Hell's Kitchen

Hell's Kitchen is the blog of TheWildGeese.com (WGT), a leading online destination chronicling "The Epic History and Heritage of the Irish." Hell's Kitchen is written by Patricia Jameson-Sammartano, Gerry Regan and Joe Gannon. TheWildGeese.com, which draws nearly 200,000 visits per year, is the flagship project of GAR Media, "forging new frontiers for the past."

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

A Game for Gods Played by Men

Recently we got an email about the Akron Celtic Guards Hurling Club, "The Hibernian Rifles !,” from Paddy Taylor, organizer/founder of the team. Paddy and the “Celtic Guards” will be playing in a four team hurling tournament at the Dublin (Ohio) Irish Festival, which will be held August 3rd, 4th and 5th. Below is their 2006 team photo, taken at last year's festival.

Paddy’s passion for the game, who’s first known great player was Setanta (Cú Chulainn), comes through in his email. According to Paddy, "Once you get into it, it becomes you, you become the legend, you have the fire of the old days." Here’s the description of hurling from their website. We suspect that this was written by Paddy:

Hurling is a game for gods played by men. Hurling is an unlikely experiment, acts of balletic beauty conducted in the face of war. It's about timing and bravery and passion. The game is nourished by history and culture and the Irish sense of place. The drift of the modern world is towards disconnection and isolation. Hurling is an adhesive, one of the last excuses for people to gather and bump shoulders and celebrate themselves and the place they come from and the history they share.

The team is sponsored by the Mark Heffernan, Div 2 of the Ancient Order of Hibernians in Akron, Ohio. For more information about the Akron Celtic Guards, or to learn more about "the myths, the legends, the skill, the athleticism, of this ancient sport of Ireland," as Paddy describes it, you can contact Seamus White at 330-773-7814 or Paddy Taylor-330-773-8437. Or you can email Paddy HERE.

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Thursday, July 05, 2007

Irishman Who Inspired Bond’s “M,” Now Inspiring Controversy

Few fictional characters could be more British than James Bond’s boss, “M.” The inspiration for that character, however, may have been an Irish Catholic man born in Sneem, County Kerry, Ireland in 1850. The incredible life of that man, William Melville, is now being highlighted in an exhibit at the Kerry County Museum and some in the area disagree with that. It is another chapter in the dichotomy that is Irish history.

William Melville, right.


Melville immigrated to London in the 1860s and joined the Metropolitan Police. In the 1880s he joined the Special Irish Branch, which was set up to combat the attacks of the Irish Republican Brotherhood, more commonly called the Fenians. Therein lies the rub with regard to celebrating his life in the eyes of some in Ireland.

Helen O'Carroll, the museum curator defended the exhibit: "Here is an Irish Catholic, who was proud of his Irish identity, defending Britain from terrorist threats that included Irish terrorism. As a Kerryman born and bred, Melville is part of our story and to fit him in we must acknowledge that Irish identity encompassed a broader spectrum in the past as indeed we are beginning to recognize that it does in the present."

Local Sinn Fein councilor Robert Beasley, expressed the other side of the controversy: "I don't think local people would want to commemorate anything to do with the British Secret Service, whether it is in the past or today. I don't see any reason to have him honored."

In 1893 he became the Superintendent of the Special Branch. Melville’s career would continue on past his involvement with combating the Fenians as part of the police to the activity that would connect him to the fictitious James Bond.

After he retired from Special Branch in 1903 he was recruited to work for the War Office's new Directorate of Military Operations. There he worked with the Secret Service Bureau, which became MI5 and MI6 in 1909. Through his work in those years combating German intelligence services, and his setting up of a spy school, many consider him the father of the modern British intelligence services.

His connection to James Bond is a result of him recruiting a spy name Sidney Reilly, aka Sigmund Rosenblum. It is believed that Ian Fleming based James Bond on Reilly, and his boss “M,” on Melville. Not everyone agrees with the theory, and with Fleming now dead, the absolute truth will likely never be known.

Melville had another famous connection. He met the renowned magician and escape artist Houdini while he was in London demonstrating for the London police how easy it was to escape their handcuffs. He then gave Melville instructions on lock picking. Rumor has it that Melville also recruited Houdini to spy for him, though that is, again, something that will probably never be known.

What is certain is that whether one considers his life to be notable or notorious, William Melville’s life was far from dull.

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