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Donegal Tunnel Tigers Memorial

12/10/2018

The @DonegalTunnelTigers are preparing to erect a memorial in honour of all Donegal miners that have died as a result of accidents while working in tunnels or those that have passed due to tunnel related industrial disease. The memorial will be erected in the Dungloe Co. Donegal area.

@DonegalTunnelTigers are on a worldwide hunt to gather the names of these people so if you know of a Donegal miner or tunnel worker please put their names forward. The information that is required is as follows:-  name, area they were from, date they died, where they were killed and their age. Please be aware that permission must be obtained by a living family member. If there are no living relatives then their names can still be put forward for consideration. Please contact @DonegalTunnelTigers either on their Facebook page search 'Donegal Tunnel Tigers', call them on (00353) 087 0550008 or email them at - donegaltunneltigers@gmail.com

Maria Fusco

Maria Fusco wrote about the Donegal Tigers (please see below) you can read more about Maria and her work by clicking this link https://www.artangel.org.uk/project/master-rock/ and more about Donegal by clicking  http://www.donegaldiaspora.ie/thisisdonegal

Donegal Tunnel Tigers by Maria Fusco

The Donegal Tigers are a group of young north-west Donegal men who travel the world constructing tunnels. They worked in the 1940s and 1950s on the subways of New York, Britain and elsewhere to dig the tunnels that provided important infrastructure. The 1990s saw them work on the Channel Tunnel between England and France, and they are currently being courted to work on the 17 billion euro expansion of the London subway network.

Back in the 1960's and 1970's, Neil Mulholland was one of the famed Tunnel Tigers. He took a lot of pride in the accomplishments of the Donegal men who did the work noting that before his time, Donegal men broke the world record for tunnelling in the north of Scotland: "They beat the Yanks," he chimed with a grin. Neil spent about 17 years at work, travelling between his Rosses home and north Scotland, western Wales and the English midlands to dig tunnels and mine coal. The young men went to wherever the money was best. It was among the best-paid work in Britain. The work however would bring health complications later in life for many men including Neil who at 45 was diagnosed with silicosis, the degenerative lung disease. 

Neil first left his home place of Mullaghdearg Mountain, near Kincasslagh, in 1959, when he was 17. He followed his brothers, Patrick and Francie, who had gone to Scotland to work. Both have died of lung cancer. There was no protective gear or ventilation in the deep tunnels, no warnings of the danger of the work or the dangers of the asbestos used in construction. Over the years Neil also worked in the coal pits between Scotland and north Wales. Though the projects were different, the work remained largely the same: "The tunnels were full of dust," he recalled, "When you set off the explosives – you called that a firing – sometimes, when you would go back into the tunnel again to put up the lights you could barely see the man beside you because there was so much dust".

Because everyone knew someone who was working there, the work came largely through word-of-mouth. The men would stay on the job for months, coming home to Ireland for two months at winter, then heading back. Glasgow was the place to go on weekends for the Tunnel Tigers working in Scotland: "We drank our fill and would have the craic and go to Irish dances," Neil recalled.

Neil's mother died in 1975 and he returned to Donegal to stay with his father. He and Nuala, a Rann na Feirste woman, married the following year and had three children: Sally Ann, Brian and Martin. Neil passed away from his health complications in April 2009.

#TunnelSafety #DonegalTunnelTigers #Donegal #TunnelTigers #Memorial #Dungloe  



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