Frank Flood

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Frank Flood

Signed photograph of Frank Flood
Born June 1901
Dublin
Died March 14, 1921
at Mountjoy Jail, Dublin
Nationality Irish
Occupation University student
Known for Executed IRA volunteer : One of The Forgotten Ten

Francis Xavier Flood (June 1901[1] – March 14, 1921), known as Frank, was a 1st Lieutenant in the Dublin Active Service Brigade during the Irish War of Independence. He was executed by the British authorities in Mountjoy Jail and was one of the men commonly referred to as The Forgotten Ten.

Background

Flood was the son of a policeman and the 1911 census lists the family living at 15 Emmet Street.[2] He was one of eight brothers, most of whom were heavily involved in the Independence movement.[3] He attended secondary school in O'Connell Schools, Dublin and won a scholarship to study engineering at University College Dublin where he was an active member of UCD's famous debating forum, the Literary and Historical Society.[4] He passed his first and second year engineering exams with distinction.[1] At the time of his arrest he was living with his family at 30 Summerhill Parade, Dublin.

Trial and execution

He was captured, together with Thomas Bryan, Patrick Doyle, Bernard Ryan and Dermot O'Sullivan while attacking a lorry-load of Dublin Metropolitan Police at Drumcondra on January 21, 1921.[5][6] All of the men were found in possession of arms and a grenade was discovered in Flood's pocket.[3] On February 24, 1921, Flood was charged by Court-martial, with high treason/levying war against the King, and was one of six men executed by hanging on March 14, 1921 in Mountjoy Jail, Dublin.[5] At nineteen years of age, he was the youngest of the six.

Legacy and re-interment

The Grave of nine of the Forgotten Ten in Glasnevin Cemetery, Dublin

Flood was a close personal friend of Kevin Barry, and asked that he be buried as close as possible to him.[5] He had taken part in the September 1920 ambush during which Barry had been arrested and had been involved in the planning of several aborted attempts to rescue him.[4] Flood would remain buried at Mountjoy Prison, together with nine other executed members of the Irish Republican Army known as The Forgotten Ten, until he was given a state funeral and reburied at Glasnevin Cemetery on October 14, 2001 after an intense campaign led by the National Graves Association.[7]

Students of University College Dublin established the Frank Flood Shield, an annual debating competition, in his memory.[4] Flood and the other five men executed on 14 March 1921 are commemorated in Thomas MacGreevy's poem "The Six who were Hanged".[8]

References and sources

Notes
Sources
  • White, Gerry; Brendan O'Shea, William Youngshusband (2003). Irish Volunteer Soldier 1913-23. Oxford: Osprey. p. 70. ISBN 978-1-84176-685-0. 

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.