'Ten years after Hay (Dublin City Univ.) revived the memory of a forgotten Irish Republican Brotherhood member in Bulmer Hobson and the Nationalist Movement in Twentieth-Century Ireland (2009), she is back with Na Fianna Eireann and the Irish Revolution, 1909-23. As in her previous work, Hay reveals the importance of the Irish National Boy Scouts, or Na Fianna Eireann, to the Irish Revolution in the years 1909-23. In a conversational tone that eschews academic jargon, this book is both insightful and thoroughly researched. An unusual and welcome feature are four appendixes that identify key pieces of information about Fianna members, such as their birth and death dates, who gave witness statements, and who received pensions. For scholars who are tasked with reviving the memories of marginalized figures from the past, as well as for family members who are seeking to piece together genealogies, the raw data organized in these handy tables is invaluable.'
Choice Connect
'A must-read for both academics and non-academics alike.'
Irish Historical Studies
'A well-conceived and well-crafted study, which addresses a significant lacuna in the historiography of revolutionary Ireland.'
Darragh Gannon, University College Dublin, Studia Hibernica
1 Na Fianna Eireann in context
2 The countess and the Quaker
3 A handful of boys against the British Empire, 1909-16
4 Expansion and contraction, 1916-23
5 Who joined the Fianna?
6 The Fianna experience
7 Moulding minds and marketing martyrdom
8 Youth in arms
Conclusion
Index