| On
April 17, 1921, Constable John Cyril MacDonald, a twenty-eight
year old single man from 31, Whirring Stone Road, Fulham,
London was walking with a female friend along Cove
Street when two men approached them, heading towards
Barrack Street.
As they passed,
one of the men jumped on McDonald and pinned his
arms behind him. The other pointed a revolver at him
which he tried to knock away but was shot in the face.
As he lay on the ground he was again fired at a
number of times.
As the men
then ran off down Cove Street, the girl rushed to the
fire station on nearby Sullivan's Quay to summon an
ambulance for the dying man. However, he succumbed
to his wounds five days
later.
McDonald had
been a soldier prior to joining the Black and Tans and
had been in Ireland for four months at the time of his
shooting.
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