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Miriam Daly

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Miriam Daly (6 May 1928 – 26 June 1980) was an Irish republican activist and university lecturer who was assassinated by the loyalist Ulster Defence Association (UDA).

Background and personal life

She was born Miriam Annette McDonnell in the Curragh Irish Army camp, County Kildare, Ireland, one of the two daughters of daughter of Commandant Daniel McDonnell and Anne McDonnell (née Cummins).[1] Her father had served under Michael Collins in the War of Independence She grew up in Hatch Street, Dublin, where she attended Loreto College on St Stephen's Green and then University College, Dublin. While at UCD, Daly was a member of Young Fine Gael. She graduated BA in 1948 with first-class honours in history and economics, a Higher Diploma in Education in 1949, and then a first-class honours MA, with a dissertation on Irish labour in England in the first half of the nineteenth century. She taught economic history in UCD for some years before moving to Southampton University with her husband, psychiatrist Joseph Lee. There, she became an active member of the Association of University Teachers and a campaigner against the Vietnam War. Lee died of a heart attack in 1963. In 1965 she married philosopher and social activist James Daly. They moved to Ireland in 1968 and were appointed lecturers in the departments of scholastic philosophy and of economic and social history at Queen's University, Belfast.[2]

Civil rights activist

File:History is written by the winner.jpg
A mural in Northern Ireland depicting a quote of Daly: "History is written by the winners."

Apart from her set course, Daly taught an extramural course on labour history whose students included numerous Protestant trade unionists. She also lectured both republican and loyalist prisoners in Long Kesh and cooperated with both on prisoner welfare work. She contributed regularly to RTÉ Radio's Thomas Davis lectures in 1972–3. She was a founding member of the Irish Labour History Society, served on its committee for several years and co-edited its journal Saothar. She was a co-founder of the Economic and Social History Society of Ireland, a committee member of the Ulster Society for Irish Historical Studies, a member of the editorial board of Irish Historical Studies, and organised the first conference on Irish labour history held at an Irish university in 1974.[1]

Daly became active in the Northern Ireland civil rights movement following the introduction of internment without trial of suspected IRA members in 1972 by Westminster officials at the request of Prime Minister of Northern Ireland Brian Faulkner.[citation needed] She was active in the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association (NICRA) and the Northern Resistance Movement (NRA), becoming involved in the former when she moved to Belfast; Daly subsequently joined the National Democratic Party (NDP), and its successor, the Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP). The rapid escalation of violence in Northern Ireland during this period, in particular the killing of 14 civil rights marchers by members of 1 PARA in Derry on 14 January 1972 in what later became known as "Bloody Sunday" further radicalised her. After Bloody Sunday, she left the SDLP and joined Sinn Féin.[citation needed]

During her political career, Daly, in line with many Irish republicans, opposed the two nations theory which held that Ulster Protestants constituted a distinct Irish nation. She also joined the Prisoners' Relatives Action Committee (PRAC), the National Hunger Strike Committee (NHSC) and the Murray Defence Committee (MDC), the latter of which successfully prevented the anarchist couple Marie and Noel Murray from being executed after they were convicted of murder and sentenced to death in June 1976 for murdering Garda Síochána officer Michael Reynolds. During the campaign to prevent the Murrays from being executed, Daly worked with Seamus Costello.[citation needed]

In 1977, Daly and her partner left Sinn Féin over the party's advocacy of an Irish federation of four self-governing provinces. They were recruited in August 1977 to the IRSP by Costello, and co-opted to its Árd Chomhairle or governing body just before Costello's assassination on 5 October 1977, allegedly by the Official IRA. In February 1978 Miriam Daly was elected chair of the IRSP. Some later IRSP/INLA material describes Daly as a 'volunteer', but she was never a member of the Irish National Liberation Army, the IRSP's military wing.[3][1]

In 1974 the Dalys, who had received death threats, moved from their home in Stranmillis, close to Queen's University and working-class Protestant loyalist districts, to the Andersonstown Road, deep within the west Belfast Catholic ghetto.

