KILMAINHAM GAOL

Victorian Wing
'Kilmainham Gaol' (Irish: '''Príosún Chill Mhaighneann''') is a former prison, located in Inchicore in Dublin, which is now a museum.
Kilmainham Gaol has played an important part in Irish history, as many leaders of Irish rebellions were imprisoned and some executed in the jail. The jail has also been used as a set for several films.
When it was first built in 1796, Kilmainham Gaol was called the 'New Gaol' to distinguish it from the old jail it was intended to replace - a noisome dungeon, just a few hundred metres from the present site. Over the 140 years it served as a prison, its cells held many of the most famous people involved in the campaign for Irish independence. The leaders of the 1916 Easter Rising were held and executed here, and the last prisoner held in the jail was Éamon de Valera.
Children were sometimes arrested for petty theft (also the case in UK), the youngest said to be a seven year-old boy, while many of the adult prisoners were deported to Australia.

There was no segregation of prisoners; men women and children were incarcerated up to 5 in each cell, with only a single candle for light and heat, most of their time was spent in the cold and the dark.
Kilmainham Gaol was abandoned as a jail in 1924, by the government of the new Irish Free State. Following lengthy restoration, it now houses a museum on the history of Irish nationalism and offers guided tours of the building.
An art gallery on the top floor exhibits paintings, sculptures and jewellery of prisoners incarcerated in jails all over contemporary Ireland.

Contents
Famous prisoners
Films that have been filmed at the jail
Photographs
See also
External link

Famous prisoners



Henry Joy McCracken, 1796

Robert Emmet, 1803

Anne Devlin, 1803

Michael Dwyer, 1803

William Smith O'Brien, 1848

Thomas Francis Meagher, 1848

Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa, 1867

J. E. Kenny, 1881

Charles Stewart Parnell, 1881

William O'Brien, 1881

James Joseph O'Kelly, 1881

Willie Redmond, 1882

Joe Brady, (Phoenix Park murders) 1883

Daniel Curley, (Phoenix Park murders) 1883

Tim Kelly, (Phoenix Park murders) 1883

Thomas Caffrey, (Phoenix Park murders) 1883

Michael Fagan, (Phoenix Park murders) 1883

Michael Davitt

Patrick Pearse, 1916

James Connolly, (Executed, but not held at, Kilmainham) 1916

Countess Markiewicz, 1916

Éamon de Valera, 1916

Joseph Plunkett, 1916.

Michael O'Hanrahan, 1916

Edward Daly, 1916

Willie Pearse, (Younger brother of Padraig, who was unaware his brother was also to be executed) 1916

Grace Gifford, (Wife of Joseph Plunkett) (1922)

Films that have been filmed at the jail



★ ''The Italian Job'', 1969

★ ''In the Name of the Father'', 1993

★ ''Michael Collins'', 1996

★ ''Boondock Saints'', 1999

Photographs



See also



The Royal Hospital, Kilmainham

External link



History of Kilmainham Gaol

Protect Kilmainham Gaol Campaign

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