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Batt O'Connor of
Brosna, Co.
Kerry was one of Michael Collins'
inner circle in the War of
Independence. His recollections of that War read more
like an adventure story than history. All
the
more surprising, therefore, that
his memoir has been out of print
since 1929. Following lively public interest in Sean Moylan's Memoirs, launched by Eamon O'Cuiv, the Aubane Historical Society is making a further account of the War of Independence available this time from a participant who felt pressed to take the pro-Treaty side in 1922. However, while Moylan's story is firmly centred in North Cork, Bart's features Dublin. Mrs O'Connor's recollections, which she lodged in the Bureau of Military History archive, appear here for the first time. An introduction by Brendan Clifford takes issue with the view that the divisions among the Volunteers over whether to accept Lloyd George's Treaty ultimatum really constituted a 'civil war' in the true sense of the word. Both sides were pledged to the Republic, the division was merely over whether to make a partial submission to the Crown under the British Prime Minister's threat of 'terrible and immediate war', as it was put by Kevin O'Higgins.
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