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Máire Gill
Máire ‘Molly’ Gill (Máire Ní Ghiolla) (1891–1977) was a political activist who became third and longest-serving president of the Camogie Association and captained a Dublin team to an All Ireland championship while serving as president of the association. ==Cultural activism== Mollie went to work with the Dun Emer industries established by Evelyn Gleeson to promote Irish crafts and industries and then with Cuala Press. She befriended the sisters of William Butler Yeats, Elixabeth and Lily, started learning Irish, and joined Inghinidhe na hEireann and Cumann na mBan, serving on the executive committee of the Irish Republican Prisoners Dependant Fund. She took the anti-treaty side during the Civil War, and was arrested in May 1923 alongside the secretary of the Camogie Association Áine Ní Riain and was interned in Kilmainham for several months. She continued to work in Cuala Press until 1969.〔Sinead McCoole: Molly Gill, A Woman of Ireland in Irish History magazine〕
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