Gifford sisters

Gifford Household 1911 Census Form

The Gifford sisters were prominent republicans during the Irish revolutionary period who were daughters of Frederick and Isabella Gifford, middle-class Dublin unionists. Two were married to signatories of the 1916 Proclamation.

Family background

Frederick Gifford (1835/6–1917), a Catholic solicitor, married Isabella Julia Burton (1847/8–1932), daughter of a rector in the Church of Ireland, on 27 April 1872 in St. George's Church of Ireland church in Dublin. Isabella's father, Robert Nathaniel Burton, died in her infancy, after which she and her siblings were raised by their uncle, the painter Frederic William Burton. From the 1880s the Giffords lived on Palmerston Road in Rathmines. After a first child who died in infancy, there were six daughters and six sons. The sons (Claude Frederick, Liebert, Gerald Vere, Gabriel Paul, Frederick Ernest, and Edward Cecil) remained unionist and pursued unspectacular careers outside Ireland. The girls were educated at Alexandra College. The children were raised as Protestants, though in adulthood four sisters converted to Catholicism (Katie, Muriel, Grace, and Sidney, all but Sidney having married Catholics).

Sisters

NameBornDiedMarriedNotes
Katherine Anna (Katie)28 February 187520 September 1957Walter Harris Wilson (1909)Lived in Wales until her husband's death in 1918. Civil servant in the Irish Republic and Irish Free State, later worked for the Irish White Cross, and as a French teacher.
Helen Ruth (Nellie)9 November 188023 June 1971Joseph Donnelly (1918)Socialist active in the Dublin lockout and the Irish Citizen Army.
Ada Gertrude14 February 1882c.1953Artist, emigrated to the United States. May have married a man named Constant.
Muriel Enid18 December 18849 July 1917Thomas MacDonagh (3 January 1912)Trained as a nurse. Mother of Donagh MacDonagh. Drowned while swimming at Skerries, County Dublin.
Grace Evelyn4 March 188813 December 1955Joseph Mary Plunkett (4 May 1916)Artist and cartoonist. Married Plunkett hours before his execution after the Easter Rising.
Sidney (or Sydney) Sarah Madge3 August 188915 September 1974Arpad Czira (later 1910s)Journalist under the pseudonym John Brennan. Later a broadcaster with Radio Éireann.

References

  • Clare, Anne (2011). Unlikely Rebels: The Gifford Girls and the Fight for Irish Freedom. Mercier Press Ltd. ISBN 9781856357128.
  • White, Lawrence William; Long, Patrick (February 2011). "Donnelly, Helen Ruth ('Nellie') Gifford". Dictionary of Irish Biography. Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 3 May 2017. (Subscription required (help)).
  • Clarke, Frances (December 2010). "Czira (Gifford), Sydney Madge ('John Brennan')". Dictionary of Irish Biography. Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 3 May 2017. (Subscription required (help)).
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