Anonymous ID: 32bf81 April 16, 2023, 5:52 a.m. No.18703851   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3898 >>3900 >>3919 >>3922 >>3926

>>18703729

> Scituate, MA

>Donelan

>LOTS OF FBI TIES

>CIA

>>18703655

 

Welcome to the most Irish town in America

Scituate, Massachusetts, has a higher concentration of Irish than anywhere else in US

 

 

 

Joe Duffy's list of Children Killed By The British in 1916 Rising

 

https://static.rasset.ie/documents/radio1/joe-duffys-list-of-children-killed-in-1916-rising.pdf

 

KILLED IN ACTION BY THE BRITISH WHILST FIGHTING FOR IRELAND DURING EASTER WEEK 1916

 

Material is added to this site on a regular basis - information on this page may change

 

Of the 590 people killed during the Easter Rising, 374 were civilians, 116 British Soldiers, 77 Irish Republicans and 23 members of the police forces. There were 38 children - aged 16 and under - killed. More than 2,600 people were wounded. Many of the civilians were killed or wounded by British artillery fire or were mistaken for rebels.

 

Adams John; Allen Tomas; Byrne Andrew; Byrne James; Byrne Joseph; Burke Frank;

 

Connolly Sean; Corcoran James; Coyle Harry; Costello John; Cromean John; Crinigan John; Clarke Philip; Carrigan Charles; Darcy Charles; Darcy Peter;Donelan Brendan;

Anonymous ID: 32bf81 April 16, 2023, 6:11 a.m. No.18703900   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3919

>>18703851

>> Scituate, MA

>>Donelan

>>LOTS OF FBI TIES

>>CIA

 

https://billbrettboston.com/scituate-is-site-of-monument-to-irelands-easter-rising/

 

https://billbrettboston.com › scituate-is-site-of-monument-to-irelands-easter-rising

Scituate is site of monument to Ireland's 'Easter Rising'

On hand for the dedication were Irish Consul General Laoise Moore; monument committee chair, attorney John Sullivan; singer Máirín Uí Chéide Keady; Scituate Select Board chair Karen B. Canfield; and state Senator Patrick O'Connor. A larger celebration is planned for April, 2021. ALL PHOTOS BY BILL BRETT Photos by Bill Brett

Anonymous ID: 32bf81 April 16, 2023, 6:16 a.m. No.18703919   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3942 >>3948

>>18703851

>>18703900

>>18703729

>Mom is from Mass…this family hasLOTS OF FBI TIES

 

When talking about FBI, Boston area, and "Donelans" (irish) probably ought to be on the lookout forWhitey Bulger Tiesin addition to IRA connections

 

Whitey Bulger

American crime boss

Alternate titles: James Joseph Bulger, Jr.

Written by

,

See All

Fact-checked by

Last Updated: Article History

Whitey Bulger

Whitey Bulger

See all media

 

Born:

September 3, 1929 Dorchester Massachusetts

 

Died:

October 30, 2018 (aged 89) West Virginia

 

Whitey Bulger, byname of James Joseph Bulger, Jr., (born September 3, 1929, Dorchester, Massachusetts, U.S.—died October 30, 2018, U.S. Penitentiary Hazelton, Bruceton Mills, West Virginia), American crime boss who, as head of the Boston-area Winter Hill Gang, was a leading figure in organized crime from the late 1960s to the mid-1990s. For more than a decade, until his capture in June 2011, he was listed by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) as one of its 10 most-wanted fugitives.

 

Bulger was born to working-class Irish immigrants and grew up in a housing project in the neighbourhood of South Boston. In his early years he earned the enduring nickname “Whitey” on account of his whitish blond hair. An unruly youth, Bulger was involved in a street gang as a teenager and was arrested several times, on charges ranging from forgery to assault and battery. However, he always managed to elude any serious consequences for his wrongdoing, which nurtured in him a sense of entitlement and invincibility. In 1948 he enlisted in the U.S. Air Force. Despite a record of disciplinary problems while in the service—which included a rape charge in Great Falls, Montana—his discharge four years later was certified as honourable.

 

Bulger soon resumed his criminal activities, and in 1956 he was convicted for a string of bank robberies committed in three states. Although sentenced to 20 years in federal prison, he was granted parole in 1965 following stints at such notorious penitentiaries as Leavenworth and Alcatraz. Upon his return to Boston, Bulger became an enforcer for mob kingpin Donald Killeen, and in the early 1970s he took on similar duties with the Winter Hill Gang, a predominantly Irish American crime syndicate led by Howie Winter.

