Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Irish in Argentina

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The Irish in Argentina

    Good overview article of the history of the Irish community in Argentina. The Wexford accent is said to live on in parts of Argentina.

    IrishAmerican.com
    Part 1

    By Harry Dunleavy, Contributor
    June / July 2014

    On the bicentennial of Combate de Montevideo, May, 1814, which won the River Plate and secured Argentina’s independence from Spain, Harry Dunleavy writes about the considerable contributions made by Irish people, such as Admiral William Brown, in the formation and development of the country.

    In the southeastern part of South America lies the wedge-shaped country of Argentina, the Land of Silver. Covering more than a million square miles, it is Latin America’s second largest country and one of the world’s richest in natural resources. Its topography varies from the snowcapped peaks of Tierra Del Fuego in the south to the arid, sunbaked regions of the north. The Spanish discovered it in 1515 and Juan Garay established the first settlement near the site of Buenos Aires in 1535.

    To this land of contrasts and beauty went several thousand Irish men and women in days gone by. Of a mainly haphazard nature before the 1810 revolution against Spain, Irish immigration was afterwards predominantly organized by the Argentine authorities and Irish groups in the capital, Buenos Aires.

    The first Irishman known to have set foot on Argentine soil was Tomas Fehilly, a Jesuit priest from Limerick, who arrived in 1556. After some time, he continued to Paraguay and died in Asuncion in 1625.

    Irish immigration was a mere trickle for the next two centuries. However, several Irish names crop up in newspapers of the period. Many were clergy; others were likely descendants of the Wild Geese (Irish soldiers in the continental European armies) who came directly from Spain.

    In 1762, a British expedition, which included many Irish, under the command of a Scotsman named McNamara entered the River Plate with the purpose of capturing Colonia, a Spanish settlement on the north side of the river in modern day Uruguay. The attempt failed and McNamara was killed. Many Irish serving in this British naval campaign were captured and sent to the interior, to Mendoza and Cordoba. Others were taken prisoner after the battle of Egmont in the Falkland Islands in June 1770. After short imprisonments, they showed no desire to leave Argentina and stayed on and made lives for themselves.

    In 1806, the British, under Viscount Beresford, invaded Buenos Aires with the unwilling help of many Irishmen. (This was the first substantial group of Irishmen to arrive together in Argentina.) Beresford took the city, but most of the Irishmen deserted to the Spanish side. Prominent among them was Michael Skennon, who was in charge of a cannon in the Spanish attempt to recapture the city. Skennon stayed at his cannon long after his comrades had fallen back and was captured and executed (likely the first non-Spanish person to fall in the liberty of Buenos Aires), but the British were driven out.

    Under General Whitelocke, the British made another attempt to capture the River Plate Provinces the following year, again with many officers and men, including an entire regiment of Irish birth, the 88th Connaught Rangers.

    Commanders Duff and Vandeleur distrusted the loyalty of the Irish soldiers, which they had used as cannon fodder in the landing, and their fears proved to be well founded. After many desertions, Duff and Vandeleur surrendered.

    The deserters helped the Spanish to repel Whitelocke. Another Irishman helping the Spanish was Thomas Craig, who had been shipwrecked off the Patagonian coast in 1798. He later served with the Argentine Navy under fellow Mayo man, Admiral William Brown against Spain and Brazil.

    By the time the Spanish provinces of the River Plate rebelled against the mother country in 1810, Buenos Aires had an identifiable Irish community, many of them attracted to Argentina as a result of the trade that had long existed between southern and western Ireland and Spain and her colonies. That community distinguished itself in the War of Independence which ensued, none more so than William Brown, founder of the Argentine Navy.



    Admiral Brown

    Born in Foxford, County Mayo, in 1777, William Brown emigrated to North America with his father as a nine-year-old. He was orphaned soon afterwards and went to sea as a cabin boy, first visiting the River Plate in 1809. In 1811, in the midst of the War of Independence, he returned to the River Plate aboard his own ship, the Elosia.