From 1978 Daly campaigned for political status for paramilitary prisoners. This became her main political cause after she resigned from the IRSP, partly for political reasons, partly because IRSP chair Ronnie Bunting shrugged off her complaint of sexual assault by an INLA member. Less than a fortnight before her death, Daly was elected to the executive of the Smash H-block Committee.[1]

Death

On 26 June 1980,[4][5] Daly was shot dead at home, in the Andersonstown area of west Belfast. At the time of her assassination, she was in charge of the IRSP prisoners' welfare.[citation needed]

According to reports in The Irish Times, members of the Ulster Defence Association (UDA) had gained entry to her home with the intention of killing her husband.[6] They tied up Daly and waited for him to return home. Her husband was in Dublin at the time and so did not arrive.[6] After a considerable time, the UDA men decided to kill Daly instead. Muffling the sound of the gun with a pillow, they shot her in the head and cut the phone lines before fleeing. Her body was discovered when her ten-year-old daughter arrived home from school.[6] However, The Irish Times also referred to Daly as a "housewife".[7]

Daly's death occurred soon after Conservative Party politician and incumbent Shadow Secretary of State for Northern Ireland Airey Neave was assassinated in Westminster Palace, London by members of the INLA, and some have speculated that the UDA's killing of Daly (along with the murder and attempted murder of other Irish Republican Socialist Party (ISRP) and National H-Block Committee members such as Ronnie Bunting, John Turnley and Bernadette Devlin McAliskey during this period) was in retaliation for Neave's murder. Solicitor Michael Brentnall claimed in an interview that "There are compelling circumstances which indicate that the killings were either committed by the British security services or facilitated by them and these killings are connected in proximity and organisational terms to the killing of Airey Neave."[8]

Daly was buried in Swords, County Dublin with her first husband, after a paramilitary funeral. Mourners included Seán Mac Stíofáin and Ruairí Ó Brádaigh, but also old friends such as Supreme Court of Ireland (and later European Court of Justice) judge Donal Barrington and UCD historian F.X. Martin. In the graveside oration, Osgur Breatnach said that Daly stood for a peaceful, socialist united Ireland.[9] She is included as a volunteer on the INLA monument in Milltown Cemetery[6] and is one of several commemorated by an IRSP mural on the Springfield Road, Belfast.[10]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Daly, Miriam". Dictionary of Irish Biography.
  2. ^ {{1. James P. Daly appointed lecturer in Scholastic Philosophy,1968. Vice-Chancellors report for year 1967-1968, page 12. QUB 2. James P. Daly. BA, LP Maynooth, MPhil S'ton- Lecturer in Scholastic Philosophy, 1968. page 46 of The Queen's University Calendar, 1968-1969. 3. Mrs Miriam A. Daly. M.A. (NUI). Appointed Assistant lecturer to Department of Economic and Social History in 1969, page 42 of The Queen's University of Belfast Calendar for 1969-70. 4. Daly, Miriam A., lecturer in economic and social history since 1969; died 26 June 1980, as the result of a terrorist shooting, page 68, The Annual Review for 1980. The Queen's University Association. Belfast 1980. }}
  3. ^ Unveiling of Memorial for Miriam Daly Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine 3 June 2003
  4. ^ "IRSM Roll of Honour". Irsm.org. Archived from the original on 16 September 2016. Retrieved 31 October 2021.
  5. ^ "CAIN: Sutton Index of Deaths". Cain.ulster.ac.uk. Retrieved 31 October 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d David McKittrick et al, Lost Lives, Mainstream Publishing, 208, p. 830
  7. ^ The Irish Times 9 July 1980
  8. ^ Young, Connla (19 March 2018). "INLA man's shooting may be linked to Tory MP's murder". The Irish News.
  9. ^ Funeral of Dr Miriam Daly, Irish Times 30 June 1980
  10. ^ "Mni02542 :: Murals of Northern Ireland". Archived from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 22 May 2015.