Mick Treacy, RIP.

Mick Treacy of Ballybeg, Mitchelstown, passed away on 27 May 2024, just five days short of his 86th birthday.

Mick Treacy at the Cork Butter Market August 2021.

Mick, his friend and fellow musician John Nyhan have sang at the Spirit of Mother Jones festivals from 2016 onwards. Many people have mentioned these unforgettable singing sessions at the Maldron Hotel when Mick and John performed the songs of Pete Seeger, Joe Hill, Ewan MacColl, mining songs, and the songs of the Spanish Civil War with power and passion in front of packed and appreciative audiences. 

What some people present did not realise was that Mick, who was in his 80s, was regarded as a legend in folk circles in Britain and Ireland back in the 1960s. He sang and performed with many of the greats of the folk revival in that period. This unassuming singer remained deeply passionate about social justice and labour and campaigned actively for nuclear disarmament in Britain during that time.  

L-R: Eamon Lowe, Mick Treacy, Mick Lillis, Holy Ground 1965 (Courtesy of Cherry Gilchrist).

Mick came to folk music by listening to The Weavers, Delia Murphy, Joe Lynch, Connie Foley, and Cork woman Margaret Barry in the fifties, and then the Skiffle movement in Britain, which Ken Colyer spearheaded. The revival of interest in folk song and music resulted in the growth of informal folk clubs in many large cities and towns across Britain and Ireland. Young aspiring ‘folkies’ flocked to hear singers and musicians who had been playing folk for a while as many Skiffle groups had embraced this new scene.

Mick went to England in late 1960 and became part of the whole folk revival, first listening to and then learning from Ewan McColl, Bob Davenport, Alex Campbell, Ramblin’ Jack Elliot and many more.   By 1964, he was singing in Birmingham Town Hall in a fundraising concert for the West Midlands Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and later joined an Irish Group called ‘The Munstermen‘. This group comprised Mick Treacy, Mick Hipliss, Mick Lillis, Gerry Norris and Eamon Lowe. 

Mick Treacy speaking at a CND rally at the Bullring (courtesy of Cherry Gilchrist).

This led, in turn, to the founding of the legendary Holy Ground Folk Club at the Cambridge Inn in Birmingham in April 1965. Over the next three years of its operation, weekly sessions attracted huge crowds excited at the prospect of hearing the performances of many of the great singers, such as Ewan MacColl and Joe Heaney. “The Munstermen” played and sang almost weekly at this club. 

In 1967, Mick came to Dublin and sang in most of the great venues of the day, such as the Embankment, the Castle Inn, the Old Sheiling, and many of the local Folk Clubs, before returning to his native Mitchelstown, where he settled down, worked in the Dairygold creamery, and married Maura Haran, raised a family of three daughters, Róisín, Jennifer, and Carolyn, and contributed so much on a voluntary basis to his local community. 

He has always been interested in the songs of working people, collecting many over the years. With the assistance of Brian O’Reilly in Studio Fiona in Fermoy and his many friends, he released “A Folk Anthology” in 1997, in which he sang and played the accordion and flute. He also released several CDs, including “At the Holy Ground Once More” and “The Road to Bandon.” 

“Mick Treacy was a man of great knowledge of folk music and politics and possessed a tremendous intellect and made a huge contribution to the Spirit of Mother Jones festival”, stated his friend and fellow musician John Nyhan

John Nyhan and Mick Treacy at the Butter Market, Shandon, Cork, in August 2021.

Mick himself acknowledged that he felt “privileged to have shared the platform and stage with many pacifist and socialist poets, writers, singers and performers who shared his dreams.”.  All involved with the Spirit of Mother Jones Festival feel very privileged to have heard Mick Treacy sing the songs of justice and freedom that were important to him and us. 

Mick Treacy with his daughter Jennifer at the 2018 Spirit of Mother Jones Festival.

To Maura and his daughters, Roisin, Jennifer, and Carolyn, everyone associated with the Spirit of Mother Jones Festival offers our sympathy. Ní bheidh a leithéid ann arís. 

Thanks go to author Cherry Gilchrist of Cherry’s Cache, who wrote about her visits to The Holy Ground affectionately and supplied two photographs of Mick Treacy. 

Manus O’Riordan – RIP

Manus O'Riordan in 2017
Manus O’Riordan in 2017 at the Spirit of Mother Jones Festival

We have learned with great sadness of the sudden death of Micheál Manus O’ Riordan on 27th September 2021. 

Manus’s emotional tribute to his father, Michael “Remembering Michael O’Riordan: A Neighbour’s Child”  at the 2017 Spirit of Mother Jones Festival, moved deeply all those who attended.

His talk was followed by a celebration of his father’s participation in the Spanish Civil War held outside the old family home on Pope’s Quay in Cork City. He was accompanied by his sister Brenda on what was the one-hundredth anniversary of Michael’s birth.

Manus with Brenda (2nd from left) listening attentively to Cork singer Rory McCarthy on Popes Quay on August 4th 2017.

Manus also attended the 2019 festival with his partner Nancy Wallach and contributed valuable insights to the lecture on Elizabeth Gurley Flynn by Lorraine Starsky.  

Micheál Manus O’Riordan commenced work in Liberty Hall for the Irish Transport and General Workers Union on 22nd March 1971. Manus carried out post-graduate work at the University of New Hampshire, USA, where he took a master degree in the economics of collective bargaining and industrial relations. On his retirement from SIPTU on 28th May 2010 as Head of Research, he stated, “For 39 years it has been my great privilege and honour to serve the One Big Union of Larkin and Connolly, No pasarán! Ni saoirse go saoirse lucht oibre!”.

Manus standing next to the wall mural of his father Michael O’Riordan on Widderlings’ Lane on Pope’s Quay, Cork.

Manus wrote widely on labour topics for books, magazines and journals, including Liberty and was an excellent speaker. While he specialised in labour and working-class history, he conducted extensive research on the Spanish Civil war as Ireland Secretary of the International Brigade Memorial Trust.

Manus with the Connolly Column banner of the International Brigades

He never forgot the activists of the Left, such as those of the International Brigades who fought Fascism in Spain. 

In a recent article on Muriel MacSwiney in the Ballingeary & Inchigeela Historical Society Journal 2016, Manus referred to a 1962 exchange of correspondence he had with Muriel MacSwiney as a twelve-year-old boy.

A beautiful singer of traditional songs, his rendering of “The Red Flag” and West Cork’s own, “The Bould Tenant Farmer”, were a joy to hear at the festival gatherings.  On behalf of the Cork Mother Jones Committee, we wish to express our sincere sympathy to all his family. We remember his generous assistance, cooperation and absolute delight at participating actively at the Spirit of Mother Jones Festivals.