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Kathleen Lynn

Kathleen Florence Lynn (28 January 1874 – 14 September 1955) was an Irish Sinn Féin politician, activist and medical doctor.

Kathleen Lynn
Lynn as she appeared in a 1927 piece of election material
Vice President of Sinn Féin
In office
1923–1927
LeaderÉamon de Valera
Teachta Dála
In office
August 1923 – June 1927
ConstituencyDublin County
Personal details
Born(1874-01-28)28 January 1874
Killala, County Mayo, Ireland
Died14 September 1955(1955-09-14) (aged 81)
EducationAlexandra College
Alma materRoyal University of Ireland
Military service
Branch/serviceIrish Citizen Army
RankCaptain/Chief Medical Officer
Battles/warsEaster Rising

Lynn was so greatly affected by the poverty and disease among the poor in the west of Ireland that, at 16, she decided to be a doctor. She was educated in England and Germany, before enrolling in the Royal University of Ireland, a forerunner to the UCD School of Medicine. Following her graduation in 1899, Lynn went to the United States, where she worked for ten years, before returning to Ireland to become the first female doctor at the Royal Victoria Eye and Ear Hospital (1910–1916). In 1919, she founded Saint Ultan's Children's Hospital.

Personal life

Kathleen Lynn was born on 28 January 1874 in the townland of Mullafarry, near Killala in County Mayo,[1] to a Church of Ireland clergyman, Robert Young Lynn, and his wife, Catherine Wynne,[2][3][4] and was their second of four children. Her mother, Catherine, was a great granddaughter of Owen Wynne of Hazelwood House, County Sligo.[5]

In 1882, the family moved to Shrule in County Longford where her father took over as the clergyman of the Ballymahon parish. Later on in her young life, in 1886 Lynn and her family moved to Cong, a village bordering Mayo and Galway, to where her father's parish was being funded by the Lady Ardilaun of Ashford Castle. She was sent to the Alexandra College, of which Lady Ardilaun was the patron, in Dublin which she attended till she was sixteen years old. She was distantly related to Countess Markievicz through her aunt's marriage.[6] Growing up in the aftermath of The Great Famine (1845 – 1852), She was deeply saddened by the deadly diseases and poverty suffered by the people in her local area. This led to her desire at sixteen, when she left school, to become a doctor.[7]

Lynn's family didn't approve of her role in the rising. In fact, at the time, Lynn's family were so disgusted with her activities that they would not let her return home to Cong, County Mayo, for Christmas. She instead had to spend Christmas 1917 with her aunt Florence in Dublin. She did the same the following year, though she longed to spend Christmas with her family in Mayo. This personal split was eventually settled before her father's death in 1923.[8]

 
Kathleen and Madeleine pictured together in 1919

Lynn lived in Rathmines from 1903 to her death in 1955, sharing her home with her life partner Madeleine ffrench-Mullen. She also had a holiday cottage in Glenmalure, County Wicklow - not far from Glendalough where a number of her Wynne cousins lived. She left the cottage to An Óige, the Irish youth hostel association on her death.[9]

Education

In 1891 Lynn went as a boarder to Alexandra College, Dublin, from where she matriculated in 1893 from the Royal University of Ireland.[10] From October 1897 Lynn took classes at the Catholic University of Ireland's school of medicine in Cecilia Street, Dublin, and in the Royal College of Surgeons of Ireland. In 1898 she won the Barker anatomical prize awarded by the college. She graduated MB BCh BAO from the Royal University of Ireland in 1899. Lynn conducted her internships at Holles Street Hospital (1897–99), the Rotunda Hospital (1899), the Royal Victoria Eye and Ear Hospital (1899), and at the Richmond Lunatic Asylum. In 1898 Lynn was appointed the first woman resident doctor at Dublin's Adelaide Hospital, but staff opposition to her appointment meant she did not take up the post. She completed postgraduate work in the United States in the early 1900s before working as a duty doctor at hospitals in the city of Dublin as part of her wider general practice based at her home at 9 Belgrave Road, Rathmines, Dublin. Lynn became a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of Ireland in 1909, and was promoted to clinical assistant in the Royal Victoria Eye and Ear Hospital in the same year.[11]

