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Kathleen Clarke
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Kathleen Clarke : ウィキペディア英語版
Kathleen Clarke

Kathleen Clarke, ''née'' Daly ((アイルランド語:Caitlín Bean Uí Chléirigh); 11 April 1878 – 29 September 1972) was a founder member of Cumann na mBan, and one of very few privy to the plans of the Easter Rising in 1916. She was subsequently a TD and Senator with both Sinn Féin and Fianna Fáil and the first female Lord Mayor of Dublin (1939–41).
==Early life==
Kathleen Daly was born in Limerick in 1878, the third daughter of Edward and Catherine Daly. She was born into a prominent Fenian family. Her paternal uncle, John Daly, a subsequent Mayor of Limerick, was at the time imprisoned for his political activities in Chatham and Portland Prisons in England.〔Clarke, Kathleen (2008), ''Kathleen Clarke: Revolutionary Woman.'' Dublin, O'Brien Press. pp.9-13〕 Her uncle was released in 1896 and returned home to Limerick. At this time Kathleen had started a drapery business having previously begun an apprenticeship.〔Clarke, pp.23-4〕 When Tom Clarke, who had been imprisoned with her uncle, was released in 1898 he travelled to Limerick to receive the Freedom of the City and stayed with the Daly family.〔Clarke, p.31〕
In 1901 she ceased her business in the city as she had decided to emigrate to the United States to join Tom who had been there since 1900, having secured work through his Fenian contacts. They married on 16 July 1901 in New York and lived in both the Bronx and Brooklyn areas of the city.〔Clarke, pp.34-9〕 They had three children together. Through his contacts in the Clan na Gael and the Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB), Tom Clarke continued to be involved in nationalist activity. Kathleen joined the Gaelic League while in the USA and they returned to Ireland in November 1907〔Clarke, p.50〕 They opened a tobaconnist shop, initially at 75A Parnell Street, Dublin and then at 77 Amiens Street, Dublin.〔Clarke, p.53〕
==Cumann na mBan==
In 1914 she became a founder member of Cumann na mBan. Her husband forbade her permission to take an active part in the 1916 Easter Rising as she had orders regardless of how the events would pan out.〔Clarke, pp.112-3〕 As Tom Clarke was the first signatory of the Proclamation of the Irish Republic he was chosen to be executed for his part in the Easter Rising. Her younger brother, Ned Daly, was also executed for taking part in the rising.〔McCoole, Sinead (2003) ''No Ordinary Women: Irish Female Activists in the Revolutionary Years 1900–1923.'' Dublin, The O'Brien Press p.157〕 She visited both of them before they were executed. Kathleen was pregnant at the time but subsequently lost the baby. After the Rising Michael Collins established contact with her while in prison in his attempts to re-build the IRB network.〔Coogan, Tim Pat (1991) ''Michael Collins.'' London, Arrow Books. p.54〕 She also set up the Irish National Aid Fund to aid those who had family members killed or imprisoned as a result of the Easter Rising.〔Coogan, pp.63-4〕

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