    In attempting to avoid the Spanish blockade, he ran his ship aground. But he succeeded in landing his valuable cargo and, with the proceeds, bought a new vessel, La Industria, which the Spanish captured. That was the turning point in his career. He was bent on retaliation.

    Brown crewed two small boats with a few dozen English-speaking sailors and some Irishmen. Disguised as fishermen, they boarded a Spanish cruiser off Montevideo and overpowered its crew. This daring feat prompted the rebel leader, General Alvear, to commission Brown to organize a navy. By 1814, Brown was Commodore of the new fleet.

    On March 8 of that year, Brown sailed out to capture the strategic island of Martin Garcia, which commanded the mouths of the mighty Paraña and Uruguay rivers. Brown’s capture of the island on St. Patrick’s Day was the major turning point in the war for Argentinean independence. It obviated previous setbacks by two other rebel leaders, Juan Bautista Azoparde at the naval battle of San Nicolas upstream on the Paraña River and Manuel Belgrano at the subsequent land battle of Tacuari.

    The Spanish Fleet, under Jacinto Romarate, was set up in a circle, with support from canons and gunfire on the island. Brown decided to attack from the front and back while simultaneously sending three infantry divisions of 80 men ashore to silence the cannon and gunfire. Brown ordered the fife and drum band to play “Saint Patrick’s Day In The Morning” to increase the morale of the landing infantry. Initial setbacks on land and water were overcome and after five days of conflict, March 10-15, 1814, Brown had control of the island and, most importantly, the two major inland waterways.

    Still a Lieutenant Colonel, Brown only had one major battle left before taking control of Montevideo and becoming an admiral.

    The Battle of Buceo, just off Montevideo on the River Plate (Rio de la Plata, lasted three days from May 14 to May 17, 1814. The Spanish fleet under Admiral Sienna had eight ships while Brown had seven. Here, Brown’s skill and knowledge of one of the world’s widest rivers told its tale. After drawing the Spanish ships into shallow water away from the protection of shore batteries, five of them were burned, two were captured, and one surrendered. Brown himself was injured on May 16 when he was hit in the leg with a cannon ball. His losses amounted to four dead and one vessel destroyed.

    Montevideo, which means “I see a mountain,” at the mouth of the River Plate was now at Brown’s mercy and surrender was the only option.

    In 1825, war broke out between Argentina and Brazil, referred to as the Cisplatine War, over the Cisplatine province, which could roughly be equated with modern day Uruguay. The retired admiral was called back to duty and at the Battle of Juncal on the Uruguay River on February 24, 1827, he destroyed the Brazilian fleet. On June 11, 1827, his fleet routed the Brazilians at the Battle of Los Pozos on the River Plate near Buenos Aires. Peace was signed between the two nations on October 4, 1827, with the Treaty of Montevideo, bringing down the curtain on Brown’s military career, though he would go on to be director of Argentina’s National Bank and Governor of Buenos Aires Province.

    In 1847, he returned to his native Foxford in Mayo. But Argentina was in Brown’s blood. and after four months, he returned to Buenos Aires, where he died ten years later.

  • #2
    IrishAmerican.com
    Part 2

    Immigration

    After the war, the Irish began to filter out of Buenos Aires into the surrounding countryside where they took up sheep farming. Immigration from Ireland, particularly from Westmeath and Wexford, increased dramatically under new land schemes, and the new arrivals also went into sheep farming, with several becoming millionaires in the process. When Cavanman Peter Sheridan died in 1844 at the age of 52, his ranch, Los Galpones, in the Canueles district, boasted 10,000 sheep, 8,000 cattle, and 2,000 horses.

    In 1848, a Dublin Protestant named McCann set up an agency in Buenos Aires to bring out emigrants for sheep farming. The passage cost £10 if paid in Ireland and £15 if paid after arrival. There were many takers.

    In 1862, President Mitre of Argentina set up an Irish agricultural colony on a large tract of land at Bahia Blanca. It failed due to the lack of a railway and a shortage of supplies. The last big attempt at organized immigration from Ireland began in 1887, when two wealthy sheep farmers, Buckley O’Meara and John Dillon, went to Ireland to recruit. Unlike previous immigrants, these new recruits were from the cities – mainly Cork and Limerick. The City of Dresden sailed from Cork in 1889 with 1,800 aboard. They settled Naposta in Buenos Aires province. Most were unsuited to a life of farming and the colony collapsed within a year. Many of them ended up in the city of Buenos Aires, but some resettled on estates owned by Irishmen.