Political activity

Lynn was a member of the executive committee of the Irish Women's Suffragette and Local Government Association (IWSLGA) from 1903, and remained on the executive until 1916.[12] Lynn was a member of the radical British Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) from 1908 and she was also said to be on friendly terms with the suffragist Sylvia Pankhurst.[13] She was part of a mass meeting in 1912, demanding that women's suffrage be included in the Third Home Rule Bill of that year.[13]

Lynn supported the workers during the 1913 lock-out and worked with Constance Markievicz and others in the soup kitchens in Liberty Hall, becoming close to Markievicz and James Connolly.[14] In 1913, at Markievicz's request, she treated Helena Molony. Molony, who was active in a number of political movements, stayed with Lynn in her Rathmines home following an illness. As a result of the influence of Molony and Markievicz, Lynn became an active participant in the suffragist, labour and nationalist movements. "We used to have long talks and she converted me to the National Movement," Lynn wrote.[15] She joined the Irish Citizen Army and was chief medical officer during the 1916 Easter Rising. She described herself as "a Red Cross doctor and a belligerent" when she was arrested.[16]

For her part in the Rising, Lynn was imprisoned in Kilmainham Gaol with her comrades Markievicz, Molony and Madeleine ffrench-Mullen. Lynn remained active in the Nationalist movement; she was elected vice-president of the Sinn Féin executive in 1917[15] and in 1923, Lynn was elected to Dáil Éireann as an anti-Treaty Sinn Féin Teachta Dála (TD) for the Dublin County constituency at the 1923 general election.[17] In accordance with Sinn Féin abstentionist policy of the time, she did not take her seat in Dáil Éireann. She lost her seat in the June 1927 general election.[18] She unsuccessfully contested the August 1927 by-election for Dublin County. Lynn claimed, many years after the 1916 rising, that it was suffrage that converted her to republicanism, saying: "I saw that people got the wrong impression about suffrage and that led me to examine the Irish question."[19] She was given a gold fibula bone-shaped brooch as a token of gratitude from the Irish Citizen Army for her help in the medical preparation for the Rising.[13]

Lynn eventually left politics in 1927, increasingly frustrated by Sinn Féin's refusal to embrace social reform and health care.[20]

Medical career

Lynn decided to become a doctor when she was 16. She was one of the first female medical graduates from University College Dublin. Lynn became politically active and worked in Liberty Hall providing food and care for the poor and destitute families during the turbulent time of the 1913 Dublin Lock-Out.[21] Lynn's medical career was defined by her work at Saint Ultan's Children's Hospital, which she established in Dublin in 1919, with a group of female activists. Lynn's work with Dublin's inner-city poor had convinced her of the need for a hospital to provide medical and educational facilities for impoverished mothers and infants. Earlier in her career, Lynn had experienced discrimination in applying for hospital positions due to her gender, and Saint Ultan's was the only hospital in Ireland entirely managed by women.[22] Saint Ultan's Hospital grew rapidly, and from 1937 became the centre for BCG vaccination in Ireland. The hospital closed in 1983.

 
Grave of Kathleen Lynn, Deansgrange cemetery, County Dublin.

Lynn was the chief medical officer for the Irish Citizen Army. At the request of rebel leader James Connolly she joined the Irish Citizen's Army during the 1916 rising and was appointed as Captain and Chief Medical Officer. She provided medical training to members of the ICA also taught the Cumann na mBan.[23] Dr. Lynn (along with writer Sean O'Casey) advocated the use of the Irish language in Church of Ireland liturgy and many events for Saint Ultan's were advertised in the Irish language.[24]

Death and legacy

Lynn died on 14 September 1955, and was buried in the family plot at Deansgrange Cemetery with full military honours in recognition of her role in the Rising and the War of Independence.[21][25] She was so well known that crowds in Dublin lined the streets to show their respects.[20]

After Lynn's death, Éamon de Valera set up the Kathleen Lynn Memorial Committee, which lasted for eight years and resulted in the opening of a surgical unit at Saint Ultan's Children's Hospital in 1964, but ended in 1975 due to funding difficulties.

