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{{Infobox politician|name=Miriam Daly|birth_name=Miriam Annette McDonnell|birth_date=16 May 1928|birth_place=Curragh Camp, County Kildare, Ireland|death_date=26 June 1980|death_place=Belfast, Northern Ireland|death_cause=Assassination|political_orientation=[[Marxism]]<br>[[Irish Republicanism]]|image=Miriam Daly.png}}
{{Infobox politician|name=Miriam Daly|birth_name=Miriam Annette McDonnell|birth_date=16 May 1928|birth_place=Curragh Camp, County Kildare, Ireland|death_date=26 June 1980|death_place=Belfast, Northern Ireland|death_cause=Assassination|political_orientation=[[Marxism]]<br>[[Irish Republicanism]]|image=Miriam Daly.png}}


'''Miriam Daly''' was an [[Irish Republican]] [[Marxist]] political activist and martyr. She was involved in the [[Northern Ireland Civil Rights Movement]] and [[the Troubles]] and played an important role in the spread of Marxism in these movements. She was murdered on 26 June 1980 by the Unionist terrorist group the [[Ulster Defence Association]].<ref name=":0">{{Web citation|author=Patrick Maume|newspaper=Dictionary of Irish Biography|title=Daly, Miriam|url=https://www.dib.ie/biography/daly-miriam-a9757}}</ref>
'''Miriam Daly''' was an [[Irish Republican]] [[Marxist]] political activist, historian, and martyr. She was involved in the [[Northern Ireland Civil Rights Movement]] and [[the Troubles]] and played an important role in the spread of Marxism in these movements. She was murdered on 26 June 1980 by the Unionist terrorist group the [[Ulster Defence Association]].<ref name=":0">{{Web citation|author=Patrick Maume|newspaper=Dictionary of Irish Biography|title=Daly, Miriam|url=https://www.dib.ie/biography/daly-miriam-a9757}}</ref>


== Early Life and Career ==
== Early Life and Education ==
Miriam Daly was born Miriam McDonnell at Curragh Camp in County Kildare, Ireland on 16 May 1928 to Daniel McDonnell and Anne Cummins. Her father was a Republican veteran of the [[Irish War of Independence]] and a trade unionist.<ref name=":0" />
Miriam Daly was born Miriam McDonnell at Curragh Camp in County Kildare, Ireland on 16 May 1928 to Daniel McDonnell and Anne Cummins. Her father was a Republican veteran of the [[Irish War of Independence]] and a trade unionist.<ref name=":0" />


She attended a local convent school before attending the [[University College Dublin]], where she graduated with a bachelors degree in history and economics in 1948. She went on to receive a Higher Diploma in Education in 1949 and a Masters degree. Her dissertation was: 'Irish labour in England in the first half of the nineteenth century'.<ref name=":0" />
She attended a local convent school before attending the [[University College Dublin]], where she graduated with a bachelors degree in history and economics in 1948. She went on to receive a Higher Diploma in Education in 1949 and a Masters degree. Her dissertation was: 'Irish labour in England in the first half of the nineteenth century'.<ref name=":0" />


She joined the youth wing of the center-right Irish political party [[Fine Gael]], [[Young Fine Gael]], at some point during her time at UCD, but soon grew opposed to its politics.<ref name=":0" />
== Career and Early Political Activism ==
She was an assistant lecturer in the University College Dublin department of history from 1950 to 1953. She worked with historian [[Robert Dudley Edwards]] there, where he sexually harassed her until her father threatened him with a gun.<ref name=":0" />
She was an assistant lecturer in the University College Dublin department of history from 1950 to 1953. She worked with historian [[Robert Dudley Edwards]] there, where he sexually harassed her until her father threatened him with a gun.<ref name=":0" />


