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Inishowen 'wake' for D'Arcy McGee 18.04.12

AN Irish 'wake' is to be held in Inishowen next month to remember Young Irelander Thomas D'Arcy McGee who was assassinated in Canada as a parliamentarian in the late 19th Century.
Canadian Ambassador to Ireland, Loyola Hearn and Nobel laureate, John Hume, are among the invited guests at the event which coincides with the launch of a new book on D'Arcy McGee's early Irish rebel years, by Professor David Wilson.
The events, on the weekend of May 4 and May 5, will take place in the village of Culdaff and nearby Tremone bay, where the young rebel escaped by boat in 1848 and where a stone memorial was erected a number of years ago in his memory.
Thomas D'Arcy McGee was born of Wexford parents in Carlingford, Co Louth.
He became a father of the Canadian Confederation, a member of parliament, champion of Irish immigrants, poet, journalist, orator and Irish historian. After an early morning session of the Canadian Parliament, he was assassinated, at the age of 42.
Inishowen-based author Hazel McIntyre, who is organising the event, said D'Arcy McGee's Irish wake is "long overdue".
The memorial events will begin on Friday, May 4 at 7pm in McGrory’s, Culdaff, with a ceremony at Tremone beach the following day, weather permitting.
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