Four diaries recorded by Lynn between 1916 and 1955 were transcribed over two years by librarian Margaret Connolly. The detailed diaries chronicle her medical, political and social life and are held at the Royal College of Physicians in Ireland archive, along with the administrative papers of Saint Ultan's Hospital. They provided source material for the 2010 documentary entitled Kathleen Lynn – An Dochtúir Reabhlóideach by Loop Line Film and director Sé Merry Doyle.[26]

Historian Margaret Ó hÓgartaigh wrote her biography, Kathleen Lynn, Irishwoman, Patriot, Doctor (Irish Academic Press, 2006).[27]

Lynn is used as a character in the novel The Pull of the Stars (2020) by Emma Donoghue, set in a Dublin hospital in 1918.[28]

Relationship with ffrench-Mullen

Modern examinations of their lives have led many people to consider the possibility that Lynn and Madeleine ffrench-Mullen were a same-sex couple. The remarkable closeness they shared, the fact they never married men, and the fact that they lived together in the same house until Madeleine's death, are all now taken into account when discussing their lives. It has also been suggested that their fellow 1916 rising comrades, Julia Grenan and Elizabeth O'Farrell, were in a similar arrangement, and that Margaret Skinnider was another lesbian participant in the rising.[29][30][31][32][33]

References

  1. ^ Ó, M., & Hogartaigh, M. O. (2006). Kathleen Lynn: Irishwoman, patriot, doctor. Dublin: Irish Academic Press. pp. 6
  2. ^ "General Registrar's Office". IrishGenealogy.ie. Retrieved 28 January 2017.
  3. ^ Smyth, Hazel P. (1 January 1977). "Kathleen Lynn, M.D., F.R.C.S.I. (1874-1955)". Dublin Historical Record. 30 (2): 51–57. JSTOR 30087174.
  4. ^ "Mullafarry Rectory or Ballysakeery Glebe". davidhicksbook.blogspot.gr. David Hicks. 26 March 2016. Retrieved 28 January 2017.
  5. ^ Burkes Irish Family Records. London: Burkes Peerage. 1976. p. 1229.
  6. ^ "Documentary on Kathleen Lynn". Irish Times. 21 June 2008. ProQuest 309035631.
  7. ^ "Kathleen Lynn: Insider on the outside, Art Exhibition, essay". 2016. Retrieved 24 November 2016.
  8. ^ Ó' hOgartaigh, Margaret (2006). Kathleen Lynn: Irishwoman, Patriot, Doctor. Dublin: Irish Academic Press.
  9. ^ "Glenmalure's hostel marks six decades". Irish Independent. 7 July 2018.
  10. ^ Ó hÓgartaigh, Margaret. "Lynn, Kathleen". Dictionary of Irish Biography. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
