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At seven in
the evening on the fourth of January, 1921 a
party of ten R.I.C. men were returning to
Union Quay Headquarters, then the main police barracks
in Cork city. As they crossed Parnell Bridge they
came under gun and bomb attack from members of
the first battalion of Cork No. 1 Brigade who were waiting
in a disused public house.
Upon their arrival police reinforcements
found that six R.I.C. had been wounded. They were
removed to Union Quay barracks and from there to
the Military Hospital at Victoria Barracks. Five civilians
had also been injured by stray gunfire and
bomb fragments.
Thirty eight year old Constable Francis
Shortall succumbed to his wounds in Cork Military Hospital
on 7 January 1921. Originally from Co. Tipperary, he
had eleven years police service, having been a soldier
before joining the RIC. He held the rank of captain
in the Irish Guards during world war one and
had joined the RIC on 21st., February 1919.
Two weeks later nineteen year old
Constable Thomas Johnston, a single man from Co. Cavan,
died from injuries received in the ambush.
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