Stephen Hayes (Irish republican)

Stephen Hayes (26 December 1902 28 December 1974) was a member and leader of the Irish Republican Army from April 1939 to June 1941.

Hayes was born in Enniscorthy, County Wexford.[1]

During the Irish War of Independence, he was commandant of the Wexford Brigade of Fianna Éireann. He took the Republican side during the Irish Civil War, during which he was interned.[1]

Hayes was active in Gaelic Athletic Association circles in Wexford. In 1925, he helped Wexford win the Leinster Senior Football title. He also served as secretary to the county board for ten years, from the 1920s to 1930s.[1]

IRA activities

Hayes joined the IRA and was on the IRA Army Council in January 1939 when it declared war on the British government.[2][3]

When IRA chief of staff Seán Russell departed on IRA business to the USA (and subsequently to Nazi Germany), Hayes was left in control of the organisation. After Russell's death in August 1940 on board a German U-boat en route to Ireland, Hayes became chief of staff. His time in office was marred by controversy and it is widely believed that he served as an informer to the Garda Síochána.

Hayes had sent a plan for the invasion of Northern Ireland by German troops to Germany in April 1940. This plan later became known as Plan Kathleen. Hayes is also known to have met with German agent Hermann Görtz on 21 May 1940 in Dublin shortly after the latter’s parachuting into Ireland on 5 May 1940 as part of Operation Mainau. Hayes is known to have asked Görtz for money and arms to wage a campaign in Northern Ireland, although shortly after this meeting the original plan Kathleen was discovered. The discovery of the plan led to the acceleration of joint British and Irish military planning for a German invasion known as Plan W.

Another meeting on 15 August 1940 on Rathgar Road, Dublin organised by Hayes and attended by senior IRA men Paddy McGrath, Tom Harte and Tom Hunt, was also raided by the Garda Síochána.

McGrath and Harte were both arrested and tried by Military Tribunal established under the Emergency Powers Act 1939. They challenged the legislation to the Irish High Court seeking a writ of habeas corpus and ultimately appealed to the Supreme Court. They were represented in the Courts by Seán MacBride. The appeal was unsuccessful and they were executed by firing squad at Dublin's Mountjoy Prison on 6 September 1940.[4] Irish Executions

On 30 June 1941, Northern-based IRA men kidnapped Hayes, accusing him of being a spy. By his own account, he was tortured and "court-martialled" for "treason" by his comrades, and would have been executed, but he bought himself time composing an enormously long confession. He managed to escape in September 1941, and handed himself in to the Garda for protection.

The Officer Commanding (O/C) of the IRA's Northern Command, Seán McCaughey, was convicted on 18 September 1941 of the kidnapping. After a long hunger and thirst strike in Portlaoise prison, McCaughey died on 11 May 1946.

Hayes was later sentenced to five year's imprisonment by the Special Criminal Court on account of his IRA activities.[1]

Within IRA circles, Hayes is still considered a traitor and an informer. One of the main allegations against him was that he informed the Garda Síochána about IRA arms dumps in Wexford. However, this was later blamed on a Wexford man named Michael Deveraux, an officer of the Wexford Battalion of the IRA who was subsequently abducted and murdered by an IRA gang in Tipperary on Hayes’ orders. George Plant, a Protestant IRA veteran, was later executed in Portlaoise for Devereux's murder.

Later life

After his release, Hayes resumed his clerical position at Wexford County Council.

He died in Enniscorthy on 28 December 1974.

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "Stephen Hayes dies at 71", Irish Independent, 30 December 1974.
  2. McCaughey's Doom
  3. The IRA's all-time low
  4. High Court and Supreme Court Re: McGrath and Harte [1941] Irish Reports 68

External links