Sean McAteer
Sean McAteer (1892–1937) was an Irish communist killed in Stalin's Great Purge.
Biography
McAteer, a dock labourer, was involved with the Irish Citizen Army and the Socialist Party of Ireland. In 1915 he left for the USA.[1][2] While in the USA he held membership of the Industrial Workers of the World (the Wobblies). Arrested in San Francisco in 1917 for draft dodging, he was jailed for three months before being released and going on the run. He was later imprisoned again in Shoshone, Idaho, under the name John McEntee, on a charge of the anti-union offence of "criminal syndicalism".[3]
Back in Ireland, McAteer adopted the name Sean Mac an tSaoir. He returned to take part in the Irish Civil War on the side of the Anti-Treaty IRA.[3]
On 11 June 1923, McAteer and Jim Phelan participated in a robbery of a post office on Scotland Road in Liverpool, England. The operation, carried out with guns supplied by English communists (including the future Liverpool council leader Jack Braddock) was intended to raise funds for the IRA, though Phelan would later insist it was non-political. When the young women working in the post office panicked, Phelan fled the scene. McAteer, however, shot the girls' brother when he tried to intervene. A pursuing crowd captured Phelan, who as a participant in the raid was held legally responsible for the killing. Having confessed and offered to turn king's evidence, he was tried and sentenced to death on 9 July 1923, though this was commuted to life imprisonment the following month. McAteer evaded capture by escaping to the Soviet Union.[4]
Once in the USSR, McAteer worked as an English teacher in Odessa, Ukraine. Here he married his wife Tamara and had a daughter, Maria.[1]
McAteer's outspoken and erratic behaviour eventually drew dangerous attention during the Stalinist purges.[5] In 1937, after a drunken outburst in which he accused the Communist Party boss in Odessa of being a Trotskyist, he was charged with "subversive wrecking", "counter-revolutionary bourgeois thoughts", and espionage. On 16 November 1937, he was sentenced to death by shooting and executed before the month's end.[2][6]
Following petitions from his wife and daughter, he was posthumously rehabilitated in the 1950s.[1]
References
- ^ a b c Fleming, Diarmaid (16 June 2007). "Irish victims of Stalin uncovered". BBC.
- ^ a b King, Carla (2010). "Reviewed Work: Left to the Wolves: Irish Victims of Stalinist Terror by Barry McLoughlin". Irish Economic and Social History. 37: 185–7.
- ^ a b "Hidden behind the iron curtain". The Irish Times. 27 February 2007.
- ^ Maume, Patrick. "Phelan, Jim (James Leo)". Dictionary of Irish Biography.
- ^ Morgan, Kevin (2009). "Left to the Wolves: Irish Victims of Stalinist Terror". Revolutionary Russia. 22 (1): 114–6. doi:10.1080/09546540902901328.
- ^ Callaghan, John; Phythian, Mark (2013). "State surveillance and communist lives: Rose Cohen and the Early British Communist Milieu". Journal of Intelligence History. 12 (2): 134–155. doi:10.1080/16161262.2013.785661.