Skip to main content

Big Marshall

18 Bealtaine 2009.

Big Marshall




This blog believes that every day brings its own challenges and possibilities and opportunities. That’s what makes life so interesting. The trick is to live every day as if it was your last day. And to live every day as a beginning. In other words to begin again. Every day.

I didn’t intend to write all that. It just flowed into the computer. I suppose its big Marshall’s fault. Marshall has just died. He is a friend of mine. We were internees in Long Kesh together. He died of cancer in the early hours of Sunday morning. The problem is that a lot of my friends are dying. Big Duice fell to cancer a month ago. Cormac before that. And Siobhán. And Cleaky. Seando is battling away like a good un. And Moke. And Jeff.

Most of these comrades have two things in common. They are all relatively young. Mid fifties to sixty-ish. Except for Siobhán, all of them are former Long Kesh prisoners. Siobhan was in Armagh Women’s Prison.

Marshall is about the same age as me. Maybe, a year older. He is one of the good guys. In Long Kesh a bunch of us tried to escape a couple of times. A lot of the time we had to abandon our plans. Sometimes in the most hilarious circumstances.

Marshall and me were the world's most unsuccessful escapees. We tried digging tunnels. Cutting the wire. Disguising ourselves. Of course we weren’t on our own. We were part of that very honourable penal tradition that gave the world Papillion and Larry Marley and other great escape merchants.

Marshall and I were caught together once. In the early hours of Christmas Day. Four of us cut our way out of Cage Six and were slowly slicing our merry way through a forest of razor wire towards freedom when the alarm went up. We got extra time for our trouble.

Todler, who is also dead, always said that it was Marshall who gave us away. Marshall had a little bald spot at the back of his head. He was very conscious of this. Todler said that the search lights on the prison wall reflected off Marshall’s bald spot and alerted the prison regime that something was afoot. Marshall denies this of course.

Me?

I think Todler was right.

The fact is that Marshall was spotted first. He, and we, were hugging the ground in single file, crawling away from Cage Six. When Marshall was spotted he jumped up from where he was, in an effort to distract attention from the rest of us.

‘Ho, ho, ho’ he bellowed at the surprised prison warders. ‘Ho, ho, ho. Happy Christmas’.

He then started to walk away from where we were lying, undetected. Of course he didn’t get very far. Sirens screamed. Search lights arced and punctured the Christmas darkness. Flairs lit up the Long Kesh sky line.

British soldiers and prison officers sped up and down watchtowers and walkways, shouting and swearing as Marshall continued with his Daddy Christmas routine.

‘Good King Wenceslas last looked out on the feast of Stephen ….’ he crooned.

The screws were not amused. Especially when, eventually, the rest of us joined Marshall. They didn’t take kindly to our Christmas carolling. You couldn’t blame them. Anyway the long and the short of it was we spent the festive season in the punishment block. Ach is é sin scéal eile. That’s another story.

Marshall was also there when Long Kesh was burned down. Big boys made us do it. To be fair it wasn’t just me and Marshall. All the political prisoners played their part, internees and sentenced prisoners, alike.



During that episode the British army pumped CR gas into the prison camp. Many of us were familiar with CS gas but CR gas is even worse. I felt as if I was drowning when it was fired at me and Todler. It was like my lungs were filling up with water.

Jim McCann, one of the prisoners at that time, has been campaigning on that issue. According to his research 12 per cent to 15 per cent of the prisoners affected in the camp have since contracted various forms of cancer, including leukaemia and other lung diseases.

Big Marshall was in the thick of all that. Maybe there is no connection between his death from cancer and the deaths of our other friends and I certainly don’t want to be upsetting any of their families. Especially Marshall’s clann, at this sad time. But I do know that Marshall was concerned about the CR gas and his illness. He said so recently.

This blog will return to the CR gas issue later this week. For now it is time to grieve for Marshall and to celebrate his life. He was a man who cared deeply about Ireland. About his community. About his family. To them all goes our sympathy and condolences. To his wife Ann,their children Conor and Laura. To the Kearney family, a sound republican clann who suffered greviously during the conflict and to Linda, Ann, Marshall and Ciara and their mother, Maureen and to the wider family circle.

Tá Marshall ar slí na fírinne anois. Go ndéanaidh Dia trócaire air.

Comments

Kate said…
R.I.P. Marshall
Condolences to friends and family.

Ta ar la anois

Kate
Ceartais said…
Sorry to hear about Marshall's untimely death and our sympathies to his Clann.

Our group Ceartais grew out of Jim McCann's investigations into the illegal use of CR Gas against defenceless POWs' in Long Kesh.

We can be contacted at our blog for further information comrades.
Condolences to Marshall's family, friends and comrades.

This whole issue of CR gas needs to be highlighted and after reading yours and the Ceartais blogs. The British government has a case to answer.

Fair play to you Gerry and Ceartais.
Linda Coleman said…
Gerry, I'm so sorry to hear about Marshall's death.

I've been following your stories about cancer deaths in the North for a few years, and it just doesn't seem statistically "normal" for so many of you to be dying of cancer at such a relatively young age.

