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Heart failure and congestion of the lungs
- They concluded that Ashe had died of heart failure and congestion of the lungs, and that this was due to force-feeding combined with the previous removal of his bed and boots (which had left him in a physically weakened state).
gript.ie/on-this-day-25-september-1917-thomas-ashe-died-from-force-feeding-during-hunger-strike-2/ON THIS DAY: 25 SEPTEMBER 1917: Thomas Ashe died from force ...
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They concluded that Ashe had died of heart failure and congestion of the lungs, and that this was due to force-feeding combined with the previous removal of his bed and boots (which had left him in a physically weakened state).
100 YEARS AGO: Thomas Ashe dies after force-feeding, 25 September 1917 By Joseph E.A. Connell Jr During the Easter Rising, the 5th Battalion of the Irish Volunteers, under the command of Cmdt Thomas Ashe, carried out a series of raids and reconnaissance movements throughout north County Dublin from Easter Monday to Friday.
Sep 25, 2017 · On September 25th, 1917, Thomas Ashe died in the Mater Hospitals from complications arising out of a force feeding regime in Mountjoy Prison.
- Ronan Mcgreevy
Sep 25, 2024 · Thomas Ashe was only 32 when he died on September 25, 1917, after a so-called “botched” force-feeding while on hunger strike in Mountjoy Prison.
On 25 September 1917, Thomas Ashe, recently appointed President of the Supreme Council of the IRB and one of the senior leaders of the reorganised Irish Volunteers, died after being force fed...
Dec 10, 2017 · The prison authorities decided to force feed the prisoners, resulting ultimately in the death of Thomas Ashe. The process of force-feeding, vividly conveyed to the Irish public in October 1917, during the Ashe inquest, involved being strapped by feet and hands to a chair.
Sep 25, 2017 · After suffering three days of ‘inhuman, dangerous and barbaric’ treatment, Easter Rising hero Thomas Ashe died in hospital, 100 years ago today, says Robert Hume.