Sr Kate McCarthy (family archives, courtesy of Catherine Fleming)
Liberation of Sr Kate McCarthy – 75th Anniversary
The 75th anniversary of World War II brought out thousands of stories from veterans, those that lived through it, and family descendants. A heroine nun from Cork is not the story you would expect to hear when talking about the French Resistance. Sr. Kate McCarthy, was born near Drimoleague, Cork, in 1895. Aged 18, she joined the Franciscans in Cork and was transferred to Béthune, a beautiful French town. When the Great War broke out, Béthune became a major hospital centre. For four years, Kate nursed Allied, and some German, wounded. Spending the interwar years in the United States, she returned to her former posting just prior to the outbreak of the next world war.
Nazi German forces occupied France in 1940. Along with two other women, Kate selflessly risked her life with the early resistance group in northern France saving over 200 British airmen and soldiers. In 1941 disaster struck and Kate was betrayed. She was arrested by the Gestapo and sent to solitary confinement for a year. She was later given the death sentence. Then she disappeared into the night and fog moving from prison to prison each one harsher than the next. Kate was then sent to the notorious Ravensbruck Concentration Camp, 90km north of Berlin. It’s estimated 130,000 women and children were imprisoned there between 1939 and 1945, where they were forced to hard labour. Surviving beatings, little food and Typhus she avoided selection for the Gas Chamber 4 times. On 25 April 1945 Kate was rescued by the white bus rescue mission from Sweden.
Following liberation Sr Kate McCarthy became Mother Superior of the Honan Home in Cork. She died suddenly on 21 June 1971 and is buried in St Finbarr’s Cemetery.
The inspirational story of Sr Kate McCarthy is currently being researched by historian Catherine Fleming. Myles Dungan will be speaking to Catherine about Sr Kate McCarthy at 6.05pm on The History Show, RTÉ Radio 1. Make sure and tune in for the full story on this remarkable women.
Surviving female prisoners gathered when the Red Cross arrived at Ravensbrück in April 1945. The white paint camp crosses show they were prisoners, not civilians. (Swedish Red Cross)
Fort Mitchel – Guarding the entrance to Cork Harbour. (Image courtesy of Spike Island)
In the last 1,300 years Spike Island, in Cork Harbour, has been host to a 6th century Monastery and a 24-acre fortress that became the largest convict depot in the world during Victorian times. The island’s rich history has included monks and monasteries, rioters, captains and convicts and sinners and saints. Today the island is dominated by the 200-year old Fort Mitchel, the star shaped fortress which became a prison holding over 2,300 convicts. Now a magnificently restored visitors centre the fort is open to the public all year round. The fort is also home to Ireland’s largest collection of restored artillery. Superintendent Spike Island, Tom O’Neill (a retired Reserve Defence Forces officer and Prison Officer), gave us a guided tour around Spike Island’s defences and their artillery collection.
The entrance to Spike Island. (Photo by Ken Mooney)
When Tom advised us that we’d need the entire day to see the restored fort, we thought he was kidding. Spike Island is an experience like none other in the country. Your journey starts at Kennedy Pier, in Cobh, where you embark on a ferry. The trip across for us modern day tourists is one of beauty. The estuary of the river Lee is full of stunning scenery and all kinds of wildlife. Once inside the walls you are immediately taken aback by the sheer size of the fort. On the ferry over it is difficult to grasp the scale. Inside, you can only imagine what the fortress must have been like when full of soldiers and bristling with artillery.
A view of the dry moat, Bastion 4, and the Flanking Galleries. (Photo by Ken Mooney)
As a natural deep-water port, Cork has been a tempting
strategic target throughout history. Due to threats by the French in the 18th
century, it was decided to improve the fortifications of Cork Harbour. Spike Island,
at the mouth of the estuary, acts as a natural gun emplacement. A pre-existing fortification
existed on Spike Island, but a more modern fort was needed. In 1789, building
work began on a stone-built fort designed by Colonel Charles Vallancey. It was
named Fort Westmoreland in honour of John Fane, 10th Earl of Westmoreland and
Lord Lieutenant of Ireland from 1789 to 1794.
