In late October 1922 Whitty was arrested (he was never charged or convicted of any crime) in a round up of dissidents and was interned by Irish Free State troops initially at Wexford Prison and from there was transferred to the Curragh Camp.[2] It has been asserted that Whitty was arrested in revenge for the actions of his brothers who were deeply involved with the IRA. The authorities were unable to locate Whitty's brothers so Joe was arrested instead.[3]
Independent hunger strike, death and news embargo
While at the Curragh Camp, Whitty decided to independently start a hunger strike and died as a result on 2 August 1923 at the Curragh Camp hospital.[4] At that time hunger strikes were not an official policy of the IRA and were not directed by its General Headquarters. Instead, each hunger striker made an individual decision to strike.[5] Due to the newly formed Irish Free State government's news embargo on conditions in prisons at that time, very little was published on Whitty's motivations and the circumstances of his hunger strike and death (including the number of days of his strike).[6]
Earlier, high-profile hunger strike deaths – Thomas Ashe, President of the Irish Republican Brotherhood in 1917 and Terence MacSwiney, Lord Mayor of Cork in 1920 – brought international attention to the Republicans’ cause.[7] The Irish Government’s news embargo prevented the embarrassment of having to publicly announce the death (by hunger strike) of a 18-year-old internee.[8] "From 1922 hunger strikes were of value only when a Government was likely to be embarrassed sufficiently by the death of a prisoner."[9]
With the ending of the 1923 Irish Hunger Strikes in late November 1923, the news embargo was relaxed. The late November 1923 deaths of Denny Barry from County Cork (20 November 1923) and Andy O'Sullivan from County Cavan (23 November 1923) were widely reported in the media, while Whitty's earlier death (August 1923) remained largely unreported.[10]
Mass hunger strikes
After Whitty's non-sanctioned hunger strike and death, Michael Kilroy, the Officer Commanding (OC) IRA prisoners in Mountjoy Prison announced that 300 men would go on hunger strike (on 13 October 1923). By late 1923, thousands of Irish republican prisoners were on hunger strike in multiple prisons/internment camps across Ireland. The mass hunger strikes of October/November 1923 saw around 8,000 of the 12,000 republican prisoners (opposed to the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty) on hunger strikes in Irish prisons, protesting internment without charge/trial, poor prison conditions and demanding immediate release of all political prisoners.[11] Previously, the Irish Free State government had passed a motion outlawing the release of prisoners on hunger strike.[12]
With the death of Whitty and two other recent Irish republican hunger strikers: Michael Fitzgerald (d.17 October 1920) and Joe Murphy (d.25 October 1920) and the large numbers of Irish republicans prisoners on hunger strike, at the end of October 1923 the Irish Free State Government sent a delegation to speak with IRA leadership. On 23 November 1923 the hunger strike was called off (O'Sullivan had died the previous day) eventually setting off a release program for many of the prisoners, but some were not released until as late as 1932.[13][14] The mass hunger strike of 1923 lasted for 41 days and "met with little success".[15]
Burial and annual commemoration
Michael Joseph Whitty is buried at Ballymore Cemetery Killinick, County Wexford, Ireland. The inscription on his grave reads: "In Memory of Joseph Whitty, Connolly St, Wexford. South Wexford Brigade who died for Ireland 2nd August 1923".[16]
The Sinn Fein Cumann (Association) in Wexford City is named after Joe Whitty. The annual Joe Whitty Commemoration is held each year on Easter Saturday evening in Ballymore, County Wexford.
^Flynn, Barry, (2011), Pawns in the Game, The Collins Press, Cork, pg 82, ISBN978-1-84889-116-6
^Thorne Kathleen, (2014) Echoes of Their Footsteps, The Irish Civil War 1922-1924, Volume II, Generation Organization, Newberg, OR, pg 227, ISBN978-0-692-24513-2
^MacEoin, Uinseann (1997), The IRA in the twilight years 1923-1948, Argenta Publications, Dublin, pg. 81, ISBN0-9511172-4-6
^Collins, Lorcan, (2019), Irelands War of Independence 1919-1921, The O'Brien Press, Dublin, pg 152 ISBN978-1-84717-950-0
^Healy, James. (1982), "The Civil War Hunger-Strike: October 1923." Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review, vol. 71, no. 283, pg. 223. JSTOR30090444. Accessed 6 August 2021.
^Sweeney, George. (1993), "Irish Hunger Strikes and the Cult of Self-Sacrifice." Journal of Contemporary History, vol. 28, no. 3, pg. 421–437. JSTOR260640. Accessed 29 May 2021.