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Loyal Dublin Volunteers


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#26 jdoyle

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Posted 14 April 2012 - 09:14 PM

a search on the Military section of Ancestry for Born Dublin with Inniskilling as a keyword gives 149 soldiers died (Irelands Memorial records database) and 47 pension records. Replacing Dublin with Wicklow gives 15 soldiers died, 0 pensions records. Kildare give 16 soldiers died plus 5 pension records.

A quick look at some chaps from Dublin shows they went to Finner Camp in 1914

Edward Lutman (discharged 1915 with bad eyes) - 9th Battn

Wellington Lyster Allen (KIA 1917) - 9th Battn. Embarked for France 5/101/1915 on the SS Victoria. A letter from his father has Wellington Allen in No 3 Company.
http://www.findagrav...r&GRid=11891549

Alfred Denham Ruddock - (discharged 1917 - gassed and TB; died 1918) - 9th Battn
http://www.cwgc.org/...72/RUDDOCK, A D

No service or pension record for Sgt Daniel Griffith, 9th Battn. Listed in the Engineering Dept of the Guinness Roll of Employees
http://www.dublin131...tell-our-story/
http://www.guinness-....aspx?eid=10834


CWGC has 3 death records for No 3 Company, 9th Battn but none are from Dublin. Was hoping that it might show No 3/C Company as being the LDV but inconclusive at the moment,

#27 murrough

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Posted 15 April 2012 - 12:35 PM

Hi Johnny,Would it be probable that a good number of the LDV were not from Dublin but were just living and employed there? there must have been a large ammount of Unionists employed in the civil service and the professions and they may have been likely to  have joined the LDV, but this is only speculation on my part.

#28 jonathan b

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Posted 16 April 2012 - 08:03 PM

Some interesting information now appearing on the Loyal Dublin Volunteers. It is good to see the photograph of a few of them at Finner Camp. There is some link with the 9th Inniskillings, and the L.D.V. someone from Tyrone must have had connections, with this group in Dublin or its leaders, that encouraged their recruitment.  Hopefully more sources will continue to throw light on this matter.
I am surprised to read of other similar units from Cork and Wicklow, and i look forward to hearing more about them.

#29 Wesley Wright

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Posted 30 May 2012 - 01:58 PM

April/May 1918--A roll of Honour of Dulin Orangemen who joined Army or Navy unveiled by Sir J.H.Stronge -Grand Master-in Fowler Memorial Hall-Dublin -the Roll had 340 names, 11 of whom had died. Included was Rev. J Thom, Military Cross + 2 Bars.  From Mid -Ulster -Mail -May 1918 Where might Roll of Honour be today??
Wesley Wright

#30 samueb

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Posted 22 June 2012 - 08:52 PM

Hey, I have an interest in this subject, according to Carson’s Army: the Ulster Volunteer Force, 1910-1922, by Timothy Bowman
Supposedly these men had made arrangements to send their families to England in the event of civil war[1]

.As late as July 1914 as this group appears to have been attempting to obtain rifles from sympathetic British army personnel and Staff Sergeant Ensell of the King’s own Yorkshire Light Infantry was charged with stealing five rifles from his battiob’s armoury in Dublin, with the intention of supplying them to Dublin UVF members.[2]

.It appears that some members from the Dublin UVF left the organisation during the First World War to join the Volunteer Training Corps, which they saw as a more effective organisation.[3]

Also, there is evidence of a corps being present in Leitrim
.There were Orange lodges in the County[1]
.Some Southern Irish Unionists supported militant action to stop the Third Home Rule Bill[2]
.A UVF unit appears to have been formed in County Leitrim by early 1914[3]
.A UVF parade took place in January, at which four corps and 300 men were inspected by the unionist Lord Farnham[4]

Can someone please send me the link for that photo of Dublin loyalists at Finner Camp

[1] Michael Wheatley, Nationalism and the Irish Party: provincial Ireland, 1910-1916, (Oxford University Press, 2005), p. 183

[2] Carson’s Army: the Ulster Volunteer Force, 1910-1922, p. 6

[3] Carson’s Army: the Ulster Volunteer Force, 1910-1922, p. 61

[4] Michael Wheatley, Nationalism and the Irish Party: provincial Ireland, 1910-1916, (Oxford University Press, 2005), p. 183


[1] Carson’s Army: the Ulster Volunteer Force, 1910-1922, p. 61

[2] Carson’s Army: the Ulster Volunteer Force, 1910-1922, p. 143

[3] Carson’s Army: the Ulster Volunteer Force, 1910-1922, p. 10

#31 samueb

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Posted 22 June 2012 - 09:01 PM

Sorry, I meant can anyone please tell me the links for the sources mentioning Loyalists militant groups in Wicklow and Cork, as I cant find anything

#32 Martin Staunton

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Posted 18 August 2012 - 12:48 AM

The 9th R Inniskilling Fusiliers was the only battalion within the 36th Ulster Division to have a significant presence of recruits from the South of Ireland - Soldiers Died in The Great War 1914-19 indicates that around 10% of the battalion's dead were from Dublin or Wicklow - as this unit saw active service from late 1915 through the war's end, it is logical to assume that this percentage was higher amongst the original personnel of the battalion - Kevin Myers wrote an article about them circa 1985 in the Irish Times confirming that they had joined this battalion.