Main Menu
Home
History & Society Series
History & Biography Titles
   Memoirs of a Tipperary Family
   Prince of Swindlers
   A Soul Came in to Ireland
   Immortal Dan
   Kuno Meyer 1858-1919
   Fr. John Murphy of Boolavogue 1753-1798
   Maurice Davin 1841-1927
   The Connerys
   In Search of Fame and Fortune
   The Queen's Last Map-Maker
   John O'Leary: A Study in Irish Separatism
   Travels of William Smith O'Brien
Other Titles
Availability
Announcements
Contact Us

ONLINE STORE
Book Store

Memoirs of a Tipperary family
Gaynor family of Tyone
Memoirs of a Tipperary Family:
The Gaynors of Tyone 1887-2000

by Eamonn Gaynor
(2003)

464 pp
ISBN 0 906602 270
Hardback only
RRP:€30.00
[ In Stock ]

Online Store Price: €20.00

This important book traces the lives of three members of the Gaynor family of Tyone near Nenagh in County Tipperary. The subjects are Fr Pat Gaynor born 1887; Sean Gaynor his step-brother born 1894 and Eamonn Gaynor, son of Sean, born 1925. Their lives encapsulate the twentieth century in Ireland and their respective memoirs, written with an honesty and integrity common to all three, pull back the veil of silence. Pat Gaynor, educated at St Flannans and Maynooth, provides a revealing account of Maynooth in the early days of the twentieth century as the young priests, influenced by the Sinn Fein philosophy of Arthur Griffith, confronted the cautious establishment which included the future Cardinal Mannix. Ordained for Killaloe diocese in 1911, Pat Gaynor served his formative years on the mission in Glasgow. In 1917 he was elected to the Supreme Executive of Sinn Fein and was prominent in the anti-conscription campaign. He presents fascinating insights on local town notables in Nenagh from the old regime who attempted to manipulate the young men of Sinn Fein. He also claims that some of the medal festooned patriots had less than heroic war campaigns. Appointed curate in the west Clare parish of Mullagh, Fr Pat helped establish Sinn Fein courts which incarcerated offenders in the open air prison on Mutton Island. A firm supporter of the Treaty he retired from active politics influenced perhaps by the harrowing experience of having to administer the last rites to three young boys sentenced to death by a military court in Birr during the Civil War. His account of their sad last hours serves to temper the glorification of violence. A curate in Birr until 1937 he was again transferred to west Clare, where he died as parish priest of Kilmihil in 1949

Fr Pat portrays the political life of a Sinn Fein activist whereas his step-brother Seán Gaynor was a man of action. He joined the Volunteers in 1917, served terms of imprisonment in Limerick and Belfast before becoming Officer Commanding of Tipperary No.1 Brigade. Seán Gaynor was immersed in the IRA military campaign in North Tipperary. Planning and participating in engagements with the Active Service Unit which made the task of the British occupation impossible. His terse prose conveys the drama and tension in a matter-of-fact fashion so different from the more loquacious style of his sibling Fr Pat. He was present at the fateful meeting in June 1922 at which Liam Lynch and his fellow officers decided to support the occupiers of the Four Courts and thereby initiate the Civil War. Returning to the south, the guerrilla war tactics so successful against the British failed against the Free State forces who also knew Ireland. Seán Gaynor was taken, at the last fateful action of the Civil War deep in the Knockmealdown Mountains, with Austin Stack, Frank Barrett and Todd Andrews. Imprisoned by former comrades in Mountjoy he recounts how their hunger strike was manipulated by prominent organisers such as Frank Barrett. Seán Gaynor resigned from the IRA in protest at this manipulation and left the political field to go back to his farm.

Eamonn Gaynor's earlier life is a mirror image of that of his uncle. We have nostalgic accounts of his early boyhood when little was said of the events in which his father and uncle were so prominent. A scholarship boy of the new state, he was enrolled in St Flannans, Ennis where he endured and enjoyed the onset of adolescence. Religious life was almost a family profession so it is no surprise to see him in Maynooth studying for the priesthood in the 1940s. He brings us to the internal world of this institution where young men were fashioned to serve. Yet behind the austere walls he found friendship and gaiety in drama and games and delight in the eccentricities of some of the independent minded professors.


Orders & enquiries to:
Geography Publications, 24 Kennington Rd., Templeogue, Dublin 6w.
Tel/Fax: 01-4566085
Email enquiries
 Printable Version

Order Products
  Title Description Price Quantity Actions
opens in new window
Memoirs of a Tipperary Family: The Gaynors of Tyone 1887-2000 The Gaynors of Tyone - History & Biography Eamonn Gaynor (2003) RRP: €30  €20.00
All prices are in Euro

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty.

Search Web Pages

New Releases
Travels of William Smith O'Brien in Europe and the Wider World 1843 to 1864
William Smith O’Brien is known in Irish History as the stand-offish if conscientious leader of the failed 1848 Rising. Recently discovered journals prove him a writer of exceptional interest. Both before and after his four and a half years penal exile in Tasmania, O’Brien proved a passionate European traveller and analyst of the conditions and policies of numerous countries. Not till the arrival of Garret FitzGerald in the 20th century was any Irishman so conversant with European political, religious and social developments. Both before and after his free pardon in 1856, O’Brien acted as an unofficial ambassador at large for his country, being honourably received by the President Buchanan of the United States of America, Marshal McMahon, later President of France, and Pope Pius IX.

The book covers tours in Tasmania –Australia 1849-53; Ceylon/India/Egypt 1854; Spain/France 1854; Brussels 1854-5; France/Italy 1855-6; Greece 1856; West of Ireland 1858; USA and Canada 1859; France/Spain/ Portugal 1860; France/Austria/Hungary/Northern Italy 1861; Italy/France 1862-3; Turkey/Romania/Poland 1863.

>> Click Here

At the Anvil: Essays in Honour of William J. Smyth
At the Anvil: essays in honour of Professor William J. Smyth was launched on 5th December 2012. This important collection of essays, by academics from Ireland and overseas, was assembled to highlight the enormous contribution made by Professor Smyth to third level education in Ireland and Irish society in general over a working career of unremitting endeavour.
At the Anvil brings together the work of three demographic cohorts of geographers – some, like Professor John Andrews, who were important influences on Smyth’s early thinking, others who were contemporaries and colleagues, and finally a younger group of researchers, a number of whom were his former students. Many of the essays build on topics which have been worked on by Willie Smyth, others extend to issues of broader concern to contemporary geographical studies in Ireland.

>> Click Here

The Queen's Last Map-Maker: Richard Bartlett in Ireland, 1600-3
Richard Bartlett was a talented cartographer and topographical draughtsman who practised in ireland at the beginning of the seventeeth century. John Andrew's has just launched his most accessible book yet: the beautiful, deceptively slim looking 'The Queen's Last Mapmaker'. This is devoted to Richard Bartlett, the great Elizabethan artist-cartographer whom historian Gerard Hayes-McCoy first celebrated in his book, Ulster and other Irish maps, c.1600 - and whom Andrews ranks with da Vinci, Durer and Wenceslas Hollar!
>> Click Here


Geography Publications Online Store
Click here and visit our new online bookstore, featuring all of our in-print titles, available for purchase securely and easily through PayPal with your credit/debit cards.

Geography Publications, 24 Kennington Road, Templeogue, Dublin 6W. Tel/Fax: +353 1 4566085