In November 1920, Jimmy Folan, aged 20, of O’Donoghue Terrace, Woodquay, was sentenced by court martial to six months imprisonment with hard labour for acting as a republican policeman and possessing seditious documents – one of which blamed the local RIC for the killings of Seamus Quirk and Seán Mulvoy. Having served his time, he was released on May 10, 1921. That evening, a benevolent RIC sergeant warned a local volunteer to tell Jimmy ‘not to be at home tonight’.
Call for Galway city street to be re-named in memory of teenager killed by Crown Forces
6 May 2021
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Galway Bay fm newsroom – A Galway West TD is calling for a city street to be named after a teenager who was shot dead by crown forces 100 years ago this month.
17 year old Christy Folan was shot dead while in bed at his family home in Woodquay in May 1921, during a raid by the ‘Black and Tans’.
They were searching for his brother James, who was a member of the IRA.
Another brother, Joseph Folan, was also shot during the raid but survived.