138:. At this time she delivered funds for medical aid for wounded combatants that had been collected by Manchester trade unionists. She was already known for her public speaking throughout the north of England, so upon her return her addressed a number of public meetings about the Spanish Civil War. She also stood for the
200:, St Stephen's Green, Dublin in 1953, and continued to be active supporters of the Red Cross. De Courcy Ireland ran in the 1955 DĂșn Laoghaire borough election unsuccessfully as a Labour candidate. She took part in the first two marches of the
165:, he was dismissed and the couple moved to Dublin when he took up a position as a history teacher at the St Patrick's Cathedral Grammar School. Both of the De Courcy Irelands identified with the "libertarian socialism" politics of
99:, Hertfordshire, England on 25 May 1911. She was youngest of four daughters of an architect, Philip Haigh, and Victoria Alice Haigh (née Brunker), originally from Dublin. De Courcy Ireland attended
111:, who was attending Oxford, in the early 1930s. He had gone to the cafe to wash himself after canoeing on the canals from Oxford and the Thames to Bath and the Severn. They married in 1932.
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following John's teaching positions. They had one son and two daughters, and eventually settled at a bungalow they called "Caprera", on
Grosvenor Terrace, Sorrento Road,
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The couple moved to
Ireland in 1938, when John was commissioned to write a book about the Northern Irish border (a commission that was cancelled after the outbreak of
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and later a school in
Switzerland. She then went to a catering college, and helped her sister in operating a restaurant in Cornmarket Street,
161:. Due to John's activities with trade union opposition to British and American naval construction on Lough Foyle as a member of the Irish
239:
White, Lawrence
William (2009). "Ireland, Beatrice de Courcy (née Haigh) ('Betty', 'Bet')". In McGuire, James; Quinn, James (eds.).
134:, and in 1936 she volunteered as part of a medical team to go to Barcelona with the republican international brigades in the
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204:(CND) at Aldermaston, Berkshire in 1958 to 1959, and founded the Irish branch of CND, serving as its secretary.
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107:, known as "the Irish cafe" owing to its university and left leaning clientele. Here she met
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from 1934 to 1937. While there they became involved in local organisations, including the
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and the China Relief
Society. De Courcy Ireland had paramedical training from the
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She died on 24 December 1999. The Irish CND erected a plaque to her in
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Following her husband's graduation, the couple moved to
95:Betty de Courcy Ireland was born Beatrice Haigh in
16:Irish campaigner, anti-war activist and socialist
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142:in the 1938 Manchester city council elections.
260:"Radical political and social campaigner"
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202:Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament
173:. The family moved variously to
149:). They initially lived on the
41:Hitchin, Hertfordshire, England
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241:Dictionary of Irish Biography
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209:People's Park, DĂșn Laoghaire
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73:Betty de Courcy Ireland
25:Betty de Courcy Ireland
196:The couple joined the
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163:Local Security Force
159:Muff, County Donegal
157:, and then moved to
101:Cheltenham College
333:Irish Trotskyists
153:to improve their
136:Spanish Civil War
128:St John Ambulance
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294:. Retrieved
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268:. Retrieved
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171:Labour Party
167:James Larkin
151:Aran Islands
147:World War II
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140:Labour Party
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52:(1999-12-24)
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323:1999 deaths
318:1911 births
38:25 May 1911
312:Categories
215:References
116:Manchester
296:6 January
270:6 January
187:Blackrock
132:Red Cross
91:Biography
77:socialist
175:Drogheda
130:and the
97:Hitchin
191:Dalkey
179:Bandon
105:Oxford
155:Irish
298:2020
272:2020
185:and
120:Bury
79:and
47:Died
31:Born
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