“The star shape allows the defenders in the fort to fire over all parts of the island, making the whole island an effective kill zone for anyone who dare enter”
Fortress Spike
With the threat from Napoleon, fortifications in the harbour were further enhanced. The next construction began in 1804. The six-bastion star shaped fort was completed by the mid-19th century. The fort was designed to stop enemy vessels in their path and defend itself from landing attacks. The star shape allows the defenders in the fort to fire over all parts of the island, making the whole island an effective kill zone for anyone who dare attack. Flanking galleries further allowed the defender to pour musket and artillery fire into the ranks of a landing force that got close enough. The fort is surrounded by a dry moat. If troops landed, they couldn’t see the moat. Facing them was a raised slope called a glacis. Advancing in the open they would have been cut to pieces.
Members of 1st Artillery Regiment in training on the QF 12-pounder 12 cwt coast defence gun. (Photo by A/B Davey Jones. Irish Naval Service)
This fort was originally armed with 29 24-pounder guns, two
12-pounder guns and twelve 6-pounder cannons. Along with howitzers and mortars
it was a formidable obstacle in any belligerent’s path. As technology evolved
so did the artillery on the island. When excavations were taking place in the
fort, three old smoothbores were recovered, later restored and are now on
display.
Supported by other forts – Carlisle (now Fort Davis), Camden (now Fort Meagher), and Templebredy, it is no wonder no one ever dared attack Cork. Fort Camden and Fort Carlisle were built at opposite sides of the harbour entrance during the period of the American War of Independence, Templebredy was built in 1910, at the back of Crosshaven facing out to the sea. If an enemy vessel managed to get through the entrance, straight in front of them would have been the guns of Spike Island. The fort was of such strategic importance that the British First Sea Lord, Winston Churchill, later called the island ‘The sentinel tower of the approaches to Western Europe’.
C Block and Mitchel Hall in the centre. (Photo by Ken Mooney)
By the turn of the 20th century the fort was armed with
breech loading rifled guns. The 6-inch Mk VII gun, together with the 9.2-inch
Mk X gun, provided the main coastal defence throughout the British Empire, and
later Ireland, from the early 1900’s until the abolition of coastal artillery in
the 1950’s. When the fort was handed over to the Irish Free State in 1938, it
was renamed Fort Mitchel after the Nationalist hero, John Mitchel, Mitchel, who
was a prisoner on Spike Island in May 1848. As Tom took us around the restored
bastions, he told us that that Spike was armed with the 6-inch guns. The 9.2-inch
were mounted on Templebredy and Fort Davis. Unfortunately, there are no
9.2-inch guns left in the country. However, Spike Island has two beautifully
restored 6-inch guns. Grey Point Fort near Belfast also has two, former Irish
Army, restored 6-inch guns. The 6-inch guns had a crew of 9. It could fire
Lyddite, HE, and Shrapnel 100 lb shells. With a rate of fire of eight rounds a
minute, it could engage targets up to13,400m (light charge) or 14,400m (heavy
charge). The 6-inch guns at Spike were originally mounted out in the open.
Interestingly, during the early 1940’s, the Irish Army moved the 6-inch guns on
Spike into underground emplacements. This was some undertaking. The most
logical reason for this was to protect them from aerial or naval
bombardment. Today on Bastion 3 where
the 6-inch guns used to be, are a battery of four QF 12-pounder 12 cwt guns. They
are still in working condition and are the Irish Army’s saluting battery for
Cork Harbour.
As part of the restoration, the underground emplacements
have been completely restored – along with 6-inch guns. The underground
emplacements include: crew quarters, a Battery Observation Post, and gun
emplacement. The Battery Observation Post gives you a clear view out to the
mouth of Cork Harbour. From here the officer would have worked out the
distance, elevation and range of the enemy target.
The Gun Park
Spike Island is also home to a unique collection of
artillery pieces. The collection traces the use of artillery in Ireland from
the 1700’s up to the present-day Irish Army. Some pieces you will be very
familiar with, including the Bofors L/60 and L/70 40mm anti-aircraft guns, and
the British Ordnance QF 18 and 25-pounders. Others such as a 17-inch anti-tank
gun and a 4.7-inch coastal gun are one of a kind examples in Ireland. All are
kept out of the elements in the Gun Park.
