Michael Donnellan

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Michael Donnellan (January 190027 September 1964) was an Irish Clann na Talmhan politician.

Michael Donnellan was born in Dunmore, County Galway in 1900. He joined Sinn Féin after the Easter Rising in 1916 and was elected as a councillor on Glenamaddy District council in 1917. Donnellan served as a member of Galway County Council from 1927 until 1945, originally as a member of Fianna Fáil.

Donnellan became disenchanted with the party in the mid 1930s, as did many supporters in the Connacht province. He founded Clann na Talmhan in 1938, essentially a pressure group. However in 1938 a by-election was called in the constituency of Galway West and his supporters persuaded him to stand. Fine Gael stood aside hoping to inflict damage on Fianna Fáil who won though Donnellan secured almost 30% of the votes cast. He was elected to Dáil Éireann as a TD for Galway West in the 1943 general election.

Donnellan, however, proved too radical for the party members from the province of Leinster and was soon replaced as party leader by Joseph Blowick. His decision to abstain on Eamon de Valera's nomination for Taoiseach in 1943 led some to suspect he had done so out of loyalty to his old party leader. Donnellan served as a Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Finance on two occasions with responsibility for the Office of Public Works.

Donnellan was also a talented footballer and won All-Ireland medals with the Galway Senior football team in the 1920s and 1930s. He died in Croke Park at the 1964 All-Ireland final, shortly before his son, John Donnellan, as victorious Galway captain, received the Sam Maguire Cup. The subsequent by-election was won by John, standing as a Fine Gael representative.

His grandson, Michael also won All-Ireland medals with Galway in 1998 and 2001.

[edit] Political career

Political offices
Preceded by
Newly Created Party
Leader of Clann na Talmhan
1938–1944
Succeeded by
Joseph Blowick
Preceded by
Seán O'Grady
Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Finance
1948–1951
Succeeded by
Patrick Beegan
Preceded by
Patrick Beegan
Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Finance
1954–1957

[edit] See also

This page incorporates information from the Oireachtas Members Database