- Seán O'Mahony
Seán O'Μahony (also John O'Mahoney) [He is referred to as both. His death notice ("Irish Independent", 29 November 1934) gives his name as John O'Mahoney (p. 1), but as Seán O'Mahony in an article on p. 10. The death notice on the following day refers to Seán O'Mahony, while the more extensive funeral report (1 December), again, as Seán O'Μahony.] (1864 – 28 November 1934) was an Irish
Sinn Féin politician and member of the First andSecond Dáil .He was born in
Thomastown ,County Kilkenny . A successful businessman he was a tea merchant and a commercial traveller. His company, John O'Mahoney & Co., was located on Middle Abbey St., and was destroyed during the 1916Easter Rising . It subsequently reestablished onParnell Square . He subsequently purchased and ran Fleming's Hotel which was located at 31-32 Gardiner Place,Dublin . A close friend ofArthur Griffith , he became an organiser forSinn Féin and was elected to Dublin Corporation for the party.He participated in the
Easter Rising and was subsequently interned atFrongoch and Lincoln Jail.He remained with Sinn Féin after it was re-constituted as a republican party at the 1917
Ard Fheis .He was arrested during the German Plot of 1917 and was jailed in
Lincoln Gaol inEngland . While imprisoned he was elected as a Sinn Féin MP for Fermanagh South in the 1918 general election. He was released from prison in 1919 and attended the proceedings of the First Dáil. He was re-arrested at the Sinn Féin offices in November 1919 and was imprisoned for three months in England. He would be arrested several more times throughout theAnglo-Irish War and his hotel was used as a meeting place by Sinn Féin members throughout the time.He was elected in the 1921 General Election to the
Second Dáil for Fermanagh and Tyrone. As a result of theGovernment of Ireland Act, 1920 this election was to provide the membership of two assemblies: theSouthern Ireland House of Commons and theNorthern Ireland House of Commons . The eight seat Fermanagh-Tyrone constituency was one of several in the Northern Ireland House of Commons. As members of Sinn Féin did not recognise either assembly he and the other five Sinn Féin TDs continued to attend the Dáil. [The other five,Michael Collins , de Valera,Arthur Griffith ,Seán Milroy andEoin MacNeill were also elected for a constituency in the Southern Ireland House of Commons.] During the debates on theAnglo-Irish Treaty he opposed ratification of the document and voted against ratification. He left theDáil withÉamon de Valera and the other Anti-Treaty TDs.As the only member of the Second Dáil not elected to the Southern Ireland House of Commons, his status in the
Third Dáil in 1922 was unclear. O'Mahoney was not invited to attend the opening of the Provisional Parliament. De Valera was keen for him to attend since if he had been refused entry it would have demonstrated, in the minds of Anti-Treaty supporters, that the assembly was not an All-Ireland Dáil. In the end O'Mahoney did not attend, but his case was taken up byLaurence Ginnell . [ [http://historical-debates.oireachtas.ie/D/0001/D.0001.192209090003.html Dáil Éireann - Volume 1 - 09 September, 1922] ] He remained an abstentionist MP to Stormont until theNorthern Ireland general election, 1925 , when he did not stand for re-election.He remained with Sinn Féin after the 1926 split, serving on the party's Ard Chomairle until his death.
He died in 1934. His funeral was attended by representatives of Sinn Féin, the Irish Republican Army,
Fianna Fáil ,Fianna Éireann ,Cumann na mBan , andMná na Poblachta . ["Irish Independent", 1 December 1934, p. 10.] He is buried inGlasnevin Cemetery .He was survived by his wife, and a son, Malachy, and a daughter, Máire.
Notes
ources
*Dorothy Macardle (1937) "The Irish Republic."
*Frank Gallagher "The Four Glorious Years", 2005 edition.
* [http://www.election.demon.co.uk/stormont/biographies.html Biography from Northern Ireland Parliamentary Election Results]
* "Irish Independent", 29 & 30 November, 1 December, 1934.
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