    Before the 1810 revolution, most Irish immigrants were men. Afterwards, half of the new arrivals were women, and settlements began to spring up that were almost exclusively Irish. Countless Irish societies were formed, the first being the Irish National Society of Buenos Aires. The principal diversions seem to have been dancing and horse racing.

    Clergy began to arrive from Ireland to cater for their spiritual needs, the first being Fr. Patrick Moran, who arrived in February 1830, and the most famous being Fr. Anthony Fahy, who arrived from Loughrea, Co. Galway, in 1843. In 1856, the Sisters of Mercy arrived; several schools and colleges sprang up and in 1858, an Irish hospital was opened in Buenos Aires.

    Success

    In Buenos Aires Province, the district which best exemplified Irish society in the halcyon days of sheep farming was Carmen de Areco, 70 miles west of the capital. It had a Mercy convent school, colleges of Clonmacnois and St. Brendan, an Irish College of Carmen, a library, the Brehon Athletic Club, and the Clara Morgan Hospital. In 1867, a fund was established in the area to ameliorate the plight of imprisoned Fenians. One successful Irish farmer in Carmen de Areco was Thomas Donohue, a native of Cork. When he died in 1866, he had 12,000 sheep on his farm.

    In the success story of the Irish in Argentina, the name Duggan is inescapable. When Westmeath man Michael Duggan died in 1888, his estate was said to be the size of Munster and he was considered the richest Irishman in the world. His descendants are still among the most prominent families in Argentina.

    The Irish involved themselves in every level of politics, from local councils to the highest office, attained in 1944 when Edelmiro Julián Farrell became national president.

    Today, around half a million Spanish-speaking Argentines trace their ancestry to Ireland. They have their own newspaper, The Southern Cross, which is over 100 years old. Originally, the paper was written mainly in English, but by 1977, it had only one English-language column.

    Irish social life and traditions now revolve around the Hurling Club in Hurlingham, a western suburb of Buenos Aires, where Irish Argentines congregate in hundreds each weekend. There are still occasional hurling games, but the popularity of the sport dropped around the time of WWII when hurley sticks became impossible to import. Irish hockey and rugby teams continue to this day.

    In the final analysis, when studying the history of Argentina, it is impossible to escape the considerable contribution made by the Irish in the formation and development of that great country.

    Comment


    • #3
      The story of Dubliner Kathleen Jones.

      Irlandes.org
      Catalina Street in Ciudad de San Martín, Buenos Aires

      by Edmundo Murray

      A wandering dog, ash trees and Don Martín. He is in his seventies, and lives in Villa Piaggio, San Martín, one of the most popular neighbourhoods of great Buenos Aires. Don Martín, a retired worker from the metallurgic industry, still remembers Maestra Catalina. When he was about eight years old, his parents wished to enrol him in the ‘English School of San Martín’, the school founded by Kathleen Milton Boyle. They wanted to give him the best possible education, but the tuition was too high for them, so Ms Boyle waived it. At 76, Don Martín, originally from Spain, still reads out loud his English copy of Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver's Travels. He is one of the more or less 3,000 students who were educated by Maestra Catalina, a pioneer of teaching English in South America.
      It is a suburban landscape, with many industries who are today in poor economic conditions. Lower middle class population. It is also the place where in the late 1970’s and early 80’s, shameful events occurred during the Dirty War. One of the clandestine prisons used by the military forces was located in the nearby neighbourhood. Torture and slaughtering are still on the memory of the people. Most of the neighbours wish to forget the ominous presence of the soldiers and the absence of their victims. However, they are willing to remember Maestra Catalina.

