Frank Stagg

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Frank Stagg
Proinsias Stagg
Paramilitary organisation Provisional IRA
Date of birth 4 October 1942
Place of birth Hollymount, near Ballinrobe, County Mayo, Republic of Ireland
Hunger strike started 14 December 1975
Died 12 February 1976
Days on strike 62

Frank Stagg (Irish name: Proinsias Stagg[1] (4 October 194212 February 1976) was a Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) hunger striker from County Mayo, Ireland who died in 1976 in Wakefield Prison, Yorkshire, England after 62 days on hunger strike.[2]

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[edit] Background

Stagg was the seventh child in a family of thirteen children, born at Hollymount near Ballinrobe, County Mayo, in 1942. Stagg was educated to primary level at Newbrooke Primary School and at CBS Ballinrobe to secondary level. After finishing his schooling, he worked as an assistant gamekeeper with his uncle prior to emigrating from Ireland to England in search of work.

Once in England he gained employment as a bus conductor in north London and later became a bus driver. Whilst in England he met and married fellow Mayo native, Bridie Armstrong from Carnicon. In 1972, he joined the Luton cumann of Sinn Féin and soon after became a volunteer in the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA).

[edit] Republicanism

In April 1973, Stagg was arrested with six others alleged to comprise an IRA unit planning a campaign in Coventry. He was tried at Birmingham Crown Court. The jury found three of the seven not guilty; the remaining four were all found guilty of criminal damage and conspiracy to commit arson. Stagg and English born priest, Father Patrick Fell, were found to be the unit’s commanding officers; Stagg was given a ten-year sentence and Fell twelve years. Thomas Gerald Rush was given seven years and Anthony Roland Lynch, who was also found guilty of possessing articles with intent to destroy property, namely nitric acid, balloons, wax and sodium chlorate, was given ten years.[3][4]

Stagg was initially sent to the top security Albany Prison on the Isle of Wight. In March 1974, having been moved to Parkhurst Prison, he and fellow Mayo man Michael Gaughan joined a hunger strike begun by the sisters Marion Price and Dolours Price, Hugh Feeney and Gerry Kelly.

Following the hunger strike that resulted in the death of Michael Gaughan, the Price sisters, Feeney and Kelly were granted repatriation to Ireland. Stagg was denied repatriation, and was transferred to Long Lartin Prison, during his time there he was subject to solitary confinement for refusing to do prison work, he was also subjected, along with his wife and sisters during visits to humiliating body searches. In protest against this he began a second hunger strike that lasted for thirty-four days, this ended when prison governor agreed to an end to the strip-searches on Stagg and his visitors. Frank Stagg was bed-ridden for the rest of his incarnation in Long Lartin, due to an acute kidney complaint.

[edit] Hunger strike

In 1975 he was transferred to Wakefield Prison, where it was demanded that he again do prison work, which he refused and was place in solitary confinement. On December 14, 1975, Stagg embarked on a hunger strike in Wakefield Prison along with a number of Republican prisoners, after being refused repatriation to Ireland during the IRA/British truce.

Stagg's demands were:

  • An end to solitary confinement.
  • No prison work.
  • Repatriation to prison in Ireland.

The British government refused to meet any of these demands. He died on February 12, 1976 after 62 days on hunger strike.

[edit] Funeral

Frank Stagg's burial caused considerable controversy in Ireland, with republicans and some members of the Stagg family seeking to have Stagg buried in the republican plot in Ballina as was the wish of Frank Stagg, while the Irish government and some members of the Stagg family including Emmet Stagg, wished to have him buried in the family plot in the same cemetery and to avoid republican involvement in the funeral. As the family of Stagg waited at Dublin Airport for the body, the British Government ordered the flight to be diverted to Shannon Airport.

It was here that his body was brought to Ballina and buried near the family plot. In order to prevent the body being disinterred and reburied by republicans in accordance to the wishes of the dead man, the grave was covered with concrete. In November 1976, a group of republicans tunnelled under the concrete to recover the coffin under cover of darkness and reburied it in the republican plot.

His brother, Emmet Stagg is an Irish Labour Party politician, currently a Teachta Dála (TD) for Kildare North.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Increased turnout in Bundoran to honour hunger strikers. SAOIRSE (September 1995). Retrieved on 2007-10-29.
  2. ^ (2002) Tírghrá. National Commemoration Centre, p. 186. ISBN 0-9542946-0-2. 
  3. ^ Man's denial on chemicals; The Times; 25 Oct 1973; pg2 Col F
  4. ^ Priest who 'raised...; The Times; 2 Nov 1973; pg1 col E

[edit] External links