Tailteann Games (Irish Free State)

Fireworks at the first Games, August 15, 1924

The Tailteann Games or Aonach Tailteann was an Irish sporting and cultural festival held in the Irish Free State in 1924, 1928, and 1932. It was intended as a modern revival of the Tailteann Games held from legendary times until the Norman invasion of Ireland; as such it drew inspiration from the Modern Olympics revival of the Ancient Olympics. Croke Park, the Dublin headquarters of the Gaelic Athletic Association, was the venue for the opening ceremony and many of the sports events, which were open to people of Irish birth or ancestry. The Tailteann Games were held shortly after the Summer Olympics, such that athletes participating in Paris 1924 and Amsterdam 1928 came to compete. Participants coming from England, Scotland, Wales, Canada, the USA, South Africa and Australia as well as Ireland.[1] Chess competitions were held in conjunction with the Irish Chess Union as part of the Tailteann Games. There were also artistic competitions and industrial displays.

Origins

This revival "meeting of the Irish race" was announced by Éamon de Valera in Dáil Éireann in 1921. The 1922 Irish Race Convention supported the plan for an "Irish Race Olympic".[2] However, due to the Anglo-Irish War and Civil War it was not held until 1924.[3] The meeting was launched to celebrate the independence of Ireland. The Hogan Stand was built and opened for the 1924 games.[1]

A report to revive the games was debated in the Dáil in June 1922. Modern sports such as motorcycling and shooting were to be included, along with a parade of massed choirs. The possibility of out-doing the Olympic Games was mentioned: "We have got representations from America to the effect that it would be advisable to depart from the idea of confining the Tailteann games to the Irish race and seeing that they predated the Greek Olympic by a thousand years we should be justified in entering upon a more varied programme."[4] The games were delayed by the Irish Civil War of 1922–23.

Symbols

Commemorative medals were struck for all three games, in gold, silver, silver gilt, and bronze. They depict Tailtiu, the patron deity of the ancient Tailteann Games, with inscription "An Bhainrioghan Tailte" ("Queen Tailte").[5]

1924

The games opened with the "Tailteann choir" singing the "Tailteann ode", with words by Oliver St. John Gogarty and music by Louis O'Brien.[6] The ode won Gogarty a bronze medal in the literature section of the 1924 Olympic art competition. The Irish flag was carried by Tom Kiely, winner of the 1904 Olympic all-around (decathlon) title.[7]

To increase the quality of the competition, some Olympic stars without Irish heritage were invited to compete as guests.[8]

The dissident Irish republican government which had lost the Civil War urged a boycott of the games "falsely described as Aonach Tailteann", because it rejected the legitimacy of the Free State government which sponsored the games.[9] Rugby union was excluded from the program because the Irish Rugby Football Union was seen as "undemocratic and almost un-Irish".[10]

Hurling

In hurling, teams from England, Wales, the United States, Scotland, and Ireland played.[11]

A shinty–hurling match was played between Scotland team organised by the Camanachd Association and an Ireland team organised by the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA).

The Camogie Association planned national and international camogie competitions, but withdrew after a dispute with the organisers, reflecting the anti-Free State bias of the association's leadership. An exhibition match was played without the association's sanction,[12] while an association "Ireland" team played in London.

Swimming

Swimming events were held in the pond at Dublin Zoo.[8] American Johnny Weissmuller and Australian Andrew "Boy" Charleton took part.[8]

Athletics

The American Harold Osborn, the 1924 Olympic high jump champion, won the same event in the Tailteann Games

Sailing

The Sailing events of 1924 were sailed in Kingstown (now Dún Laoghaire) on Saturday in the second week of August.

Tailteann Games 1924 sailing events[13]
Race Class Result
1 Yachts over 10 tons
2 25 ft & 21 ft
3 Yachts up to 10 tons
4 17 ft
5 Seapoint [Sailing Club] No. 2 & Clontarf [Yacht & Boat Club] class
6 Shannon-One-Design 1 S47 Edgar H. Waller ; 2 S32 N. Lionel Lyster ; 3 S35 A.G. Waller ; 4 S36 R. White ; 5 S34 Walter Levinge ; 6 S45 Tom Feely ; 7 S43 Jocelyn H. de W. Waller
7 Water Wags

Motor Boating

The Motor Boat event of 1924 took place in Dublin Bay.

