Burials in Glasnevin Cemetery
This is a list of notable people buried in Glasnevin Cemetery.
- Thomas Ashe – died on hunger strike in 1917
- Kevin Barry – medical student executed for his role in the Irish War of Independence. (His body was moved from Mountjoy Prison to Glasnevin in 2001, having been accorded a state funeral.)
- Piaras Béaslaí – Easter Rising survivor turned writer
- Sir Alfred Chester Beatty – art collector
- Brendan Behan – author and playwright
- Professor Thomas Bodkin – lawyer, art historian, art collector and curator[1]
- Harry Boland – friend of Michael Collins and anti-Treaty politician. Image of Harry Boland's grave
- Christy Brown – writer of My Left Foot and subject of the film of the same name
- Father Francis Browne – Jesuit priest and photographer who took the last known photographs of RMS Titanic
- Cathal Brugha – first President of Dáil Éireann (January – April 1919) Image of Cathal Brugha's grave
- Thomas Henry Burke – Permanent Under Secretary to Chief Secretary for Ireland Lord Frederick Cavendish, victim with his master of the Phoenix Park murders in 1882
- Sergeant James Byrne – Victoria Cross recipient (Indian Mutiny)
- Sir Roger Casement – human rights campaigner turned revolutionary, executed by the British in 1916 2 Image of Casement grave
- Robert Erskine Childers – Irish Nationalist and writer, executed by the Irish Free State government during the Irish Civil War. Erskine Childers' grave, located in the Republican Plot
- Mary "Molly" Alden Childers – Irish Nationalist and wife of Robert Erskine Childers
- J. J. Clancy – Irish Nationalist MP (1847–1928)
- Michael Collins – assassinated republican leader, Anglo-Irish Treaty signatory and first internationally recognised Irish head of government
- Dáithí Ó Conaill – a founder member of the Provisional Irish Republican Army
- Roddy Connolly – socialist politician and son of James Connolly
- Andy Cooney – Irish republican
- John Philpot Curran – patriotic barrister, renowned wit, lawyer on behalf of Wolfe Tone and other United Irishmen, Sarah Curran's father
- William Dargan – Ireland's rail pioneer
- Charlotte Despard – suffragist
- Private Thomas Duffy – VC recipient (Indian Mutiny)
- Éamon de Valera – 3rd President of Ireland (1959–1973) and dominant Irish leader of 20th century
- Sinéad de Valera – wife of Éamon de Valera, buried in the same plot
- Anne Devlin – famed housekeeper of Robert Emmet
- John Devoy – Fenian leader Image of John Devoy's grave.
- John Blake Dillon – Irish writer and politician
- Martin Doherty – IRA member
- Frank Duff – founder of the Legion of Mary
- Edward Duffy – Irish Fenian, Irish Republican Brotherhood
- James Fitzmaurice – aviation pioneer
- Francis Gleeson – Chaplain to the British Army and the Irish Free State
- Edmund Dwyer Gray – Irish 19th century MP, son of Sir John Gray
- Sir John Gray – Irish 19th century MP. Image of Sir John Gray's gravestone
- Maud Gonne – nationalist campaigner, love of W.B. Yeats's life, famed beauty and mother of Nobel and Lenin Peace Prize winner Seán MacBride, who is also buried in the grave Image of Maud Gonne & Seán MacBride's grave
- Arthur Griffith – President of Dáil Éireann (January – August 1922)
- Joseph Patrick Haverty – Irish painter
- Tim Healy – 1st Governor-General of the Irish Free State. image of Tim Healy's grave.
- Denis Caulfield Heron – lawyer and politician
- Gerard Manley Hopkins – poet
- Peadar Kearney – composer of the Irish National Anthem, Amhrán na bhFiann
- Luke Kelly – singer and folk musician, founding member of The Dubliners
- Kitty Kiernan – fiancée of Michael Collins
- James Larkin – Irish trade union leader and founder of the Irish Transport & General Workers Union (ITGWU)
- Seán MacBride – founder of Clann na Poblachta and a founder-member of Amnesty International
- Edward MacCabe – late 19th century Cardinal Archbishop of Dublin and Primate of Ireland Image of the elaborate monument to Cardinal MacCabe.
- Dick McKee – member of the Irish Republican Army during the War of Independence
- Terence MacManus – Irish rebel and shipping agent
- James Patrick Mahon – Irish nationalist politician and mercenary
- Countess Constance Markievicz – first woman elected to the British House of Commons and a minister in the first Irish government
- Manchester Martyrs – cenotaph honouring 3 members of the Irish Republican Brotherhood known in history as the Manchester Martyrs who were in fact buried in the grounds of a British prison following their execution
- Lance Corporal James Murray – VC recipient (First Boer War)
- Dermot Morgan – Irish satirist and star of Father Ted. Cremated in Glasnevin and interred at Deansgrange Cemetery.
- Kate Cruise O'Brien – writer and publisher (This is not Kate O'Brien who is buried in Faversham Cemetery, England.)
- Daniel O'Connell – Irish political leader from 1820s to 1840s O'Connell's tomb under the specially built round tower O'Connell's tomb interior
- Patrick O'Donnell the Avenger – executed in 1883 in London for the assassination of the co-conspirator turncoat of the Phoenix Park murder, James Carey. A memorial in his honour stands in Glasnevin.
- Patrick Denis O'Donnell – Irish military historian, writer, and former UN peace-keeper
- Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa – Fenian leader Patrick Pearse's oration at his funeral in 1915 has gone down in history.
- Eoin O'Duffy – Chief of Staff of the Irish Republican Army and leader of The Blueshirts
- Thomas O'Hagan, 1st Baron O'Hagan – Lord Chancellor of Ireland
- Kevin O'Higgins – assassinated Vice-President of the Executive Council
- Seán T. O'Kelly – 2nd President of Ireland (1945–1959)
- John O'Mahony – a founder of the Irish Republican Brotherhood
- John O' Leary – poet[2]
- James O'Mara – nationalist leader and member of the First Dáil
- Henry O'Neill – painter and archaeologist
- Christopher Palles, Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer, often described as "the greatest of Irish judges"
- Charles Stewart Parnell – dominant Irish political leader from 1875 to 1891
- Patrick (P.J.) Ruttledge – Minister in Éamon de Valera's early governments
- Daniel D. Sheehan – first independent Irish labour MP
- Hanna Sheehy-Skeffington – founder of Irish Women's Franchise League
- Sergeant Philip Smith – VC recipient (Crimean War)
- Chief Boatswain's Mate John Sullivan – Royal Navy VC recipient (Crimean War)
- Patrick James Smyth – journalist and politician
- David P. Tyndall – prominent Irish businessman who transformed the grocery business
- William Joseph Walsh – Roman Catholic Archbishop of Dublin
- Billy Whelan – Manchester United footballer who died the Munich air disaster of 1958
References
- ↑ Unlabelled press clipping of contemporary obituary, in Royal Birmingham Society of Artists archives
- ↑ Alan O'Day, O'Leary, John (1830–1907), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept 2004; online edn, May 2006
External links
- Glasnevin Cemetery
- Glasnevin Cemetery: famous names at Find a Grave
- Companion sites: irishgraves.com and deadireland.com
- Burial Records from Glasnevin Cemetery at Interment.net
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.