Joe Murphy died in Cork Gaol after 76 days on hunger strike in 1920
“Many of us in the Ballyphehane area are constantly reminded of him as his name is forever etched on the streetscape of the city, but his death on hunger strike only hours after that of Lord Mayor Terence MacSwiney was largely overshadowed by the death of Cork’s First Citizen,” he said.
“That he is finally being rewarded with an official service medal of honour is just and right and credit to his family for pursuing it for almost a century. It means his memory and place in history will live on even more.”said her granduncle, who lived on Pouladuff Road on Cork’s Southside, joined the Irish Volunteers as a young man in 1917 and was involved in several IRA actions but was arrested by the British in July 1920 and imprisoned.
She said the family had campaigned as far back as 1923 for a posthumous Service Medal without success. She paid tribute to Minister for Defence Paul Kehoe for awarding the medal and to Lord Mayor Cllr Mick Finn. “I am so proud, delighted that after all these years that Joe Murphy, a local hero, is now being recognised on a national scale. He was an ordinary man who made an extraordinary sacrifice that we continue to honour and celebrate.”
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