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13 July 2012

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Patrick Cannon Commemoration, Dublin – Saturday 14th July

Patrick Cannon from Dublin and Peter McElchar from Donegal

Members of the Garda Special Branch attempted to disrupt the funeral, assaulting several people

Assemble 2:30pm Hilton Hotel, Malahide Road

Parade to Balgriffin Cemetery

Speaker: Peadar Tóibín TD

ON SATURDAY 17th July 1976, two IRA Volunteers on active service – Patrick Cannon from Dublin and Peter McElchar from Donegal – were killed in a premature explosion as they crossed the border from Donegal into Tyrone. They were approaching the town of Castlederg when the device they were transporting detonated. It was about 2:15pm.

Peter McElchar was killed instantly. Patrick Cannon was gravely injured and was taken to Tyrone County Hospital in Omagh. He was being transferred to hospital in Belfast when he died.

Patrick Cannon was born in Dublin on 28th November 1955. He was one of a family of seven: three girls and four boys. The Cannon family home was in the suburb of Edenmore, one of the many housing estates developed on the northside of the city in the 1960s and 1970s.

He served his time as a fitter welder and worked in Carrick-on-Suir in County Tipperary and in Letterkenny, County Donegal, from the beginning of 1976 and was employed there at the time of his death.

Peter McElchar, from Knock, Ballybofey, in County Donegal, was 19 years old. Though only a Volunteer with Óglaigh na hÉireann for a short period prior to his death, he was an active and committed member of his local unit.

The fact that Cannon and McElchar were both from the 26 Counties seemed to anger the British and their unionist allies, who heavily condemned the actions of the young Volunteers.

At Patrick Cannon's funeral in Edenmore, Dublin, his coffin was draped in the Tricolour and was accompanied outside the church by an IRA guard of honour. Shots were fired in a final salute. Members of the Garda Special Branch then attempted to disrupt the funeral, assaulting several people, including a pregnant woman, before order was restored.

Despite the attack and intimidation, hundreds of people accompanied the funeral to the family plot in Balgriffin Cemetery.

At the graveside, the oration was delivered on behalf of the Republican Movement by Seán Keenan of Derry, who had lost his own son, IRA Volunteer Colm Keenan, in 1972. Seán Keenan said of Pat Cannon: “He was a brave and great soldier who died fighting for the freedom of his country.”

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