Tomás Ó Flatharta

Looking at Things from the Left

Posts Tagged ‘Gay Liberation

Irish Times Tribute to Nell McCafferty, March 28 1944 – August 21 2024 – Hold the Front Page – Nell has a story

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An excellent tribute : Web Link :
Nell McCafferty Obituary – Journalist and Feminist Campaigner

Update, Dublin Gathering, Friday August 23, The Teachers’ Club, 36 Parnell Square West, at  12.30. Nell McCafferty’s funeral will be livestreamed.

RIP.IE Notice :

https://rip.ie/death-notice/nell-mccafferty-derry-derry-city-566175

  • Born: March 28th, 1944
  • Died: August 21st, 2024
  • Nell got to the front page in the end :

Nell”, she called her autobiography, and that was how she was known.

Hold the Front Page – Nell has a story – Irish Times August 22 2024

Small, fierce and feisty. That mop of curls, the waft of cigarette smoke, the tongue in cheek smile and her distinctive walk, like a sailor ashore. Everyone soon knew her smoky Derry voice, laconic, challenging, always ready to break into laughter. You never knew what Nell was going to say next. It was often outrageous. She was a character, and she loved to play herself to the hilt. She was also one of the most important Irish journalists of the latter half of the twentieth century. She listened. She paid attention. She told the truth.

She was, wrote her friend, the historian Margaret Mac Curtain, “unequalled in the extraordinary breadth and fearless candour she has brought to bear on controversial subjects.” Her journalistic career started in The Irish Times in 1970, when the paper’s late Northern editor and editor, Fergus Pyle, commissioned her to write about the new bathroom in her family home in Beechwood Street in Derry’s Bogside.

Home was her touchstone. She vaunted her street-cred. She was part of a Bogside aristocracy that included Martin McGuinness, Eamonn McCann, Seamus Deane, Paddy Doherty, John Hume, Dana and Phil Coulter. Her mother was her biggest fan and harshest critic.

McCafferty was born in 1944. Her father, Hugh, was a clerk for the British admiralty by day and a bookie’s clerk at the dog track at night. Her mother, Lily, reared six children. Another daughter died at birth.

Her parents had to work hard to keep poverty at bay. She was fascinated and frightened by the poverty of the tenements where her father was raised. One of his brothers had died as a British soldier at the Somme. Her mother’s parents were Sergeant Duffy, a Catholic RUC man, and his wife Sarah, a Protestant who “turned”.

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