Charlie McGlade

Charlie McGlade was a volunteer in the IRA who was killed, officially "shot while resisting arrest", by the Irish police / Garda at Dublin in the early 1940s. At the time, the IRA was the target of an intensive campaign by the Special Branch Division of the Garda Síochána (nicknamed the Broy Harriers after their commander Ned Broy).

McGlade's death, as well the killing in similar circumstances of Liam Rice, were blamed by the IRA on Special Branch Sergeant Denis O'Brien, himself a former long-time IRA member turned police detective. It was cited at the time by the IRA (and continuous to be cited up to the present by radical Irish Nationalists ) as a justification for the 1942 killing of O'Brien by IRA Chief-of-Staff Charlie Kerins, for which Kerins was executed in 1944.[1]

References

Military offices
Preceded by
Sean McArdle
Officer Commanding the Belfast Battalion of the Irish Republican Army
1938 1940
Succeeded by
Jimmy Steele
Preceded by
New position
Officer Commanding the IRA Northern Command
1939 1940
Succeeded by
Seán McCaughey


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