Everything about Joseph Plunkett totally explained
Joseph Mary Plunkett (
21 November 1887 –
4 May 1916) was an
Irish nationalist, poet, journalist, and leader of the 1916
Easter Rising. His father,
George Noble Plunkett, was a papal count and curator of the
National Museum. However his father's cousin,
Horace Plunkett, was a
Protestant Unionist who sought to reconcile both sides, but instead witnessed his own home burned down during the
Anglo-Irish War.
Born in
Dublin, at a young age Plunkett was stricken with
tuberculosis, and spent part of his youth in the warmer climates of the
Mediterranean and north
Africa. He studied at the
Jesuit Colleges,
Belvedere College, in Dublin and
Stonyhurst College, in
Lancashire, and acquired some military knowledge from the
Officers' Training Corps there.
Throughout his life, Joseph Plunkett took an active interest in Irish heritage and the
Irish language, and also studied
Esperanto. Plunkett was one of the founders of the Irish Esperanto League. He joined that
Gaelic League, and took on as a tutor
Thomas MacDonagh, with whom he formed a lifelong friendship. The two were both poets with an interest in theater, and both were early members of the
Irish Volunteers, joining their provisional committee. Plunkett's interest in Irish nationalism spread throughout his family, notably to his younger brothers George and John, as well as his father, who allowed his property in
Kimmage, south
Dublin, to be used as a training camp for young men who wished to escape conscription in
England during
World War I. Men there were instead trained to fight for Ireland.
Sometime in 1915 Joseph Plunkett joined the
Irish Republican Brotherhood, and soon after was sent to Germany to meet with
Roger Casement who was negotiating with the German government on behalf of Ireland. Casement's role as emissary was self-appointed, and as he wasn't a member of the IRB, that organization's leadership wished to have one of their own contact Germany to negotiate German aid for an uprising the following year. He was seeking (but not limiting himself to) a shipment of arms. Casement, on the other hand, spent most of his energies recruiting Irish
prisoners of war in Germany to form a brigade to fight instead for Ireland. Most nationalists in Ireland saw this as a fruitless endeavor, and preferred to seek weapons. Plunkett successfully got a promise of a German arms shipment to coincide with the rising.
Plunkett was one of the original members of the IRB Military Committee that was responsible for planning the rising, and it was largely his plan that was followed. As such he may be held partially responsible for the military disaster that ensued, though one should realize that in the circumstances any plan was bound to fail. Shortly before the rising was to begin, Plunkett was hospitalized following a turn for the worse in his health. He had an operation on his neck glands days before
Easter and had to struggle out of bed to take part in what was to follow. Still bandaged, he took his place in the
General Post Office with several other of the rising's leaders such as
Patrick Pearse and
Tom Clarke, though his health prevented him from being terribly active. His energetic
aide de camp was
Michael Collins.
Following the surrender Plunkett was held in
Kilmainham Gaol, and faced a
court martial. Hours before his
execution by firing squad at the age of 28, he was married in the prison chapel to his sweetheart
Grace Gifford, a Protestant convert to Catholicism, whose sister, Muriel, had years before also converted and married his best friend
Thomas MacDonagh, who was also executed for his role in the
Easter Rising. The main railway station in
Waterford City is named after him.
Joseph Plunkett tower in ballymun is named after him.
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