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PRIVATE
DANIEL FAY, 1887 - 1942
PRIVATE JAMES JOSEPH MOORE, 1892 - 1915
PRIVATE BARTHOLOMEW MOORE, 1894 - 1957
2nd BATTALION, ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS |
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BACKGROUND
The
story of 'the three Dubs' was recorded by Bill Fay, son of Daniel
and nephew of the Moore brothers. The three men came from the same
North inner-city area of Dublin, near Dorset Street.
DANIEL
FAY
Daniel's first
job was as a porter in a grocery shop in Dorset Street, his second
was porter/messenger in a butcher's shop for a shilling a week.
He had been working at the Customs House Docks when he enlisted
in the 2nd Battalion of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers in 1908.
Married two years before the outbreak of the war, Daniel was fighting
beside his young brother-in-law when James was killed in action
near Ypres. Daniel was injured less than four months before the
end of the war and received an Honourable Discharge. His Discharge
Cerficate declared he was suffering from Melancholia, though he
didn't receive his small pension until 1923.
He was fortunate
enough to be re-employed on the Docks and was able to support his
family of seven children, several of whom continued the family military
tradition.
The
Celtic Cross shown here is known as the 'Ginchy Cross' named after
the village in France which the Irish Division took back from the
Germans in September 1916.
It
was made by the pioneers of the 16th (Irish) Division who were the
11th Hampshire Regiment,and erected from a ruined farmhouse in Ginchy.
Today the same cross is held in a room at the War Memorial Gardens,
Islandbridge. A similar cross stands in the village of Guillemont.
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Photograph
of Private Daniel Fay (standing on left) taken in 1917.
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This
is a photograph of the memorial of the Irish
Division in front of Trinity College Dublin.
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BARTHOLOMEW
MOORE
Known as Bartle, this Dub had one of the saddest fates of all. He
enlisted in the 2nd Battalion of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers towards
the end of 1912. Almost a year after the war, in October 1919, Bartle
was given an Honourable Discharge on medical grounds. He was first
sent to Belfast War Hospital and later transferred to a Dublin hospital.
He spent the remaining thirty-eight years of his life in psychiatric
care. Bartle is buried in Blackhorse Avenue Military Cemetery, Dublin.
In accordance with convention, his headstone is cut away at the
top corners to indicate that he did not die in action.
JAMES
MOORE
It was the lock-out of 1913 that forced James Moore to enlist in
the 2nd Battalion of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers when he had just
turned 21. James was killed near Ypres on March 2nd, 1915, when
fighting alongside his brother-in-law, Daniel Fay. It was eighty-three
years before any member of his family managed to visit James' grave
at Prowse Point Military Cemetery, where his neices laid a wreath
in November 1998. Another Royal Dublin Fusilier and native Dubliner,
Private Christopher Rogers, is buried beside James. Christopher's
granddaughter and grandson also laid a wreath at his grave for the
first time in November 1998.
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SOME OF DANIEL FAY'S BELONGINGS -
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Daniel's
Army Certificate of Discharge. He had served 4 years, 21 days with
the Colours and 6 years, 102 days with the Special Reserve. He had
joined up in April 1908.
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Daniel's Treatment Card, which advised the avoidence of alcohol
and open air employment as a treatement for his condition, 'Melancholia'.
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Daniel's
character reference refers to him as, 'A very good man; served his
Country well and was wounded in its defence.'
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Letter
to Mr. D. Fay, ex 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers, from the Dublin
Port and Docks Board offering to re-employ him. Dated the 16th of
January 1919.
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