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Biographical
history
Seán MacEoin
was born John Joseph McKeon on 30 September 1893 at Bunlahy, Granard,
County Longford, the eldest son of Andrew McKeon and Catherine Treacy.
After a national school education he trained as a blacksmith in
his fathers forge and, on his fathers death in February
1913, he took over the running of the forge and the maintenance
of the McKeon family. His national activities began in earnest in
the same year when he joined the Clonbroney Company of the Irish
Volunteers and was sworn into membership of the I.R.B.
His initial contact
with Michael Collins was at the Longford by-election in May 1917
and a very strong friendship developed between the two men. MacEoins
War of Independence career was active and eventful. He served as
Company Captain and later O/C 1 Battalion, Longford Brigade, 1917ñ20;
Vice O/C and Director of Operations, Longford Brigade, 1920ñ21;
as well as Provincial Centre for the I.R.B. with a place on the
Supreme Council. His exploits with the North Longford Flying Column
are the stuff of legend, particularly the engagements with the enemy
at Ballinalee in November 1920 and Clonfin in February 1921.
Arrested and badly
wounded in March 1921, MacEoin was returned unopposed to the Second
Dáil for Longford-Westmeath. He was court martialled and
sentenced to death in June 1921 for the murder of R.I.C. District
Inspector T.J. McGrath and when, in August, imprisoned Deputies
were being released to attend Dáil Éireann to ratify
the Truce, an exception was made of MacEoin. Eventually released
at Michael Collins insistence, MacEoin nominated Eamon de
Valera for election as President by the Dáil.
During the Dáil
debate on the Treaty, MacEoin seconded Arthur Griffiths motion
proposing acceptance. Appointed G.O.C. Western Command in June 1922,
he directed activity against anti-Treaty forces during the Civil
War, particularly in the Mayo and Sligo areas. He had been re-elected
as a T.D. in the same month as his appointment. He did not seek
re-election in 1923. For the rest of the 1920s his military career
was a steady upward curve, appointed G.O.C. Curragh Training Camp
in August 1925, Quartermaster General in March 1927, and Chief of
Staff in February 1929. His tenure of the highest post in the armed
forces would not appear to have been a particularly happy period
and his departure came in June 1929, with the opportunity to stand
as a Cumann na nGaedheal candidate in a bye-election in Sligo-Leitrim
which he won.
In the 1932 general
election he moved to the constituency of Longford-Westmeath and
served the Longford area as T.D. in either Longford-Westmeath
(1932ñ37, 1948ñ65) or Athlone-Longford (1937ñ48) until he was defeated in
the 1965 general election. During a long and distinguished political
career he served as Minister for Justice (February 1948ñMarch 1951)
and Minister for Defence (MarchñJune 1951) in the First Inter-Party
Government; and again as Minister for Defence (June 1954ñMarch 1957)
in the Second Inter-Party Government. He stood twice as candidate
for the Presidency, against Seán T. OKelly in 1945,
and Eamon de Valera in 1959.
An expectation that
he might be an agreed candidate for the office in 1959, as a result
of his not standing against O'Kelly in 1952, was disappointed by
de Valeras decision to quit parliamentary life. MacEoin retired
from public life after the 1965 general election and died on 7 July
1973. His wife Alice Cooney, who he married on 21 June 1922 at a
ceremony attended by Griffith and Collins [see P151/2015], died
on 16 February 1985. They had no children.
Custodial history Material
willed to the Franciscan Library Killiney by Seán
MacEoin; transferred there by his wife Alice. Transferred to the
custody of UCDAD in July 1997 as part of the OFM-UCD partnership
agreement.
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