  11. ^ Luddy, Maria (2004). "Lynn, Kathleen (1874–1955), physician and political activist". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Maria Luddy. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/57724. Retrieved 22 October 2016. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  12. ^ Ó hÓgartaigh, Margaret (2006). Kathleen Lynn: Irishwoman, Patriot, Doctor. Dublin: Irish Academic Press.
  13. ^ a b c Ó hOgartaigh, Margaret (2006). Kathleen Lynn: Irishwoman, Patriot, Doctor. Dublin, Ireland: Irish Academic Press.
  14. ^ Stokes, Tom. "Kathleen Lynn". The Irish Republic. Retrieved 23 November 2016.
  15. ^ a b Wheelock. "1916: Diary of rebel doctor Kathleen Lynn". The Irish Times.
  16. ^ Eight Women of the Easter Rising The New York Times, 16 March 2016
  17. ^ "Kathleen Lynn". Oireachtas Members Database. Retrieved 26 April 2009.
  18. ^ "Kathleen Lynn". ElectionsIreland.org. Retrieved 26 April 2009.
  19. ^ Ó hOgartaigh, Margaret (2006). kathleen Lynn: Irishwoman, Patriot, Doctor. Dublin, Ireland: Irish Academic Press.
  20. ^ a b "Dr. Kathleen Lynn -- Irish Rebel, Politician and Humanitarian". The Wild Geese. 1 August 2016. Retrieved 23 October 2017.
  21. ^ a b "Lynn, Kathleen (1874-1955), A revolutionary doctor". www.ucd.ie. UCD. Retrieved 13 October 2016.
  22. ^ Ó hÓgartaigh, Margaret, Kathleen Lynn. Irishwoman, Patriot, Doctor. (Irish Academic Press, 2006). pp. 68–69.
  23. ^ "Lynn, Kathleen (1874-1955), 1916: Diary of rebel doctor". www.irishtimes.com. Harriet Wheelock. Retrieved 13 October 2016.
  24. ^ Saint Ultan's a Womens Hospital for Infants www.historyireland.com
  25. ^ Ó hÓgartaigh, Margaret, Kathleen Lynn. Irishwoman, Patriot, Doctor. (Irish Academic Press, 2006).
  26. ^ "Kathleen Lynn - The Rebel Doctor". loopline.com. Retrieved 11 November 2016.
  27. ^ The Irish Times Obituary of Margaret Ó hÓgartaigh, "Distinguished and prolific historian of women of Ireland"
  28. ^ "Woman's Hour". BBC. Retrieved 26 July 2020.
  29. ^ "It's time to acknowledge the lesbians who fought in the Easter Rising with podcast". Dublin Inquirer.
  30. ^ "Hidden Histories: Queer Women of The 1916 Rising | GCN | Gay Ireland News & Entertainment". Gcn.ie. 22 March 2016. Retrieved 6 May 2019.
  31. ^ Rogers, Rosemary (23 May 2015). "Wild Irish Women: Elizabeth O'Farrell – A Fearless Woman". Irish America. Retrieved 6 May 2019.
  32. ^ "Lesbians of 1916 are the Rising's hidden history". The Independent.
  33. ^ Ronan McGreevy (21 June 2018). "The gay patriots who helped found the Irish State". Irishtimes.com. Retrieved 6 May 2019.

