98 q 1914 Sir William Carroll Civic celebrities No 1 Holdings National Library of Ireland Retrieved 30 September 2017 John S Carroll Civic celebrities No 4 Holdings National Library of Ireland Retrieved 30 September 2017 Dublin City Council Minutes 1891 p 234 Dublin City Council Minutes 1891 pp 234 237 Gifford and Seidman 2008 pp 279 478 519 Joyce 1922 pp 236 237 460 545 Dublin City Council Minutes 1891 p 271 Dublin City Council Minutes 1891 p 307 1894 pp 274 275 Joyce James January 1919 Ulysses Episode VIII The Little Review 23 50 39 Retrieved 17 October 2017 a b Joyce 1922 p 157 Gaskell Philip Hart Clive 1989 Ulysses A Review of Three Texts Proposals for Alterations to the Texts of 1922 1961 and 1984 Rowman amp Littlefield p 201 Ref 506 8 ISBN 9780389208747 Retrieved 17 October 2017 Dublin City Council Minutes 1894 p 280 1897 pp 86 139 152 183 302 1898 p 56 The Dublin City Marshal Drogheda Independent 8 May 1897 p 3 Parnell Gets An Office Nationalist Elected City Marshal of Dublin to Save His Estates The New York Times March 1898 Retrieved 30 September 2017 Dublin City Council Minutes 1898 p 102 Meleady Dermot 8 November 2013 John Redmond The National Leader Irish Academic Press p 183 ISBN 9781908928573 Retrieved 20 October 2017 Dublin City Council Minutes 1923 pp 365 382 a b O Neill Marie Spring 1994 Dublin Corporation in the Troubled Times 1914 1924 Dublin Historical Record 47 1 Old Dublin Society 56 70 69 JSTOR 30101057 Gifford and Seidman 2008 pp 172 280 471 Joyce 1922 pp 157 162 238 243 456 545 Dublin City Council Minutes 1923 p 431 1935 pp 181 214 Dublin City Marshal The Irish Times 7 July 1923 p 7 Retrieved 24 October 2017 City Marshal s Action The Irish Times 22 May 1941 p 6 High Courts The Irish Times 28 October 1941 p 2 Mr P Meehan Irish Independent 21 March 1969 p 13 Shy newsreader who was one of Ireland s best known faces The Irish Times 9 September 2017 Retrieved 3 October 2017 Funeral of Mr Sean Nolan Irish Independent 20 September 1955 p 2 Sources edit Commissioners Appointed to Inquire into the Municipal Corporations In ireland MCI 1835 Appendix To The First Report Report on the City of Dublin Part I London William Clowes for HMSO Retrieved 30 September 2017 Dublin City Archives Index of City Council Minutes Retrieved 2 October 2017 Gifford Don Seidman Robert J 14 January 2008 Ulysses Annotated Revised and Expanded Edition University of California Press ISBN 9780520253971 Retrieved 30 September 2017 Gilbert John Thomas Gilbert Rosa Mulholland eds 1889 1922 Calendar of ancient records of Dublin Vol 1 18 Dublin Dollard OCLC 558008333 Joyce James 2 February 1922 Ulysses Paris Shakespeare and Company Retrieved 2 October 2017 Raymond Raymond James December 1978 Pawnbrokers and Pawnbroking in Dublin 1830 1870 Dublin Historical Record 32 1 Old Dublin Society 15 26 JSTOR 30104102 Select Committee on local government and taxation of towns Ireland 11 July 1876 Report together with the proceedings of the Committee minutes of evidence and appendix Parliamentary Papers Vol HC 1876 352 10 H M Stationery Office Select Committee on pawnbroking in Ireland 3 August 1838 Report together with minutes of evidence appendix and index Parliamentary Papers Vol HC 1837 1838 677 17 Yeates Padraig 28 September 2012 A City in Turmoil Dublin 1919 1921 The War of Independence Gill Books ISBN 9780717154630 Retrieved 17 October 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dublin City Marshal amp oldid 1121579365, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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