      We read in a 1931 letter to the editor of a Socialist newspaper: ‘I am a member of a poor workers’ family, and I worked since I was twelve years old. I am indebted to the generous heart of my dear teacher Missis Boyle, who helped me to learn some English. This high-minded and honest lady, whom I admire and respect, even got me my first job’ (Trabajo, 2 October 1931, letter from Manuel Ramírez). 'Thanks to her personal recommendations', according to other newspaper, 'many of her students managed to get very good jobs in the British companies', many of which had offices in Buenos Aires (El Noticioso, San Martín, 25 October 1962). Now Catalina is remembered by a street in Villa Piaggio and a bronze bust in the entrance of San Martín cemetery.

      On 18 October 1869, Kathleen Milton Jones was born in a house of N° 54 Rathgar Road, Dublin. She was a member of a Church of Ireland family, who later sent her to England to study literature in the University of Cambridge. Her mother was Elizabeth Dowling, and her grandfather, James Dowling, was a Surveyor in his Majesty’s Customs. Kathleen's father, Francis P. Jones, was a Civil Engineer. He was employed in the Government Office of the General Valuation, and died in 1886. Three years later, when she was twenty, her family emigrated to Rio de Janeiro following the late nineteenth-century stream of emigration from Ireland to almost every part of the world. In Rio, she taught English, Music and Arts in the ‘Colegio Americano Brasileiro’, but a yellow fever outbreak forced the family to travel southwards. Two cousins, John and Robert Hallahan, sons of the Rev. John Hallahan from Castletown, Berehaven (Co. Cork), were working as medical doctors in the British Hospital at Buenos Aires. They received Kathleen’s mother and her four children in Buenos Aires.



      Once in the River Plate, where they arrived in 1891, Kathleen resumed her teaching profession. In 1894, the Colegio Inglés (later renamed San Patricio), was founded in San Martín, open to students of any origin.

      Five years later, Kathleen married Andrew T. S. Boyle, a former Major in the British Army and an engineer, who founded the San Martín Boy Scouts group. Maj. Boyle was born in 1844 on a war ship near the shores of north-west India. He went to the school in England and then entered the Royal Military School at Sand Hutton. In 1888, serving under the celebrated Connaught Rangers 88th Regiment – The Devil's Own – he was promoted to Major. During his appointment in India, he received eight proud wounds, which he would carry during the rest of his life. Andrew Boyle, who was also Church of Ireland religion, became Catholic after a cholera break in India. As a family member recalls, ‘all the ministers left with their families and the Catholic priests remained. That made him change.’ He retired from the Army and was engaged by a British company with businesses in Argentina. Andrew Boyle worked in several Argentine cities and his last executive position was in the Ferrocarril Buenos Aires al Pacífico.

      Kathleen and Andrew married in the Anglican Church in Buenos Aires. She later converted to the Roman Catholic church and they both remarried and re-baptised their children in the new faith.

      From the time of its opening, the Colegio Inglés was a laboratory to test modern educational techniques. Kathleen managed to implement new methods to teach English as a foreign language and, according to the examination results, there was a significant improvement of the students’ knowledge and enthusiasm. Her motivation schemes, including awards to the best students, prompted the children to work harder. When the number of students grew and she was not able to teach to everybody, she hired qualified teachers with diplomas from prestigious Argentine schools. A newspaper of the 1930’s argues that ‘the awards should be given to Mrs. Boyle, whose commitment, effort and determination have been proven during long years of full-time dedication to her worthy service.’

      However, Kathleen works were not limited to education. Many Sundays, the Major of San Martín received her request to visit the prisoners in order to take them cigarettes and magazines. The three Boyle girls, Catalina, Agatha and Ruth, wandered several times with her mother through the poor streets distributing supplies to destitute families. One day, when Kathleen learnt that a Chinese person had died from an infectious disease and in appalling circumstances, she was the only one with the courage to get into his room, wash the corpse, and prepare it for the burial. These examples chosen among those cited by newspapers in her obituary are an expression of her qualities. I wonder if these simple and concrete actions are not a little outdated today. Does it look unfashionable to spend our Sunday time on aiding hungry kids or poor immigrants? Nevertheless, solidarity is a primary duty for individuals like you and me, and like Kathleen.

