John Joe Sheehy
John Joseph Sheehy was an Irish political/military activist and sportsperson. He participated in the Irish War of Independence and Irish Civil War in the Irish Republican Army, where he was a senior figure in County Kerry. He also gained fame as a successful Gaelic footballer representing the Kerry county team.
IRA activities
In 1914 Sheehy joined the republican boy scouts the Fianna Éireann and later the Irish Volunteers. Sheehy commanded the Boherbee company of the IRA, and later of the Tralee. His brother Jimmy was killed in the British Army in the Battle of the Somme in 1916.He sided against the Anglo-Irish Treaty in 1922, like most of the IRA in Kerry. In the Civil War, when Free State troops landed in Kerry as part of a seaborne offensive, he was in command of the Anti-Treaty garrison in Tralee. After the Army took the town, Sheehy retreated, burning the barracks there. As the conflict became a guerrilla affair, he found himself in charge of three 'columns', or around 75 men in total, in the Ballymacthomas area. He and Tom McEllistrim were in charge of an attack on Castlemaine in January 1923.
Just after the Civil War, when Sheehy was still on the run, he managed to play football for Kerry. Kerry captain Con Brosnan, though a member of the Free State army, would guarantee his safe passage. Sheehy would pay into Munster and All Ireland finals, slip off his street clothes, play, and then at the final whistle, disappear back into the crowd. In 1936 Sheehy was in New York and was able to smuggle a large number of Thompson sub machine guns back to Ireland.
Prison
In February 1941 Sheehy was arrested and interned in the Curragh Internment Camp for two years.Sheehy was arrested again and charged with making "seditious speeches" on the day that IRA hunger striker Seán McCaughey died. Sheehy was found guilty and sentenced to four months imprisonment.