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OPW invite Granddaughter of leading Irish suffragette Hanna Sheehy Skeffington to re-enact smashing the windows in Dublin Castle to mark the 100th anniversary of women’s suffrage

To mark the centenary of women getting the vote in Ireland, the granddaughter of Irish suffragette Hanna Sheehy Skeffington will tomorrow (Tuesday the 6th February) re-enact her grandmother smashing the windows of OPW’s Dublin Castle over a 100 years ago to highlight women's disenfranchisement. The event hosted by the Office of Public Works will also be attended by the Lord Mayor of Dublin Micheál Mac Donnacha and will include a speech by Hanna’s granddaughter Micheline Sheehy Skeffington from a “soapbox” similar to that used by suffragettes a century ago.


At 5am on the 13th June 1912 Hanna Sheehy Skeffington on her own smashed windows in Dublin Castle, the seat of British Government rule, in response to votes for women being excluded from the Home Rule Bill for Ireland. She was arrested and sent to Mountjoy Prison where she went on hunger strike. To commemorate the centenary of women getting the vote Hanna’s granddaughter Micheline dressed in period costume will smash a replica window in the Castle at the Ship Street entrance and will be “arrested” by a policeman.

In the coming weeks Dublin City Council will recognise Hanna Sheehy Skeffington’s contribution to Irish public life by erecting a plaque at the Ship Street entrance. Lord Mayor of Dublin Micheál Mac Donnacha said, “Hanna Sheehy Skeffington is Ireland’s most famous suffragette and her actions and agitation directly contributed to Irish women winning the vote in 1918. Hanna lived in Dublin and was elected to the Council so it’s entirely fitting that Dublin City Council recognise her role in Irish political life by erecting a plaque in her honour and I look forward to unveiling this later in the year”.


Speaking about the event Chairman of the OPW Maurice Buckley said;

“The OPW is delighted to host this event celebrating Hanna Sheehy Skeffington who dedicated her life to tackling injustice in general and women’s inequality in particular. As a suffragette, a nationalist and a human rights activist Hanna was undoubtedly ahead of her time in challenging the boundaries of what was perceived as a woman’s role. Smashing the windows in Dublin Castle resulted in the first of many prison sentences Hanna endured over a 20 year period. Indeed, she noted that a wife-beater sentenced the same day received a lighter sentence, than her two months in Mountjoy Prison. This event tomorrow (6th February) is about recognising a historic day in Irish public life as well as a celebration of the contribution of Ireland’s most committed feminist who played a leading role in the struggle for equality. I would like to sincerely thank Micheline Sheehy Skeffington for coming here today and for her commitment as the custodian of grandmother’s legacy.”


Speaking about her motivation for staging the re-enactment Micheline Sheehy Skeffington said,

“I want to ensure that the courage of the suffragettes is honoured on the centenary of women getting the vote. What they did and what they achieved is incredibly impressive. We have the vote today because of them. Power and privilege are never given up easily by any section of society, but things changed through women like Hanna taking a very public and often unpopular stance to demand that change. So we owe it to them to ensure they are remembered”.