She married a psychiatrist named Joseph Lee in 1953 and subsequently took a position as an extramural history lecturer at the college. She moved to England in 1958 and worked as history mistress at Aberdashers' Aske's School for Girls in London. She also studied for a Ph.D. at [[King's College]], studying agrarian resistance in Ireland in the 1800s. Lee died in 1963 of a heart attack and Daly was forced to abandon her studies.<ref name=":0" />
She married a psychiatrist named Joseph Lee in 1953 and subsequently took a position as an extramural history lecturer at the college. She moved to England in 1958 and worked as history mistress at Aberdashers' Aske's School for Girls in London. She also studied for a Ph.D. at [[King's College]], studying agrarian resistance in Ireland in the 1800s. Lee died in 1963 of a heart attack and Daly was forced to abandon her studies.<ref name=":0" />


She became a lecturer of economic history at the [[University of Southampton]] in 1964. She married philosopher and Socialist political activist [[Jim Daly]] in 1964 and in 1968 they moved to Belfast, Northern Ireland, where growing tensions relating to the [[Northern Ireland Civil Rights Movement]] would soon erupt into a full scale civil war. They both began to work at [[Queen's University Belfast]]. They adopted two children, a daughter and a son, in 1970.<ref name=":0" />
She had slowly lost her Catholic faith throughout the 1950s due to a variety of factors, eventually abandoning it altogether by the end of the decade. By 1967 she had readopted the faith, publishing an article called 'Believing today', which described the progressive form of Catholicism she followed.<ref name=":0" />
 
She became a lecturer of economic history at the [[University of Southampton]] in 1964. At Southampton she began to participate in anti-war activism and was a member of the [[Association of University Teachers]], a large trade union in the United Kingdom.<ref name=":0" />
 
She married philosopher and Socialist political activist [[Jim Daly]] in 1964 and in 1968 they moved to Belfast, Northern Ireland, where growing tensions relating to the [[Northern Ireland Civil Rights Movement]] would soon erupt into a full scale civil war. She began to participate in the civil rights movement soon after she moved, joining the [[Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association]]. She joined the [[National Democratic Party]], a Social-Democratic Republican party, in 1969, eventually becoming its assistance secretary.  When the NDP merged into the [[Social Democratic and Labour Party]] in October 1970 she joined that party. She led the opposition to a statement by prominent SDLP member [[John Hume]] which condemned political violence as a whole. They both began to work at [[Queen's University Belfast]]. <ref name=":0" />
 
Miriam and Jim adopted two children, a daughter and a son, in 1970.<ref name=":0" />
 
In 1971 she was elected to the executive council of the NICRA. She was voted off the next year. She was radicalized by the [[Bloody Sunday]] massacre in January 1972, leaving the SDLP and joining [[Provisional Sinn Féin]]. <ref name=":0" />
 
Faced with death threats in the majority Protestant Loyalist community they lived in at the time, the Dalys moved to Andersonstown Road, a Catholic area in Belfast in 1974.<ref name=":0" />
 
During her career at Queen's University she organized a course on labor history and lectured Republican and Loyalist prisoners interned in relation to the Troubles in [[Long Kesh]]. She was committed to the idea that academics should work to educate people and change the world, rather than watch events pass by. She was a founding member of the [[Irish Labour History Society]] and contributed to its journal [[Saothar]]. She was also a co-founder of the [[Economic and Social History Society of Ireland]] among many other academic positions.<ref name=":0" />
 
In 1976 she chaired the committee which advocated against the death sentences of Irish Republican anarchists [[Noel and Marie Murray]].<ref name=":0" />
 
== Irish Republican Socialist Party ==
Miriam and Jim Daly both resigned from Provisional Sinn Féin in opposition to the [[Éire Nua]]. In August of that year they joined the [[Irish Republican Socialist Party]], eventually becoming part of its Ard Chomhairle in October.<ref name=":0" />
 
Daly was elected chair of the IRSP in February 1978 and in a paper called 'The relevance of Connolly today' argued that the form of Irish Republican Socialist developed and promoted by [[James Connolly]] was represented at that time in the [[Irish Republican Socialist Party]]. She spoke for the party on television in several countries.<ref name=":0" />
 
