Bachelor's Walk massacre
The Bachelor's Walk massacre happened in Dublin, on 26 July 1914, when troops of the King's Own Scottish Borderers fired on a crowd in Bachelor's Walk. Four people were killed and thirty were wounded.
The events followed the purchase of 1,500 rifles and ammunition for the Irish Volunteers in Hamburg in May 1914. In a counter operation to the Protestant Unionists running guns into Northern Ireland Erskine Childers landed the cargo in Howth and a thousand rifle carrying Irish Volunteers marched into Dublin. The quantity was negligible when compared to the far greater numbers of weapons landed and distributed by the Protestant Ulster Volunteer Force, completely without hindrance, but the reaction this time was severe from the British ruling authorities.
The incident proved a moment of political opportunity for Irish nationalists as it sharply brought out the different treatment for Protestant Ulster gun runners, and for unarmed Dublin civilians. Patrick Pearse declared 'The army is an object of odium, and the Volunteers are the heroes of the hour. The whole movement, the whole country, has been re-baptised by blood shed for Ireland.' [1]
References
- ↑ Ronan Fanning, Fatal Path, page 129