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1916 and War of Independence medals awarded to Vincent Poole, G.P.O. Garrison

Currency:EUR Category:Collectibles Start Price:0.00 EUR Estimated At:1,200.00 - 1,500.00 EUR
1916 and War of Independence medals awarded to Vincent Poole, G.P.O. Garrison

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Auction Date:2012 Apr 21 @ 12:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland


Vincent Poole City Hall and GPO Garrison Irish Citizen Army; thence by descent


1916 medal (with replacement suspender) engraved on reverse "V. Poole" and 1919-21 War of Independence Service Medal with Comrac bar crudely marked on reverse "V. Poole". (2 items)Vincent Poole was born in Dublin in 1881 and came from a strong Republican background. His brother Joseph Poole, who was executed in 1883 was a member of the Irish Republican Brotherhood and friend of Tom Clarke. Working as a labourer and living in the centre of Dublin Vincent Poole joined the Irish Citizen Army and served with Sean Connolly as part of the company that occupied City Hall on Easter Monday 1916. Later that evening, however, he was sent from City Hall to the G.P.O. where he served until the end of the Rebellion. For his involvement in the rising Vincent Poole was sentenced to death, which was later commuted to five years imprisonment. He served this time in England and was one of the instigators of the Lewes Jail hunger strike. Later in the War of Independence Poole served with the 2nd Battalion, Dublin Brigade, I.R.A. and took the anti-treaty side during the Civil War and fought at the Four Courts. In 1949 a photograph of Poole along with Jimmy Mallon and Liam Daly in front of the G.P.O. appeared on the cover of the Irish Times Pictorial magazine, described as one of the men who made "it possible for a Republic to be declared this weekend." He died in 1955 in Dublin and was buried, with full military honours, in Mount Jerome Cemetery. An extremely interesting pair of medals with potential for much further research.