Top Issue 1-2024

24 May 2018

Resize: A A A Print

Commemoration to be held on 24th anniversary of Volunteer Martin ‘Doco’ Doherty

"As Doco was taken from the scene in an ambulance, people feared the worst for a man whose heroism had saved their lives."

This Saturday 26th May, Dublin Sinn Féin will host a commemoration on the 24th Anniversary of Volunteer Martin ‘Doco’ Doherty. 

Those who wish to attend have been asked to assemble at the McKee Memorial in Finglas Village, before marching to Glasnevin Cemetery. The main speaker at the event will be Sinn Féin’s Martina Anderson MEP. 

Taken from: Volunteer Martin ‘Doco’ Doherty – That’s the sort of me

IT WAS JAMMED UPSTAIRS. Too many people had turned up to support the Sinn Féin POW Department function. It was just after 10pm and it was estimated that over 300 people had packed into the upstairs lounge of the Widow Scallan’s pub in Dublin’s Pearse Street. The main attraction, The Irish Brigade, were in full swing when Martin ‘Doco’ Doherty, who’d been collecting the admittance fee at the upstairs door, and the others doing security that fateful night agreed that the room was too packed. It was decided to close over the front doors.

Investigations by republicans involving dozens of eyewitnesses have allowed us to piece together what happened next.

At around 10:45pm, two people who wished to attend the function came into the bar and Doco engaged them in his usual banter about being late. They commented on the fact afterwards that they noticed an unmarked Garda car across the road as they entered and that they’d noticed two men acting suspiciously outside the pub.

Doco and Mick Murray

• Mick Murray and Doco

The two went up into the function and Doco (with the front door closed and feeling that he’d finished his duty for the night) slipped down the back stairs to the public bar, where he was joined by two friends. The boxing match between Chris Eubank and Ray Close was blaring out from the TV screens around the pub and the three were soon engrossed, like everyone else, in the fight.

Minutes before the commercials on the TV, two men entered the bar and ordered a drink each but left again quite suddenly, one reaching for a bag he’d left down at the door.

What exactly happened we will never know but eyewitnesses state that they saw Doco come out of the pub and launch himself straight at the man who was at this stage standing with a gun in full view, signalling to the getaway car to come down, while his companion was bent over the bag at the stairwell. Doco succeeded in grappling with the gunman and knocked him onto a car. He was shot in the hand at this stage but continued to struggle, only for the other man to come from behind and knock him to the ground. At this stage the gunman stood over him and shot him dead. The man who had placed what turned out to be an explosive device in the stairwell was running towards the car, which then picked up the killer. They drove off, in no great rush it seemed, even stopping at the first set of lights, confident that they were not pursued by republicans or the state police force. The killers’ gold-coloured Triumph Acclaim was later found abandoned and burned out in Aldborough Place, on the northside of the city.

Doco plaque

After hearing several bangs, the bar manager rushed out onto Pearse Street and found Martin Doherty lying on the ground outside the main door leading to the function room. He ran back inside to call an ambulance while the men who had been in Martin’s company rushed upstairs to the function room for fear that the killers had gained entry. It was then discovered that another man, Paddy Burke, lay injured on the front stairway, apparently hit by a bullet which had passed through the front doors.

All the entrances to the function room were sealed and barricaded as fear gripped many of those inside. Word filtered through the crowd that people had been shot and a member of the band called for anyone with medical experience to come forward.

People from the public bar and a few from the function went out onto the street to tend to Doco, who was lying face down. Others tended to Paddy Burke, lying wounded on the stairs. It was at this stage that a holdall bag, which contained a bomb, was discovered at the front door. Thinking the bag belonged to Doco, somebody went to move it but the detonator went off. People scattered in various directions across Pearse Street, some fearing that the killers were still in the vicinity and had opened fire again. They crouched behind parked cars until they were sure it was safe.

It was then that it became clear to people just what Martin Doherty had prevented. Had the killers succeeded in their task, their intent was to inflict death and injury on a massive scale. The bomb they were priming when they were disturbed would have ripped through the building, killing and maiming a large number of people in the packed pub.

Anger erupted as members of the Garda Special Branch came on the scene, with people pointing out that the function had been under observation all evening and yet gardaí were nowhere to be found when the killers struck. Passions were to be inflamed even more when several Special Branch men were seen joking, laughing and making snide remarks at the scene of the killing.

Stewards did their best to clear over 250 people from the function room and away from the building, successfully preventing any incidents developing between the Special Branch and patrons of the Widow Scallan’s.

As Doco was taken from the scene in an ambulance, people feared the worst for a man whose heroism had saved their lives. As friends and family rushed to the hospital, the worst was confirmed –– a friend was dead.

Bodenstown 1989

• Volunteer Martin ‘Doco’ Doherty leading the Colour Party at the 1989 Wolfe Tone commemoration in Bodenstown

Doco Bodenstown 1989

Doco Bodenstown 1989 grave

In a statement issued on Monday 23 May, the IRA’s Dublin Brigade said:

“Martin Doherty, the man killed in the UVF attack on Dublin’s Pearse Street, was a Volunteer of Dublin Brigade, Óglaigh na hÉireann. He died heroically in the defence of others at Widow Scallan’s on Saturday 21 May. His courage and quick thinking during the attack undoubtedly saved many lives.

“Martin Doherty prevented the loyalist attackers from gaining access to the function room, thereby averting widespread deaths and destruction.

“Óglaigh na hÉireann extends deepest sympathy to the family, partner and friends of Martin Doherty.”

Doco firing party

• Volunteers of Dublin Brigade, Óglaigh na hÉireann pay a final tribute to their comrade 

Doco picket

• A vigil by Sinn Féin outside the Widow Scallan’s pub in Dublin’s Pearse Street

Tribute to Martin

The May moon stood high in the night,

As the people gathered with delight,

To proudly aid those held in the jails.

Two men stood protecting them,

Not knowing what the night would bring,

For a soldier never knows what lies ahead.

So here’s to you our brave young friend,

A martyr till the very end.

Doco funeral 1

Maybe we’ll meet again some day, somehow.

For you stood your ground in the fight,

An unarmed man on the night.

You saved three hundred and they live to tell.

So here’s a toast from one and all,

For your courage, as you stood tall,

From your friends and comrades,

And some you never knew.

Doco funeral 2

For you stood your ground in the fight,

An unarmed man on the night.

You saved three hundred and they live to tell.

And they love you so well,

Cause they live to tell.

Volunteer Martin ‘Doco’ Doherty

• Volunteer Martin ‘Doco’ Doherty

Follow us on Facebook

An Phoblacht on Twitter

An Phoblacht Podcast

An Phoblacht podcast advert2

Uncomfortable Conversations 

uncomfortable Conversations book2

An initiative for dialogue 

for reconciliation 

— — — — — — —

Contributions from key figures in the churches, academia and wider civic society as well as senior republican figures

GUE-NGL Latest Edition ad

An Phoblacht
44 Parnell Sq.
Dublin 1
Ireland