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  1. Roddy Connolly was later arrested and was held in Richmond Barracks. To keep the fact that he was the son of James Connolly from the British authorities he went under the alias of Alfred Carney. James Connolly was executed on 12 May 1916. He was forty-seven years old. Roddy Connolly was a member of Na Fianna Éireann and during the Rising he ...

  2. Connolly went on to join and found a number of left-wing movements, including James Larkin’s Irish Worker League, and the Workers’ Party of Ireland, before joining the Labour Party, whom he represented as a TD for Louth between 1943-44 and 1948-51.

  3. Charlie McGuire. Roddy Connolly and the Struggle for Socialism in Ireland. Cork: Cork University Press, 2008. Pp. 318. $65.00 (cloth). - Volume 48 Issue 3

  4. James Adam & Sons Ltd | LOT:277 | ***WITHDRAWN*** RODDY CONNOLLY’S FAKE PASSPORT A British passport issued purportedly to Mr. Robert James Hawthorne, actually Roddy Connolly, son of James Connolly, and used by him to visit the Soviet Union and other countries in 1921-2.

  5. Adrian Grant reviews Roddy Connolly And The Struggle For Socialism In Ireland by Charlie McGuire, Cork University Press, ISBN 978-1-85918-420-2, €49/£33 hbk THIS IS the first biography of Roddy Connolly, son of James Connolly and a major player in the development of Irish communism and socialist republicanism in the inter-war period.

  6. Roddy Connolly, född 11 februari 1901, död 16 december 1980 var en irländsk kommunistisk politiker. Son till James Connolly. Referenser a b c ...

  7. Great Britain (CPGB), Arthur McManus, described Connolly's motives, in 1916, as "somewhat obscured in a mist of cloudy complexities'. From late 1919, Connolly's son, Roddy, tried to establish a communist party in Ireland, against the wishes of his sister, Nora. It was not clear how such a party