1
Received this note
from Kit in
Kilmainham Jail
Sunday Mat 21—1916
the day after I
was sentanced by
the British Government
to be shot; Kept it
by me on my person
during stay in
Dartmoor, Lewes,
Portland & Penton
—ville Prisons (1916-17) Diarmuid Lynch L.306
2
UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITIAN
AND IRELAND.
Ten shilling Currency Notes are Legal Tender
for the payment of any amount.
TEN SHILLINGS
Issued by the Lords Commissioners of His Majesty's Treasury
under the Authority Act of Parliament (4&5 Geo.V.ch.14)
10/— E38 No. 91894
A note from Diarmuid Lynch (1876-1950) written during from Richmond Barracks. The
Kit mentioned in the note is Kathleen Quinn, Lynch's fiancee who visited him on the
day of his court martial. Lynch's note was written on the back of a ten shilling note.
Diarmuid Lynch was born in January 1878 to a substantial tenant farmer in Tracton
parish, in South County Cork. At the age of 18 he emigrated for work, initially to
London and thereafter to New York. In the USA he pursued his interests in Gaelic culture
and the Irish language, coming under the influence of John Devoy, Diarmuid O' Donovan
Rossa and other ardent Fenian disciples.Of great natural ability he was elected President
of the New York Gaelic League and president of the Philo- Celtic Society. Diarmuid
returned to live in Ireland in 1907, both were convinced that Ireland's freedom from
British Rule must be worked for on home ground.From 1911 Lynch was a member of the
Supreme Council of the IRB and one of that organisation's main recruiting officers.
He was present at crucial meetings in Hardwicke Street on Holy Saturday night and
at Liberty Hall on Easter Sunday morning when the Military Committee decided to go
ahead with the planned Rising on the following morning. Lynch was present in the GPO
for all of that week, being aide de camp to James Connolly. Following his court martial
on May 18th he was condemned to be shot but his American citizenship was one factor
in his sentence being commuted to 10 years hard labour.