Sources

  • Ó hÓgartaigh, Margaret (2006). Kathleen Lynn: Irishwoman, Patriot, Doctor. Irish Academic Press.
Party political offices
Preceded by Vice President of Sinn Féin
with P. J. Ruttledge (1923–1926)

1923–1927
Succeeded by

kathleen, lynn, kathleen, florence, lynn, january, 1874, september, 1955, irish, sinn, féin, politician, activist, medical, doctor, lynn, appeared, 1927, piece, election, materialvice, president, sinn, féinin, office, 1923, 1927leaderÉamon, valerateachta, dála. Kathleen Florence Lynn 28 January 1874 14 September 1955 was an Irish Sinn Fein politician activist and medical doctor Kathleen LynnLynn as she appeared in a 1927 piece of election materialVice President of Sinn FeinIn office 1923 1927LeaderEamon de ValeraTeachta DalaIn office August 1923 June 1927ConstituencyDublin CountyPersonal detailsBorn 1874 01 28 28 January 1874Killala County Mayo IrelandDied14 September 1955 1955 09 14 aged 81 EducationAlexandra CollegeAlma materRoyal University of IrelandMilitary serviceBranch serviceIrish Citizen ArmyRankCaptain Chief Medical OfficerBattles warsEaster RisingLynn was so greatly affected by the poverty and disease among the poor in the west of Ireland that at 16 she decided to be a doctor She was educated in England and Germany before enrolling in the Royal University of Ireland a forerunner to the UCD School of Medicine Following her graduation in 1899 Lynn went to the United States where she worked for ten years before returning to Ireland to become the first female doctor at the Royal Victoria Eye and Ear Hospital 1910 1916 In 1919 she founded Saint Ultan s Children s Hospital Contents 1 Personal life 2 Education 3 Political activity 4 Medical career 5 Death and legacy 5 1 Relationship with ffrench Mullen 6 References 7 SourcesPersonal life EditKathleen Lynn was born on 28 January 1874 in the townland of Mullafarry near Killala in County Mayo 1 to a Church of Ireland clergyman Robert Young Lynn and his wife Catherine Wynne 2 3 4 and was their second of four children Her mother Catherine was a great granddaughter of Owen Wynne of Hazelwood House County Sligo 5 In 1882 the family moved to Shrule in County Longford where her father took over as the clergyman of the Ballymahon parish Later on in her young life in 1886 Lynn and her family moved to Cong a village bordering Mayo and Galway to where her father s parish was being funded by the Lady Ardilaun of Ashford Castle She was sent to the Alexandra College of which Lady Ardilaun was the patron in Dublin which she attended till she was sixteen years old She was distantly related to Countess Markievicz through her aunt s marriage 6 Growing up in the aftermath of The Great Famine 1845 1852 She was deeply saddened by the deadly diseases and poverty suffered by the people in her local area This led to her desire at sixteen when she left school to become a doctor 7 Lynn s family didn t approve of her role in the rising In fact at the time Lynn s family were so disgusted with her activities that they would not let her return home to Cong County Mayo for Christmas She instead had to spend Christmas 1917 with her aunt Florence in Dublin She did the same the following year though she longed to spend Christmas with her family in Mayo This personal split was eventually settled before her father s death in 1923 8 Kathleen and Madeleine pictured together in 1919 Lynn lived in Rathmines from 1903 to her death in 1955 sharing her home with her life partner Madeleine ffrench Mullen She also had a holiday cottage in Glenmalure County Wicklow not far from Glendalough where a number of her Wynne cousins lived She left the cottage to An oige the Irish youth hostel association on her death 9 Education EditIn 1891 Lynn went as a boarder to Alexandra College Dublin from where she matriculated in 1893 from the Royal University of Ireland 10 From October 1897 Lynn took classes at the Catholic University of Ireland s school of medicine in Cecilia Street Dublin and in the Royal College of Surgeons of Ireland In 1898 she won the Barker anatomical prize awarded by the college She graduated MB BCh BAO from the Royal University of Ireland in 1899 Lynn conducted her internships at Holles Street Hospital 1897 99 the Rotunda Hospital 1899 the Royal Victoria Eye and Ear Hospital 1899 and at the Richmond Lunatic Asylum In 1898 Lynn was appointed the first woman resident doctor at Dublin s Adelaide Hospital but staff opposition to her appointment meant she did not take up the post She completed postgraduate work in the United States in the early 1900s before working as a duty doctor at hospitals in the city of Dublin as part of her wider general practice based at her home at 9 Belgrave Road Rathmines Dublin Lynn became