She resigned from her position as chair of the IRSP in March 1979 due to disputed between the party and the [[Irish National Liberation Army]], its military wing. Despite this she remained active in the party.<ref name=":0" />
 
She visited the United States on a lecture tour in March and April of 1979, with her talk 'Women in Ulster' later being published in an essay collection compiled by [[Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin]] in 1985.<ref name=":0" />
 
Throughout the late 1970s to her death she also campaigned on behalf of Irish Republican political prisoners, increasing her attention on the issue after her resignation from the Irish Republican Socialist Party.<ref name=":0" />
 
She was a delegate to a UNESCO conference on labor history in Paris, France in April 1980.<ref name=":0" />
 
Barely two weeks before her death she was elected to the [[Smash H-Block Committee]].<ref name=":0" />
 
== Assassination, Funeral, and Possibility of State Conspiracy ==
Miriam Daly was murdered by members of the Unionist [[Ulster Defence Association]] in her home on June 26, 1980. They broke into her home and tied her up, waiting for Jim Daly, who was also a target in the attack, to return home. Unbeknownst to them at the time he was in Dublin. The terrorists then shot Daly 5 times in the head.<ref name=":0" />
 
She was buried in Swords, County Dublin with her first husband. The funeral was organized by the IRSP and attended by friends and political allies of various parties.<ref name=":0" />
 
Her murder was unusual due to its occurrence deep into a Catholic area of Belfast and due to the many other attacks on Anti-H Block campaigners in around that time, including the murders of INLA volunteer [[Ronnie Bunting]] on 15 October 1980 and [[Irish Independence Party]] founder [[John Turnley]] on 5 June of that year, as well as the attempted assassination of [[Bernadette Devlin McAliskey]] on 16 January 1981. These circumstances have led some to allege that the British army was directly or indirectly involved with her murder<ref name=":0" />  


She was a founding member of the [[Irish Labour History Society]] in 1973.<ref name=":0" />
== References ==

Revision as of 04:11, 5 June 2024

Miriam Daly
Born
Miriam Annette McDonnell

16 May 1928
Curragh Camp, County Kildare, Ireland
Died26 June 1980
Belfast, Northern Ireland
Cause of deathAssassination
Political orientationMarxism
Irish Republicanism


Miriam Daly was an Irish Republican Marxist political activist, historian, and martyr. She was involved in the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Movement and the Troubles and played an important role in the spread of Marxism in these movements. She was murdered on 26 June 1980 by the Unionist terrorist group the Ulster Defence Association.[1]

Early Life and Education

Miriam Daly was born Miriam McDonnell at Curragh Camp in County Kildare, Ireland on 16 May 1928 to Daniel McDonnell and Anne Cummins. Her father was a Republican veteran of the Irish War of Independence and a trade unionist.[1]

She attended a local convent school before attending the University College Dublin, where she graduated with a bachelors degree in history and economics in 1948. She went on to receive a Higher Diploma in Education in 1949 and a Masters degree. Her dissertation was: 'Irish labour in England in the first half of the nineteenth century'.[1]

She joined the youth wing of the center-right Irish political party Fine Gael, Young Fine Gael, at some point during her time at UCD, but soon grew opposed to its politics.[1]

Career and Early Political Activism

She was an assistant lecturer in the University College Dublin department of history from 1950 to 1953. She worked with historian Robert Dudley Edwards there, where he sexually harassed her until her father threatened him with a gun.[1]

She married a psychiatrist named Joseph Lee in 1953 and subsequently took a position as an extramural history lecturer at the college. She moved to England in 1958 and worked as history mistress at Aberdashers' Aske's School for Girls in London. She also studied for a Ph.D. at King's College, studying agrarian resistance in Ireland in the 1800s. Lee died in 1963 of a heart attack and Daly was forced to abandon her studies.[1]

She had slowly lost her Catholic faith throughout the 1950s due to a variety of factors, eventually abandoning it altogether by the end of the decade. By 1967 she had readopted the faith, publishing an article called 'Believing today', which described the progressive form of Catholicism she followed.[1]