      As a citizen, the works of Catalina were exemplar. As a woman, her role in her developing society was precursory. At that time, Argentina was a country whose the society was growing dramatically. Its post-colonial bourgeois structure was changing to an ethnic melting pot of immigrants from disparate cultures in Europe and the Middle East. On 4 August 1932, an unknown reader sent a letter to the Editor of The Standard, the newspaper founded in 1861 by the Irish estanciero Edward Thomas Mulhall and targeted at the English-speaking community. Signed by Miss Justice, the letter argued against the quite chauvinistic perspective that in order to relieve unemployment, working women should give up their jobs in favour of men. In her letter, Miss Justice managed to re-focus a gender issue on its actual social context: a proposed 10% cut on salaries should be applied only to those with higher income, not to low-paid workers with large families. ‘Why have they any business to have large families? I have heard this question discussed by men with large salaries and only one or two children at most. Who is more to blame, the rich man with his only son or the poor man with his 8 or 9 children?’ She ended her appeal to ‘big salaried men: sacrifice half of your salaries or more if necessary and see that those working under you earn a living wage, and that their miserable little pittance is no further encroached upon’ (The Standard, 4 August 1932). The mystery writer, Miss Justice, was indeed Kathleen Boyle. Shouldn’t contemporary executives and professionals accept her appeal to generosity and solidarity?

      Catalina's bronze bust in San Martín has a peripatetic history itself. To honour her memory, a memorial committee submitted a proposal to the City Hall to place Catalina’s sculpture - a work of the artist Francis de la Perutta - in a grass island in 9 de Julio at Mitre, in the heart of the city. On 20 April 1944, the bust was unveiled before a crowd, and many of Catalina’s acts of charity and her 48 years dedicated to the education were recalled. However, in 1952 the image of the Irish English teacher vanished: the grass island was torn up to build a new approach road to the suburb. The workers placed it on a municipal storehouse under the bandstand in San Martín’s main square. Catalina's former students rallied again and obtained a new location for the bust. In 1956, it was placed at the San Martín cemetery… though people thought it was Evita and would either shower flowers or throw rocks at it!

      Catalina remains an example to all of us. Being originally Church of Ireland and coming from an urban middle-class family from Dublin, she was not the typical Irish girl who emigrated to Argentina. The street in Villa Piaggio and the bronze portrait of a rather stern-looking woman are, as a Buenos Aires Herald reporter wrote in 1961, the remainders of 'who was, perhaps, the kindliest woman the city of San Martín has ever commemorated.'

      She died at 72, on 27 October 1941.

      Comment


      • #4
        A very good source to browse.

        Comment


        • #5
          The Argentine who raised the flag over the GPO in 1916.

          Anirishhirseman.com

          Miss Rita O'Brien- Author

          “We cannot desert Pearse now”; these were the anxious words of Lieutenant Eamonn Bulfin on Easter Sunday morning 1916 in an effort to inspire some fighting enthusiasm amongst disillusioned insurgents after countermanding dispatches from MacNeill had been sent out.

          Eamonn Bulfin was born in Buenos Aires, where his father William, author of ‘Rambles in Erin’ wrote for an Argentinian-Irish newspaper ‘The Southern Cross’. In 1902, at the age of 8 Eamonn moved back home to Ireland and was enlisted to Padraig Pearse’s School, St. Enda’s in Rathmines. He joined the Fianna, and undertook a solemn oath to enroll as a member of the IRB, and in 1913 after the eminent meeting in the Rotunda, Eamonn became closely attached to Pearse commenting that he (Pearse) ‘possessed great personal magnetism’. Such a powerful influence over the volunteers enabled Pearse to produce a highly devoted and well trained force of men. Eamonn was promoted to the position of Lieutenant by Padraig Pearse and was subsequently left with the responsibility of organising the volunteers in South County Dublin.

