He was born in Drumany, Aughnasheelin,[1]County Leitrim, the son of Joseph McGirl, a farmer, and Bridget McGirl (née Gallagher).[2] McGirl became involved with the Irish Republican Army (IRA) in the 1930s.[3] McGirl was trained for the 1939–1940 sabotage/bombing attack on British soil - the S-Plan. He was arrested along with Cathal Goulding and ten others in April 1946. McGirl was sentenced to 12 months in prison for IRA membership spending his prison time in the Curragh Camp.[4] McGirl was interned again in the 1950s.[5]
McGirl participated in the IRA Border campaign.[6] In January 1957, he was tried and convicted at Ballinamore courthouse and imprisoned in Mountjoy Prison.
In November 1957, he delivered the oration at the funerals of some of the "Edentubber martyrs", four IRA members who were killed when a bomb they were preparing accidentally exploded. In 1962, he served on the committee that founded St. Felim's College, Ballinamore.
Provisionals
When the IRA split in 1969, between Official IRA and Provisional IRA factions, McGirl sided with the Provisionals, who were committed to launching an armed campaign against British rule in Northern Ireland. He was interned in Long Kesh in 1974 and was present when it was burned by internees (October 15, 1974).[9]
McGirl contested the February 1982 and 1987 general elections for Sligo–Leitrim. In the former contest, he received 2,772 votes (6.1%) and in the latter, 2,627 votes (5.7%).
McGirl served as vice president of Sinn Féin. Originally he was opposed to the dropping of the Éire Nua policy and was considered an ally of Ruairí Ó Brádaigh (who later founded Republican Sinn Féin). However, at the 1986 Sinn FéinArdfheis, McGirl supported the moves of Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness to drop the policy of abstentionism, greatly angering his contemporaries Ó Brádaigh and Dáithí Ó Conaill.
McGirl was a publican, undertaker and bicycle-repairer in Ballinamore.[10] He was elected a Sinn Féin councillor to Leitrim County Council in 1960, serving as chairperson of that body. He was still a member of the council at the time of his death. After his death, a monument was erected to McGirl in his native town of Ballinamore. It is located on the bridge crossing the Shannon–Erne Waterway. Each August there is a commemoration and march through Ballinamore to the John Joe McGirl monument.[11]
A nephew, Francis McGirl, was charged but acquitted of the murder of Lord Mountbatten, who was killed by the IRA when his boat was bombed off the Sligo coast in 1979.[6] John Joe's son, Liam McGirl, was co-opted on to Leitrim County Council in 1988 after his father's death.