 

In 1975 Bulger agreed to work with the FBI as a so-called “Top Echelon Informant.” His FBI handler was another son of South Boston, John J. Connolly, who was about 10 years younger than Bulger and who had grown up idolizing him along with Bulger’s brother, William, who became a powerful Massachusetts politician. The informant relationship quickly turned corrupt, becoming what was later described as a “devil’s deal” and giving rise to the worst informant scandal in FBI history. Instead of the FBI controlling Bulger, the crime boss began to manipulate his handler and other FBI agents. In 1979 Bulger managed to avoid being named in an indictment for fixing horse races at tracks up and down the East Coast, a case that eventually led to the conviction of Winter and several of his associates. The resulting power vacuum allowed Bulger to assume leadership of the Winter Hill Gang. A fellow FBI informant, Stephen Flemmi, became his top lieutenant. Establishing a racket by which he extorted money from bookmakers, loan sharks, drug dealers, and other local criminals, Bulger soon acquired a fearsome reputation both within and beyond the illicit underworld.

Anonymous ID: 32bf81 April 16, 2023, 6:28 a.m. No.18703948   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3955 >>4024 >>4106

>>18703922

>WHAT DOES THIS MEAN ANON???? IT TWIZZLES THE ALMONDS MIGHTLY…

just making some possible connections.

>Donelan

>Irish

>Greater Boston

>FBI

>Clowns

 

Could be a coincidence.

It looks like at the early stages of the Irish Republican Army in 1916

the brits massacred some protestors on Easter.

One of the dead has the same surname as Whitworth's Grandmother, if I'm reading that Obit correctly

>>18703729

 

Relatives of Louise Donelan live in Scituate, the most Irish town in America, which has a monument to the Easter massacre which played a part in the formation of the IRA.

 

>>18703919

Anonymous ID: 32bf81 April 16, 2023, 6:33 a.m. No.18703958   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>18703942

>Congrats to everyone on the board for making through this pyscho warfare over the years with BALLS in tack and still ready to FIGHT FIGHT FIGHT…

o7

Anonymous ID: 32bf81 April 16, 2023, 6:42 a.m. No.18703975   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3976

>>18703955

>is this Sunday Bloody Sunday??/

Looks like a different massacre.

"Bloody Sunday" was in 1972

 

This was apparently called the Easter Rising or Easter Rebellion

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Easter_Rising

 

>>18703955

>which we can assume was always a British intel op…

 

>Wow…never thought the dig would go here….

kek

yep

Anonymous ID: 32bf81 April 16, 2023, 6:58 a.m. No.18704024   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4106

>>18703948

>>18703948

 

>>18703729

wow

full obit is very interdasting.

>published in WAPO

>born in 2016

>Mcauliffe? heard that name before

>husband "FBI Inspector" Donelan

>Catholic Charities

>"She touched everyone she met"

 

 

LOUISE DONELAN OBITUARY

 

DONELAN LOUISE ROSE McAULIFFE DONELAN "Sally" (Age 92) Died Friday, May 15, 2009. Born in South Boston, MA in 1916, the daughter of William F. McAuliffe and Sara McLeod McAuliffe. She moved to Foxboro, MA as a young child. Sally was the only girl among eight siblings. She excelled in school and graduated with a B.S. in Chemistry from Emmanuel College in Boston and earned a masters degree in social work from Boston College, where she was the first female graduate. Shemoved to Washington, DC, following graduation, where she worked forCatholic Charities.She met her beloved husband, FBI InspectorCharles Adrian Donelan, in DC. They married in 1941. He predeceased her in 1991. She put her career on hold to raise a family. She resumed her career at age 50 and worked in the adoption field until retirement in 1985. She and her husband then moved to Wilmington, DE to be near their two daughters and grandchildren. Blessed with longevity and a keen mind, she led a rich and rewarding life as mother and grandmother, playing a vital role in her grandchildrens lives. She enjoyed an active social life even in later years, interacting with and delighting a younger generation of friends. She touched everyone she met in a memorable and lasting way. She is survived by her four children, Martha Conaty of Wilmington, DE, Sara Whitworth of Scituate, MA, Matthias Donelan of Chestnut Hill, MA and Charles Donelan of West Virginia. In addition, she leaves behind nine grandchildren, Thomas, Matthias and Brian Conaty, Elizabeth Kelty Whitworth White, Brendan Whitworth, Matthias, Katie, Darcy and Charlie Donelan, and six great-grandchildren, Thomas, Louise and Cate Conaty, Connor, Alden and Quinn White. Friends may call at CHANDLER FUNERAL HOME, 2506 Concord Pk., Wilmington, DE, from 7 to 9 p.m. on Tuesday, May 19. Mass of Christian Burial will be held at St. Joseph on the Brandywine on Wednesday, May 20 at 10 a.m. Burial private. www.chandlerfuneralhome. 302.478.7100

Published by The Washington Post on May 18, 2009.