          It was after attending mass on Easter Sunday morning when Eamonn Bulfin was contacted by Eoin MacNeill and ordered to deliver the countermanding dispatches to the South. Extremely infuriated at this apparent stand down, he refused to co operate with MacNeills commands and instead Eamonn decided to go see Pearse at Liberty Hall. However, neither Pearse nor Connolly were there so he assembled his men to march. Lieutenant Bulfin mobilised all of his St. Enda’s boys of the Rathfarnham Company known as Pearse’s own and with an army of 30 men he departed for the city. As they were about to set off, MacNeill, his son and another volunteer arrived on the scene on bicycles. MacNeill urged Eamonn and his battalion to retreat, insisting that they would in effect ‘be marching into a death trap’.

          On recalling such events Eamonn told how Captain Boland had pleaded with him to allow him accompany the Rathfarnham unit but the volunteers persuaded him to remain behind on account of him being a married man, and so Lieutenant Bulfin led his men into combat without Captain Boland. They travelled into the city by tram which carried them to Dame Street, and immediately the volunteers were instructed to make their way to Liberty Hall as the Castle was being attacked and their help was needed. On their arrival there was no sign of any other volunteers and so it was arranged that Eamonn’s forces would march to the GPO and meet Pearse.

          The initial attack came from the British as the Volunteers marched to the GPO when the lancers drove ferociously down Sackville Street. Lieutenant Bulfin commanded his unit to take action despite being under heavy bombardment. The lancers withdrew under the enemy’s fire. Due to an ongoing argument inside the GPO Eamonn recalled how his men were forced to break a window in order to enter the building. In such an effort Eamonn managed to cause damage to his rifle, and while he pushed his men up onto the window one volunteer accidentally discharged his rifle causing injury to his groin. He was at that time, (at 22 years of age) a gifted marksman and was stationed on the rooftop of the GPO. The intense struggle continued for two and half days and the Rathfarnham unit remained fighting under constant attach from the snipers.

          It was Lieutenant Bulfin who raised the green flag with the words ‘Irish Republic’ from the GPO. A certain amount of ambiguity surrounded the recollections regarding the flag, as to whether it was the tricolour or the traditional flag of green but Lieutenant Bulfin’s account clarifies any confusion. He recounted how Willie Pearse brought up the two flags to the GPO rooftop. Eamonn was given the green flag which he duly hoisted over the GPO, and one of the Kimmage Exile Unit hoisted the Tricolour.

          When the GPO was set on fire by incendiary bombs on the Friday the Volunteers were forced to retreat from their posts. Flames raged throughout the building and the ceilings were beginning to collapse. Lieutenant Bulfin recalled how Pearse (the Commander-In-Chief) was standing amongst his men practically engulfed in flames. Quoting Pearse ‘if we haven’t impressed the people, we have at least done one thing, we have banished the blush of shame from the face of Dublin City’ Eamonn remarked that this was the last he saw and heard of Padraig Pearse.

          Lieutenant Bulfin was brought directly to Richmond Barracks where surrender, execution or imprisionment seemed the inevitable. It was on the intervention of Pearse’s sister that Eamonn was saved from death or prison. Margaret Pearse contacted the Argentinian Consulate in the hope that the fact that Eamonn had been born in Argentina might have some impact on the outcome he faced. Eamonn was visited at Richmond Barracks by the Consul, and it was agreed that upon his discharge he would immediately enrol as an Argentinian citizen. He spent a short while in Frangoch Internment camp in Wales but was released at Christmas 1916. He then came back to his home in Birr, Co. Offaly. He continued to be actively involved in the volunteers and Michael Collins appointed him to the position of Vice-Commandant in 1918. After the nomination of Lord French as Lord Lieutenant to Ireland the fictitious German plot emerged and Bulfin was one of the 73 leading Sinn Fein figures to be arrested. He spent a term in Portlaoise Prison, and then another term in Burnham Jail. By May 1919 all of the prisoners were released and Lieutenant Bulfin was given a deportation order to Argentina.

