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Joe Clarke (Irish republican)

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Name
  
Joe Clarke

Died
  
1976

Role
  
Irish republican

Joe Clarke (Irish: Seosamh O Clerigh, 22 December 1882 – 1976) was an Irish republican activist.

Born in Rush, Dublin, Clarke worked for the Sinn Fein Bank, and was active in the Easter Rising. When captured, he was shot in the head, but survived, and was instead imprisoned in Liverpool Prison, Wakefield Prison and then Frongoch Internment Camp.

On his return to Ireland, Clarke acted as the courier for the First Dail, but was interned from January 1921. Released in 1923, he acted as caretaker of the Sinn Fein headquarters on Harcourt Street, and founded the Irish Book Bureau. Although the Anti-Treaty Sinn Fein rejected participation in the Dail, they continued to contest local elections, and Clarke sat on Dublin City Council.

Clarke was a founder member of Comhairle na Poblachta in 1929. In 1937, he worked with Brian O'Higgins to establish the Wolfe Tone Weekly as a light-hearted party newspaper. In August 1939, Clarke was interned at Arbour Hill, then later at Cork County Jail.

Although Clarke had served under Eamon de Valera during the Easter Rising, the two became implacable opponents. Clarke was ejected from an official commemoration of the fiftieth anniversary of the First Dail for interrupting de Valera's speech in order to raise the complaints of the Dublin Housing Action Committee. He vowed to outlive de Valera, in which endeavour he succeeded by a year.

Clarke was elected as a Vice-President of Sinn Fein in 1966. In the split of 1970, he supported the provisional wing, remaining Vice-President. The Dublin South West Inner City cumann of Sinn Fein is named for Clarke.

References

Joe Clarke (Irish republican) Wikipedia