Anonymous ID: 32bf81 April 16, 2023, 7:26 a.m. No.18704106   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4131

>>18704024

>full obit is very interdasting.

>>18703729

>>18703948

<McClean, VA

 

Louise Donelan; social worker was 'ultimate extrovert'; 92

LOUISE DONELAN LOUISE DONELAN

By Michele Richinick

Globe Correspondent / May 20, 2009

 

Louise Rose McAuliffe Donelan, a South Boston native and longtime social worker, died Friday of congestive heart failure at Wilmington Hospital in Wilmington, Del. She was 92.

 

Mrs. Donelan was born in South Boston and grew up in Foxborough. She grew up with seven brothers, who called her Sally.

 

Mrs. Donelan graduated from Foxborough High School in 1933 and from Emmanuel College in Boston with a bachelor's degree in chemistry in 1937. In 1939, she graduated from Boston College with a master's degree in social work and was a member of the first class that included women, relatives said.

 

"She studied chemistry because she wanted to go to medical school, but then decided to do social work, which was perfect," said one of her daughters, Martha Conaty of Wilmington. "She was the ultimate social worker. She was the type of person who people went to with all their problems."

 

Upon graduation, Mrs. Donelan moved to Washington, D.C., where she worked forCatholic Charities USA,which works to reduce poverty.

 

"She was very independent," Conaty said.

 

While she was living in Washington, Mrs. Donelan met her husband, Charles, at a Boston College communion breakfast at Georgetown University. They married in 1941.Charles worked as an FBI inspector, which led the couple to live in various locations on the East Coast. Shortly after they married, the couple moved to New York, where Mrs. Donelan worked for theAmerican Red Cross.

 

In 1943, Mrs. Donelan ceased working and concentrated on raising her four children.

 

During the following 20 years, the family lived in Silver Spring and Hyattsville, Md., eventually settling in McLean, Va.,in the early 1970s.

 

"She was the kind of person who could have done anything she wanted, but she really devoted herself to her family," her daughter said. "She would always be there for you, no matter if she knew you and loved you or met you in the grocery store. She was always available, always positive. She never told you what to do; she just listened to what you had to say and just talked it out with you."

 

At age 50, Mrs. Donelan resumed her career and worked in the adoption field. She worked at Pierce Warwick in Washington, D.C., for several years before working for the Barker Foundation Adoption Agency, also in the capital, until her retirement in 1985.

 

"She found so many homes for babies," Conaty said. "It gave her such pleasure and satisfaction to know that these children were sent to a lovely home."

 

Relatives said people who Mrs. Donelan helped while she worked in the adoption agencies were still in contact with her until her death. They invited her to the adopted children's weddings, sent her cards, and often called her.

 

"People wanted to be in her life, and she wanted everyone in her life," her daughter said.

 

In 1987, Mrs. Donelan and her husband moved to Wilmington to be closer to their two daughters and grandchildren. Relatives said Mrs. Donelan played a vital role in her grandchildren's lives.

 

Even in her later years, Mrs. Donelan enjoyed an active social life, interacting with and delighting a younger generation of friends. She loved to entertain guests at her house and always wanted to host holiday celebrations.

 

"She was a beautiful person, outward and inward, just a shining star," her daughter said.

 

Mrs. Donelan enjoyed reading all kinds of books, and she was a member of a book club. Her daughter said Mrs. Donelan was often the only member to actually read the assigned books.

 

Relatives said Mrs. Donelan touched everyone she met in a memorable and lasting way.

 

"She never, never stopped being interested in living," Conaty said. "She was the ultimate extrovert. It kept her so vital. She would always tune in on whoever she was talking to, whether it was a baby or a 98-year-old fellow."

 

Mrs. Donelan's husband died in 1991. In addition to her daughter Martha, Mrs. Donelan leaves another daughter, Sara Whitworth of Scituate; two sons, Matthias of Chestnut Hill and Charles of Martinsburg, W.Va.; a brother, Paul of Fairhaven; nine grandchildren; and six great-grandchildren.

 

A funeral Mass will be said at St. Joseph on the Brandywine Roman Catholic Church in Wilmington today at 10 a.m. Burial will be private.

 

http://archive.boston.com/bostonglobe/obituaries/articles/2009/05/20/louise_donelan_social_worker_was_ultimate_extrovert_92/