          In Argentina, Eamonn was appointed an Irish Diplomatic Representative by Eamonn DeValera. This position, as defined by DeValera in a letter to Bulfin required him to establish a consulate in Buenos Aires and initiating trade between Ireland and Argentina. More significantly, DeValera instructed Bulfin to garner support for the Irish Republic. It was hoped that Bulfin would manipulate the Argentinian representatives to such an extent that the European nations would accept the Government of Ireland. However, an attempted Communist coup d’etat had taken place in Buenos Aires at the time of Eamonn’s arrival and he was immediately taken into custody by the Suerote (Special Detectives Branch). Bulfin was suspected by the authorities of being a Bolshevik agent and was subsequently condemned to ‘military service as a conscription deserter’. Therefore, his role as an Irish Diplomat in Argentina ended up being quite restricted due to the imposition of military service.

          Mr. Lawrence Ginnell became Minister Plenipotentiary & Envoy Extraordinary in 1920 and Eamonn Bulfin was appointed his Chief-Aid. He was also appointed Registrar of the republican loan which was set up in connection with the loan in the USA. The loan was to be published in Buenos Aires and signed by DeValera and Bulfin in 1921. Eamonn Bulfin was chief co-ordinator of the loan setting out all details concerning the bonds which were in Spanish. However, just as the loan was about to be launched on December 7th (a day after the treaty was signed in London) a cable was sent instructing them to shut down the Consulate in Buenos Aires. Mr. Ginnell then left and came back to Ireland, leaving Bulfin to deal with paying out on any overdue accounts, and discarding the republican loan documents.

          On his return home to Ireland in 1922 Lieutenant Bulfin was denied the right to land in England by the Home Office. However, the Irish Minister in London at the time (Gavin Duffy) arbitrated and Eamonn was eventually allowed to travel through on the condition that he journeyed straight to Dublin. His arrival home to Derrinlough, Birr in County Offaly at the age of 28 brought his eminent political and military career to a close.
          His sister Catalina also born in Argentina was Austin Stack secretary and went on to marry Sean MacBride.

          Comment


          • #6
            I's a shame how the Native people are treated there.....even to this very day.....
            Here Rex!!!...Here Rex!!!.....Wuff!!!....... Wuff!!!

            Comment


            • #7
              Re.Admiral Browne...

              In 1847, he returned to his native Foxford in Mayo. But Argentina was in Brown’s blood. and after four months, he returned to Buenos Aires, where he died ten years later.
              Black '47... in the west of Ireland... starvation, disease and death... little surprise he didn't stick around.
              Everything is self-evident.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by cogito View Post
                Re.Admiral Browne...Black '47... in the west of Ireland... starvation, disease and death... little surprise he didn't stick around.
                Dats three famous naval heroes ye know now......Horatio....Bill and Nollaig.
                Attached Files
                We'll sail be the tide....aarghhhh !!

                Comment


                • #9
                  I wonder how many Irish in Argentina are subject to that country's Human Rights abuse?
                  I google because I'm not young enough to know everything.
                  Nemo Mortalium Omnibus Horis Sapit

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Interesting character Brown. That statue is located in the old docklands area of Buenos Aires like so many around the world has been redeveloped. It's the next suburb along from La Boca where the famous Boca Junior's stadium is. You don't want to be in La Boca after dark, even the police don't go there.

                    If you are down that way, a great little day trip is over the Rio de la Plata to Collonia in Uraguay where you'll find a well preserved Portugese and Spanish walled citadel with old cannon, lighthouse etc. Brown's old naval headquarters is there as well called Casa del Almirante Brown. Great historical site.
                    Such is life - Ned Kelly

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by boxman View Post
                      That statue is located in the old docklands area of Buenos Aires
                      Wat statue ?.
                      We'll sail be the tide....aarghhhh !!

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by DAMNTHEWEATHER View Post
                        Wat statue ?.
                        One like the one in Dublin wat NT put up.
                        Such is life - Ned Kelly

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          A replica of Admiral Brown's original house in La Boca, Buenos Aires called Casa Amarilla. Quick snap from the top of a bus. Brown is a massive hero in Argentina.
                          Attached Files
                          Such is life - Ned Kelly

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            He certainly is a great hero in argentina...and I hear he couldn't kick a ball ?
                            Have met many argentinians over here and they all know all about him,big in rugby here.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              his Mam said when he went.....Pat a gone arye.
                              Here Rex!!!...Here Rex!!!.....Wuff!!!....... Wuff!!!

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X