a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of Ireland in 1909 and was promoted to clinical assistant in the Royal Victoria Eye and Ear Hospital in the same year 11 Political activity EditLynn was a member of the executive committee of the Irish Women s Suffragette and Local Government Association IWSLGA from 1903 and remained on the executive until 1916 12 Lynn was a member of the radical British Women s Social and Political Union WSPU from 1908 and she was also said to be on friendly terms with the suffragist Sylvia Pankhurst 13 She was part of a mass meeting in 1912 demanding that women s suffrage be included in the Third Home Rule Bill of that year 13 Lynn supported the workers during the 1913 lock out and worked with Constance Markievicz and others in the soup kitchens in Liberty Hall becoming close to Markievicz and James Connolly 14 In 1913 at Markievicz s request she treated Helena Molony Molony who was active in a number of political movements stayed with Lynn in her Rathmines home following an illness As a result of the influence of Molony and Markievicz Lynn became an active participant in the suffragist labour and nationalist movements We used to have long talks and she converted me to the National Movement Lynn wrote 15 She joined the Irish Citizen Army and was chief medical officer during the 1916 Easter Rising She described herself as a Red Cross doctor and a belligerent when she was arrested 16 For her part in the Rising Lynn was imprisoned in Kilmainham Gaol with her comrades Markievicz Molony and Madeleine ffrench Mullen Lynn remained active in the Nationalist movement she was elected vice president of the Sinn Fein executive in 1917 15 and in 1923 Lynn was elected to Dail Eireann as an anti Treaty Sinn Fein Teachta Dala TD for the Dublin County constituency at the 1923 general election 17 In accordance with Sinn Fein abstentionist policy of the time she did not take her seat in Dail Eireann She lost her seat in the June 1927 general election 18 She unsuccessfully contested the August 1927 by election for Dublin County Lynn claimed many years after the 1916 rising that it was suffrage that converted her to republicanism saying I saw that people got the wrong impression about suffrage and that led me to examine the Irish question 19 She was given a gold fibula bone shaped brooch as a token of gratitude from the Irish Citizen Army for her help in the medical preparation for the Rising 13 Lynn eventually left politics in 1927 increasingly frustrated by Sinn Fein s refusal to embrace social reform and health care 20 Medical career EditLynn decided to become a doctor when she was 16 She was one of the first female medical graduates from University College Dublin Lynn became politically active and worked in Liberty Hall providing food and care for the poor and destitute families during the turbulent time of the 1913 Dublin Lock Out 21 Lynn s medical career was defined by her work at Saint Ultan s Children s Hospital which she established in Dublin in 1919 with a group of female activists Lynn s work with Dublin s inner city poor had convinced her of the need for a hospital to provide medical and educational facilities for impoverished mothers and infants Earlier in her career Lynn had experienced discrimination in applying for hospital positions due to her gender and Saint Ultan s was the only hospital in Ireland entirely managed by women 22 Saint Ultan s Hospital grew rapidly and from 1937 became the centre for BCG vaccination in Ireland The hospital closed in 1983 Grave of Kathleen Lynn Deansgrange cemetery County Dublin Lynn was the chief medical officer for the Irish Citizen Army At the request of rebel leader James Connolly she joined the Irish Citizen s Army during the 1916 rising and was appointed as Captain and Chief Medical Officer She provided medical training to members of the ICA also taught the Cumann na mBan 23 Dr Lynn along with writer Sean O Casey advocated the use of the Irish language in Church of Ireland liturgy and many events for Saint Ultan s were advertised in the Irish language 24 Death and legacy EditLynn died on 14 September 1955 and was buried in the family plot at Deansgrange Cemetery with full military honours in recognition of her role in the Rising and the War of Independence 21 25 She was so well known that crowds in Dublin lined the streets to show their respects 20 After Lynn s death Eamon de Valera set up the Kathleen Lynn Memorial Committee which lasted for eight years and resulted in the opening of a surgical unit at Saint Ultan s Children s Hospital in 1964 but ended in 1975 due to funding difficulties Four diaries recorded by Lynn between 1916 and 1955 were transcribed over two years by librarian Margaret Connolly The detailed