Do keep pursing the connection between CR gas and cancer deaths, and let us know what we in the States can do to help you research and publicize this.
E.Feighan said…
Sorry to hear of the passing of another of your friends and comrades,it sure does seem like so many of them have died in the last couple of years. The gassing must have been terrible. Just the thought of that vapor filling your lungs,can"t be good. Rest in Peace Marshall
Micheal said…
Sorry for your loss Mr. Adams. Being gassed certainly wouldn't aid physical health in life. It is yet another tragic consequence of the dispossession, oppression and brutalisation of the irish people by british imperialists. It sadened me to hear of this so I appreciate Sinn feins resilience and your leadership all the more. May God protect us in our struggle, and lift us up in the resurrection of the body.
Anonymous said…
Sorry to hear about Marshall. He was a really nice guy.
Condolences to all family and friends.
Anonymous said…
a wonderful and warm post..cant put my finger on it ...something quite unique about your style maybe unlike many blogs in this world you mean it ...sorry re your friend i hope he is at peace at last
Judewhyte@ireland.com
EFeighan said…
Hi Gerry You mentioned Larry Marley, every time I think of what the R.U.C. bastards did to disrupt his funeral I want to go postal. Every few years I get out some video reminders of the past just to renew my hatred for the brits. E.F
Linda Coleman said…
Thought I'd share something I got in the morning's email:

5 Cancer-Fighting Garden Herbs
http://www.care2.com/greenliving/5-cancer-fighting-garden-herbs.html

The herbs they recommend can be used as part of a healthy diet to prevent cancer, and can also support chemotherapy drugs for those who already have cancer.
Helen said…
Surely the public health section of the Dept of Health, Social Services and Public Safety NI can be tasked to investigate the health of the internees subject to the CR gas. It strikes me it would make a classic epidemiological study – a discrete population that probably isn’t too difficult to follow. The dhsspsni is a devolved department so can’t Sinn Fein along with the SDLP push for the investigation to take place?
Gerry said…
I learnt a lot from Big Mick
he was a friend and a brother-in-law whom i will miss
Garly Rita and family
RIP Mick.
Timothy Dougherty said…
Ní thig éag gan adhbhar.my condolences Gerry,I know what it is to feel like everyone is gone in you past. I just read that "Angela's Ashes" author Frank McCourt is facing a life-or-death battle with cancer, and then that Sen. Ted Kennedy's cancer is in full remission .Nil tuile ná trághann.
Stay in good health Gerry.

Popular posts from this blog

Turf Lodge – A Proud Community

This blog attended a very special celebration earlier this week. It was Turf Lodge: 2010 Anois is Arís 50th Anniversary. For those of you who don’t know Turf Lodge is a proud Belfast working class community. Through many difficult years the people of Turf Lodge demonstrated time and time again a commitment to their families and to each other. Like Ballymurphy and Andersonstown, Turf Lodge was one of many estates that were built on the then outskirts of Belfast in the years after the end of World War 2. They were part of a programme of work by Belfast City Corporation known as the ‘Slum clearance and houses redevelopment programme.’ The land on which Turf Lodge was built was eventually bought by the Corporation in June 1956. The name of the estate, it is said, came from a farm on which the estate was built. But it was four years later, in October 1960, and after many disputes and delays between builders and the Corporation, that the first completed houses were handed over for allocation...

Slán Peter John

Sinn Féin MP Conor Murphy, Fergal Caraher’s parents, Mary and Peter John, and Sinn Féin Councillors Brendan Curran and Colman Burns at the memorial in South Armagh dedicated to Fergal Caraher It was a fine autumn morning. The South Armagh hilltops, free of British Army forts, were beautiful in the bright morning light as we drove north from Dublin to Cullyhanna to attend the funeral of Peter John Caraher. This blog has known Peter John and the Caraher family for many years. A few weeks ago his son Miceál contacted me to let me know that Peter John was terminally ill. I told him I would call. It was just before the Ard Fheis. Miceál explained to me that Peter John had been told he only had a few weeks left but had forgotten this and I needed to be mindful of that in my conversation. I was therefore a wee bit apprehensive about the visit but I called and I came away uplifted and very happy. Peter John was in great form. We spent a couple of hours craicing away, telling yarns and in his c...

The Myth Of “Shadowy Figures”

Mise agus Martin and Ted in Stormont Castle 2018 The demonising of republicans has long been an integral part of politics on this island, and especially in the lead into and during electoral campaigns. Through the decades of conflict Unionist leaders and British governments regularly posed as democrats while supporting anti-democratic laws, censorship and the denial of the rights of citizens who voted for Sinn Féin. Sinn Féin Councillors, party activists and family members were killed by unionist death squads, o ften in collusion with British state forces. Successive Irish governments embraced this demonization strategy through Section 31 and state censorship. Sinn Féin was portrayed as undemocratic and dangerous. We were denied municipal or other public buildings to hold events including Ard Fheiseanna. In the years since the Good Friday Agreement these same elements have sought to sustain this narrative. The leaderships of Fianna Fáil, the Irish Labour Party, the SDLP and...