She became a lecturer of economic history at the University of Southampton in 1964. At Southampton she began to participate in anti-war activism and was a member of the Association of University Teachers, a large trade union in the United Kingdom.[1]

She married philosopher and Socialist political activist Jim Daly in 1964 and in 1968 they moved to Belfast, Northern Ireland, where growing tensions relating to the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Movement would soon erupt into a full scale civil war. She began to participate in the civil rights movement soon after she moved, joining the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association. She joined the National Democratic Party, a Social-Democratic Republican party, in 1969, eventually becoming its assistance secretary. When the NDP merged into the Social Democratic and Labour Party in October 1970 she joined that party. She led the opposition to a statement by prominent SDLP member John Hume which condemned political violence as a whole. They both began to work at Queen's University Belfast. [1]

Miriam and Jim adopted two children, a daughter and a son, in 1970.[1]

In 1971 she was elected to the executive council of the NICRA. She was voted off the next year. She was radicalized by the Bloody Sunday massacre in January 1972, leaving the SDLP and joining Provisional Sinn Féin. [1]

Faced with death threats in the majority Protestant Loyalist community they lived in at the time, the Dalys moved to Andersonstown Road, a Catholic area in Belfast in 1974.[1]

During her career at Queen's University she organized a course on labor history and lectured Republican and Loyalist prisoners interned in relation to the Troubles in Long Kesh. She was committed to the idea that academics should work to educate people and change the world, rather than watch events pass by. She was a founding member of the Irish Labour History Society and contributed to its journal Saothar. She was also a co-founder of the Economic and Social History Society of Ireland among many other academic positions.[1]

In 1976 she chaired the committee which advocated against the death sentences of Irish Republican anarchists Noel and Marie Murray.[1]

Irish Republican Socialist Party

Miriam and Jim Daly both resigned from Provisional Sinn Féin in opposition to the Éire Nua. In August of that year they joined the Irish Republican Socialist Party, eventually becoming part of its Ard Chomhairle in October.[1]

Daly was elected chair of the IRSP in February 1978 and in a paper called 'The relevance of Connolly today' argued that the form of Irish Republican Socialist developed and promoted by James Connolly was represented at that time in the Irish Republican Socialist Party. She spoke for the party on television in several countries.[1]

She resigned from her position as chair of the IRSP in March 1979 due to disputed between the party and the Irish National Liberation Army, its military wing. Despite this she remained active in the party.[1]

She visited the United States on a lecture tour in March and April of 1979, with her talk 'Women in Ulster' later being published in an essay collection compiled by Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin in 1985.[1]

Throughout the late 1970s to her death she also campaigned on behalf of Irish Republican political prisoners, increasing her attention on the issue after her resignation from the Irish Republican Socialist Party.[1]

She was a delegate to a UNESCO conference on labor history in Paris, France in April 1980.[1]

Barely two weeks before her death she was elected to the Smash H-Block Committee.[1]

Assassination, Funeral, and Possibility of State Conspiracy

Miriam Daly was murdered by members of the Unionist Ulster Defence Association in her home on June 26, 1980. They broke into her home and tied her up, waiting for Jim Daly, who was also a target in the attack, to return home. Unbeknownst to them at the time he was in Dublin. The terrorists then shot Daly 5 times in the head.[1]

She was buried in Swords, County Dublin with her first husband. The funeral was organized by the IRSP and attended by friends and political allies of various parties.[1]

Her murder was unusual due to its occurrence deep into a Catholic area of Belfast and due to the many other attacks on Anti-H Block campaigners in around that time, including the murders of INLA volunteer Ronnie Bunting on 15 October 1980 and Irish Independence Party founder John Turnley on 5 June of that year, as well as the attempted assassination of Bernadette Devlin McAliskey on 16 January 1981. These circumstances have led some to allege that the British army was directly or indirectly involved with her murder[1]

References

  1. 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 1.16 1.17 1.18 1.19 1.20 1.21 1.22 1.23 Patrick Maume. "Daly, Miriam" Dictionary of Irish Biography.