The RIC in Galway

In the 18th century, attempts at maintaining law and order in Galway were poor. Occasional groups of civilian vigilantes were set up, but they were not very successful. Then, 200 years ago, in 1822, the Chief Secretary Henry Goulburn set up the Irish Constabulary. In 1824, Edward Blake from Mary Street became the first Catholic in Ireland to become a constable. In 1825, a decision was made to bring police to Galway. Some time later a barracks was set up in Abbeygate Street, then one in Eyre Square (where Giblin’s Hotel was situated later ), and one in Dominick Street where An Tobar Nua is today. The force gradually became very organized, was successful in dealing with crime, and so Queen Victoria granted it the term ‘Royal’.

As some of these premises gradually fell into bad condition, it was decided to build a headquarters in the city for the force, so a site was cleared on Lion’s Tower Avenue, the trees were cut down and the barracks was built on what we know today as Eglinton Street. It opened in 1886 and could accommodate 46 policemen with each officer given a kitchen, pantry, scullery, bathroom, parlour, drawing room, and bedrooms. The constables had bedrooms and shared a large kitchen, a day room, and a dining room. Included were offices on the top floor, strong holding cells and stables, a coach house, and a ball alley at the rear. By the end of the century there were barracks situated off Lenaboy Avenue in Salthill and one next to the house where Pádraic Ó Conaire was born on New Dock Street.

In 1909, the County Inspectors were RG Flower and DI Mercier. The head constable in Dominick Street was T Killackey, he had six constables; Sergeant Walker was in charge of four constables in New Dock Street; and Sergeant John Lynch had four constables in Salthill.

In spite of occasional dangers the RIC was seen as an attractive source of employment for young men, but as time moved into the 20th century relationships between the force and nationalists began to deteriorate. As more and more republican prisoners were incarcerated, Eglinton Street Barracks was seen more as a symbol of British occupation than as a place of law enforcement. Constables were seen as legitimate targets and the number of attacks on them increased.

By the summer of 1920, the RIC members reacted in one of five different ways to the pressure they were under: They resigned; they stayed in the force and helped the Republican movement; they stayed in the force and tried to avoid trouble of any kind; they remained in the force and tried to uphold the law; or they stayed in the force but abandoned the law. From this time, they went on the offensive using legal and illegal methods to counteract republicans. Native-born RIC men, almost all of them Catholics and so presumably from a nationalist background, were implicated in a large proportion of the shootings in Galway.

After the truce, when the British were leaving, the RIC barracks were being handed over and the policemen began to go home. Many of these men were attacked about this time, the worst atrocity occurring in St Bride’s on Sea Road in March 1922 when three ex-RIC men and a civilian were shot as they lay in their beds. Sergeants John Gilmartin and Tobias Gibbons were killed as was the civilian John Cassidy. Constable Eugene McGloin was injured.

Our photographs today are of a typical RIC man and of the last RIC group at Eglinton Street before they handed over control of the barracks.

Listen to Tom Kenny and Ronnie O'Gorman elaborating on topics they have covered in this week's paper and much more in this week's Old Galway Diary Podcast.

 

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