diaries chronicle her medical political and social life and are held at the Royal College of Physicians in Ireland archive along with the administrative papers of Saint Ultan s Hospital They provided source material for the 2010 documentary entitled Kathleen Lynn An Dochtuir Reabhloideach by Loop Line Film and director Se Merry Doyle 26 Historian Margaret o hogartaigh wrote her biography Kathleen Lynn Irishwoman Patriot Doctor Irish Academic Press 2006 27 Lynn is used as a character in the novel The Pull of the Stars 2020 by Emma Donoghue set in a Dublin hospital in 1918 28 Relationship with ffrench Mullen Edit Modern examinations of their lives have led many people to consider the possibility that Lynn and Madeleine ffrench Mullen were a same sex couple The remarkable closeness they shared the fact they never married men and the fact that they lived together in the same house until Madeleine s death are all now taken into account when discussing their lives It has also been suggested that their fellow 1916 rising comrades Julia Grenan and Elizabeth O Farrell were in a similar arrangement and that Margaret Skinnider was another lesbian participant in the rising 29 30 31 32 33 References Edit o M amp Hogartaigh M O 2006 Kathleen Lynn Irishwoman patriot doctor Dublin Irish Academic Press pp 6 General Registrar s Office IrishGenealogy ie Retrieved 28 January 2017 Smyth Hazel P 1 January 1977 Kathleen Lynn M D F R C S I 1874 1955 Dublin Historical Record 30 2 51 57 JSTOR 30087174 Mullafarry Rectory or Ballysakeery Glebe davidhicksbook blogspot gr David Hicks 26 March 2016 Retrieved 28 January 2017 Burkes Irish Family Records London Burkes Peerage 1976 p 1229 Documentary on Kathleen Lynn Irish Times 21 June 2008 ProQuest 309035631 Kathleen Lynn Insider on the outside Art Exhibition essay 2016 Retrieved 24 November 2016 o hOgartaigh Margaret 2006 Kathleen Lynn Irishwoman Patriot Doctor Dublin Irish Academic Press Glenmalure s hostel marks six decades Irish Independent 7 July 2018 o hogartaigh Margaret Lynn Kathleen Dictionary of Irish Biography Retrieved 20 February 2022 Luddy Maria 2004 Lynn Kathleen 1874 1955 physician and political activist Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Maria Luddy doi 10 1093 ref odnb 57724 Retrieved 22 October 2016 Subscription or UK public library membership required o hogartaigh Margaret 2006 Kathleen Lynn Irishwoman Patriot Doctor Dublin Irish Academic Press a b c o hOgartaigh Margaret 2006 Kathleen Lynn Irishwoman Patriot Doctor Dublin Ireland Irish Academic Press Stokes Tom Kathleen Lynn The Irish Republic Retrieved 23 November 2016 a b Wheelock 1916 Diary of rebel doctor Kathleen Lynn The Irish Times Eight Women of the Easter Rising The New York Times 16 March 2016 Kathleen Lynn Oireachtas Members Database Retrieved 26 April 2009 Kathleen Lynn ElectionsIreland org Retrieved 26 April 2009 o hOgartaigh Margaret 2006 kathleen Lynn Irishwoman Patriot Doctor Dublin Ireland Irish Academic Press a b Dr Kathleen Lynn Irish Rebel Politician and Humanitarian The Wild Geese 1 August 2016 Retrieved 23 October 2017 a b Lynn Kathleen 1874 1955 A revolutionary doctor www ucd ie UCD Retrieved 13 October 2016 o hogartaigh Margaret Kathleen Lynn Irishwoman Patriot Doctor Irish Academic Press 2006 pp 68 69 Lynn Kathleen 1874 1955 1916 Diary of rebel doctor www irishtimes com Harriet Wheelock Retrieved 13 October 2016 Saint Ultan s a Womens Hospital for Infants www historyireland com o hogartaigh Margaret Kathleen Lynn Irishwoman Patriot Doctor Irish Academic Press 2006 Kathleen Lynn The Rebel Doctor loopline com Retrieved 11 November 2016 The Irish Times Obituary of Margaret o hogartaigh Distinguished and prolific historian of women of Ireland Woman s Hour BBC Retrieved 26 July 2020 It s time to acknowledge the lesbians who fought in the Easter Rising with podcast Dublin Inquirer Hidden Histories Queer Women of The 1916 Rising GCN Gay Ireland News amp Entertainment Gcn ie 22 March 2016 Retrieved 6 May 2019 Rogers Rosemary 23 May 2015 Wild Irish Women Elizabeth O Farrell A Fearless Woman Irish America Retrieved 6 May 2019 Lesbians of 1916 are the Rising s hidden history The Independent Ronan McGreevy 21 June 2018 The gay patriots who helped found the Irish State Irishtimes com Retrieved 6 May 2019 Sources Edito hogartaigh Margaret 2006 Kathleen Lynn Irishwoman Patriot Doctor Irish Academic Press Party political officesPreceded byArthur GriffithMichael O Flanagan Vice President of Sinn Feinwith P J Ruttledge 1923 1926 1923 1927 Succeeded byMary MacSwineyJohn Madden Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kathleen Lynn amp oldid 1132239876, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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