The earliest artillery piece in the collection is the
12-pounder cannon. It is one of Spike Island’s oldest artillery pieces. The
crest of King George III on the barrel dates the piece to the late 1700’s. Designed
as a naval gun, this piece was used for coastal defence. This is indicated by
the presence of a breeching ring at the rear of the gun, through which a strong
rope was passed and fixed to either side of the gun port opening to control recoil
when the gun rolled back upon firing. This is one of three such cannon on Spike
Island. They were used as bollards on the pier and were removed in circa 1999, restored
and mounted for display. The 7-inch Rifled Muzzle Loading Cannon on display represents
the progression of artillery technology, with the introduction of rifling
grooves cut into the barrel to impart spin and stability to the shell while in
flight. Dating from 1865, three of these massive 7-inch guns were mounted on
Spike Island, one on each of the three bastions facing Cobh. The introduction of breech loaded guns
rendered them obsolete.
“A one of a kind and the envy of the artillery community is the QF 4.7-inch coastal gun. This gun was made by the Elswick Ordnance Company of England. Spike Island’s 4.7- inch dates from 1910, is one of only two known surviving examples in Ireland”
The QF 12-pounder was originally designed as a shipboard
naval weapon, also used for coastal defence. Batteries were positioned in Forts
Carlisle and Camden, providing protection against torpedo boats and covering
the Cork Harbour minefield. The thickly armoured shield provided protection for
the crew operating in open gun emplacements and is considered extremely rare. A
one of a kind and the envy of the artillery community is the QF 4.7-inch
coastal gun. This gun was made by the Elswick Ordnance Company of England.
Spike Island’s 4.7-inch dates from 1910. It is one of only two known surviving
examples in Ireland; the other is at Fort Dunree in Co. Donegal. This rare gun
has been the subject of an extensive restoration project and must be among the
best-preserved examples of its type in the world. Luckily the brass fittings
and breach block were still in the Irish Army stores. ‘It was originally
thought that the guns were from Bere Island. However, the Fortress Study Group
found that the 4.7-inch was originally bought for the Irish Army in 1940, for a
gun emplacement in Galway Bay. The emplacement was never built and the guns
were put in storage. How many were brought in is unclear.
Bofors L/70 Anti Aircraft Gun alongside a QF 18-pounder
Leyland Machine Lorry
A 25pdr and a 17pdr
A 12-pounder cannon
The Bofors anti–aircraft guns are very much at home in
Spike. During the Emergency years (1939 1946) anti-aircraft emplacements were
built on Spike. In later years, the 4th Air Defence Battery was also based on
the island. The Bofors L/60 pm display is one of the very guns that served on
Spike from 1980 – 1985. Another rare artillery piece in the collection is the
Ordnance QF 17-pounder Anti-Tank Gun. Developed in World War II to counter new
and heavily armoured German tanks, the 17 pounders proved a battlefield
success. The 17-pounder served with the Irish Army from 1949 to 1962. It too is
fully restored.
Spike Island visitors centre is only open two years. In that
very short time the team on the island has done incredible work. The artillery
collection on the island is an aspect of Irish military history that has not
been written about that much. At one time gun emplacements and forts with their
coastal artillery dotted the coastline well into the 1950’s. One by one the
forts were no longer used and the gunners’ story was forgotten.
Gun by gun and barrel by barrel, the team on Spike Island is preserving and retelling that story. The management on Spike Island are most grateful to the Department of Defence and members of the Defence Forces for their outstanding support in the project. They are also very fortunate in having a dedicated team of volunteers working on the guns and in the museum.
There are many more fascinating stories to come from Spike
Island including the Aud Exhibition and that of the prisoners who were there.
Watch out for more on Ireland’s island fortress.
Spike Island – Cork Harbour Ferries depart from Kennedy pier
Cobh, which is right in the town centre next to Titanic Cobh. Tickets can be
purchased from the kiosk on the pier, or save money and book online. Online
booking is highly recommended during the busy summer months to secure you preferred
sailing and avoid disappointment. Open year round for pre-booked tour groups of
15 or more, contact Spike Island for booking. Regular sailings for walk up passengers
(advance online booking recommended):