31 May 1941 – The German bombing of the North Strand in
Dublin by the Luftwaffe on this day. 28 were killed & over 90 were injured, some 300 houses
were destroyed or damaged in the attack. Smaller bombs damaged the American
Embassy and Áras an Uachtarain the official home of President Douglas Hyde in
the Phoenix Park. The bombing was in all probability accidental and the German
Government apologised in June 1941 for the attack.
The first fifteen burials took place on 4 June incl. the internment of the tragic Brown
family in their native Drumcooley, outside Edenderry Co Offaly . Harry Brown,
who lived on the North Strand was a member of the Local Defense Force and was
amongst the dead, as was his 65-year-old mother, Mary, his wife Mary (or Mollie
as she was known, 32) and their children Maureen (7), Ann (5), Edward (3) and
Angela (2). On the same day the burial
of eight more people took place in
Glasnevin and in Dean's Grange cemeteries in Dublin. Twelve of those killed
were buried by Dublin Corporation at a Public Funeral on 5 June, at which
Government members including Eamon De Valera attended. The service took place
in the Church of St. Laurence O'Toole, Seville Place and was presided over by
Archbishop McQuaid.
An Taoiseach Eamon De Valera made the following statement in
the Dáil on 5 June:
Members of the Dáil desired to be directly associated with
the expression of sympathy already tendered by the Government on behalf of the
nation to the great number of our citizens who have been so cruelly bereaved by
the recent bombing. Although a complete survey has not yet been possible, the
latest report which I have received is that 27 persons were killed outright or
subsequently died; 45 were wounded or received other serious bodily injury and
are still in hospital; 25 houses were completely destroyed and 300 so damaged
as to be unfit for habitation, leaving many hundreds of our people homeless. It
has been for all our citizens an occasion of profound sorrow in which the
members of this House have fully shared.
(Members rose in their places.)
The Dáil will also desire to be associated with the
expression of sincere thanks which has gone out from the Government and from
our whole community to the several voluntary organisations the devoted
exertions of whose members helped to confine the extent of the disaster and
have mitigated the sufferings of those affected by it. As I have already
informed the public, a protest has been made to the German Government. The Dáil
will not expect me, at the moment, to say more on this head.
https://www.oireachtas.ie/en/debates/debate/dail/1941-06-05/27/
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