As I crossed the pedestrian walkway, a flatbed truck driver leaned out his window and unleashed a barrage of angry words at me. The wind swallowed most of his rant, but the essence was clear: he was furious, and his fury was aimed at “Democrats”, “budgets”, and “billions of dollars”. My puzzled expression likely only heightened the veins bulging in his neck. With a final, dismissive curse, he sped away, his old truck groaning under the strain, but not before glaring at me through his rear-view mirror. The faded U.S. flag sticker on his window was a faint clue to his political leanings, though I was more perplexed by why he assumed I was a Democrat. Was it my outdated 1990s attire—jeans, shirt, and blazer combo—that my wife swears she will leave me if I wear again?
Spirit of Revolution
Very enthused by the reviews of our latest book on the Irish War of Independence and Civil War periods - Spirit of Revolution: Ireland from below 1917-23, edited by Dr John Cunningham and Dr Terry Dunne. I have a chapter in it based on an aspect of my PhD research, looking at an IRA Volunteer company in rural County Mayo.
A lop-sided study of the Mayo Revolution
This is the thirteenth book in the county studies series, drawing on new archival records and scholarship to examine the local Irish revolutionary period. Joost Augusteijn expands his previous PhD research and 1998 study of IRA volunteers in west Mayo, with additional material from north and east of the county.[1] He draws on a rich vein of sources including IRA witness statements, local newspapers and interviews with Volunteers and their families, to present a concise and accessible narrative of local events and personalities in Mayo, over 1912-23.