Description
While domestic histories frequently focus on the frontline fighting in Ireland, the financial and political survival of the republican movement relied heavily on strategic transatlantic networks. Irish Republican Women in America delivers a masterly, data-driven investigation into the actions of radical diaspora women—including key members of Cumann na mBan and labor activists—who organized across the US.
The narrative looks deeply past traditional summaries to evaluate the functional operations of overseas funding networks, political printing presses, and high-velocity speaking tours led by figures like Hanna Sheehy-Skeffington and Mary MacSwiney. The authors systematically guide researchers through private American archives, FBI surveillance files, and radical newspaper logs to show how these women shaped US public opinion and funded the struggle at home. Written with exceptional direct clarity, this volume serves as a mandatory asset for advanced academic history tracks, gender studies, and research libraries worldwide.
Core research frameworks within this historical audit:
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Transatlantic Financial Analytics: Breaks down the precise donation ledgers, bond sales metrics, and arms procurement pipelines managed by US networks.
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Geopolitical Propaganda Mapping: Documents how activist women managed massive anti-imperial press campaigns and coordinated public protests across major US cities.
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Gold-Standard Archival Curation: Heavily supported by primary state papers, surveillance file excerpts, and comprehensive bibliographic indices.






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