Cultural programme

Irish and foreign dignitaries at the RIA

W. B. Yeats persuaded the Royal Irish Academy to award prizes. The gold medal went to Stephen MacKenna for his translation of Plotinus; other winners were Oliver Gogarty, Francis Stuart, and James Stephens. A banquet presided over by T. M. Healy, the Governor-General of the Irish Free State, had an "oddly assorted" group of guests invited by Yeats, including Augustus John, Sir Edwin Lutyens, writers Compton Mackenzie, G. K. Chesterton, Lennox Robinson, and Carlos Magalhães de Azeredo; cricketers Ranjitsinhji and C. B. Fry; and diplomats Willem Hubert Nolens and Erik Palmstierna. Chesterton accepted the medal on his behalf of the absent MacKenna, who later refused it.[14]

At the Theatre Royal two recent operas by Irish composers were performed: Geoffrey Molyneux Palmer's Sruth na Maoile (1922) and Harold White's Seán the Post (1924), along with Shamus O'Brien (1896) by Charles V. Stanford.[6] The last was not successful: "there seemed to be a greater number of people in the orchestra than in the audience".[15]

In the genre painting competition, Charles Lamb won a silver medal for Dancing at a Northern Crossroads, depicting a traditional crossroads dance.[16]

1928

The programme for the 1928 games included athletics, billiards, boxing, camogie, cycling, Gaelic football, golf, gymnastics, Gaelic handball, hurling, motorcycling, rowing, and swimming.[17]

At the awards ceremony in the Iveagh Gardens, the pageant The Coming of Fionn by Seamus MacCall was staged.[18]

Motor Boating

The Motor Boat event of 1928 took place at Ballyglass, Co. Westmeath, home of the Lough Ree Yacht Club, and Motor Yacht Club of Ireland, on 16 August. Races took place in various classes:

1932

With the 1932 Summer Olympics begin held in Los Angeles, the Tailteann Games was originally scheduled for 1931 to avoid a clash, but postponed to 1932, which meant Olympic athletes from Ireland or abroad could not be present. The Games' main backer, minister J. J. Walsh, lost office when Fianna Fáil took power after the 1932 election, and public funding was cut. Against a background of the Great Depression and the Anglo-Irish Trade War, the Games cut from two weeks to one; they made a £12 profit.

In 1937 Éamon de Valera organised an inter-departmental committee into the feasibility of staging another games, which reported in June that it would be possible to stage one in 1939. De Valera used the split in Irish athletics governance as an excuse to defer consideration, to the chagrin of J. J. Walsh. The onset of the Second World War deferred any progress and nothing further happened after the war.[19]

References

  1. 1 2 History of Croke Park - Hogan Stand
  2. Dean 2014 p.91
  3. The Tailteann Games - An Olympic Event for the "Celtic Race", by Bernd Biege, About.com
  4. "Dil ireann - Volume 2 - 08 June, 1922 - IOMATHOIRI IASACHTA.". oireachtas.ie.
  5. Went, Arthur E. J. (June 1978). "Medallic Illustrations of Dublin History". Dublin Historical Record. Old Dublin Society. 31 (3): 97–104 : 103. JSTOR 30104073.
  6. 1 2 McAsey, Carmel C. (December 1969). "Dubliners and Opera". Dublin Historical Record. Old Dublin Society. 23 (2/3): 45–55 : 53. JSTOR 30087165. ; Gogarty, Oliver St. John; O'Brien, Louis (1924). "Aonach tailteann 1924 prize ode". Holdings. Dublin: Piggott. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  7. Zarnowski, Frank (August 2006). "Thomas F. Kiely: A biography" (PDF). Journal Of Olympic History. 14 (2): 5–11: 11.
  8. 1 2 3 Rouse, Paul (18 November 2016). "When Ireland’s Tailteann Games eclipsed the Olympics". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  9. Ruttledge, P. J. (1924). "To the people of Ireland and to every member of the Irish race". Holdings. National Library of Ireland. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  10. Rouse 2015 p.269
  11. Leeworthy, Daryl (2012). "The Forgotten Hurlers of South Wales: Sport, Society and the Irish, 1910–1925". Journal of Welsh People's History. Llafur. 11 (2). ISSN 0306-0837.
  12. Nic Congáil, Ríona (Spring–Summer 2013). "“Looking on for Centuries from the Sideline”: Gaelic Feminism and the Rise of Camogie" (PDF). Éire-Ireland :. 48 (1 & 2): 168–190 : 184.
  13. "Aonach Tailteann : programme of sailing.". Holdings. National Library of Ireland. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  14. Hone, Joseph (1963) [1943]. "Meditations in Time of Civil War; 7.". W. B. Yeats. Macmillan. pp. 362–365.
  15. Joseph O'Neill: "Music in Dublin", in: Music in Ireland. A Symposium, ed. by Aloys Fleischmann (Cork: Cork University Press, 1952), p. 255.
  16. Bourke, Marie (Spring 2000). "A Growing Sense of National Identity". History Ireland. 8 (1).
  17. Committee of Aonach Tailteann and Irish Tourist Information (1928). "Aonach Tailteann". Holdings. National Library of Ireland. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  18. Dean 2014 p.95
  19. Rouse 2015 p.255

Sources

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