Background
J. J. Walsh was born in the townland of Rathroon, near Bandon, County Cork.
J. J. Walsh was born in the townland of Rathroon, near Bandon, County Cork.
Until the age of fifteen, Walsh attended a local school in Bandon, but by his own account "as far as learning went, I may as well have been at home".
He was also a senior Gaelic Athletic Association organiser and Cumann na nGaedheal politician. Later, he was closely associated with Irish-based pro-Nazi initiatives during the Second World War, frequently expressing his views with anti-semitic rhetoric. His family came from a farming background, "working a substantial holding of medium but well-cultivated land".
Together with his school-friend P. South. O"Hegarty, he passed the Civil Service exams for the Postal service.
He later worked locally as a clerk in the Post Office. Like O"Hegarty, he spent three years in London at King"s College, studying for the Secretary" General’ s Office "a syllabus (which) differed little from the Indian Civil Service".
Walsh was active in the Gaelic Athletic Association, promoting Gaelic games in many areas, but particularly in Cork city and county. His interest in organised sports had a strong political dimension.
I happened to be one of those who realised the potentialities of the G.A.A. as a training ground for Physical Force.
I gathered around me a force of youthful enthusiasts from the University, Civil Service and Business. With this intensely organised instrument, war was declared on foreign games which were made to feel the shock so heavily that one by one, Soccer and Rugby Clubs began to disappear. He was also instrumental in establishing the "revived" Tailteann Games.
He participated in the Easter Rising in 1916.
One of the small group of Hibernian Rifles that reported to James Connolly in the General Post Office He was arrested following the general surrender and sentenced to death after a court-martial at Richmond Barracks.
This was almost immediately commuted to life imprisonment, but he was released the following year under a general amnesty. Walsh was elected as a Sinn Féin Member of Parliament in the 1918 general election for the Cork City constituency. Walsh served as Postmaster General from 1922 until 1924 and joined the cabinet of West. T. Cosgrave between 1924 and 1927, after the office was reconstituted as the Department of Posts and Telegraphs.
He was elected at every election for the Cork Borough constituency until 1927 when he retired from government.
Their request to the Minister for Justice, Gerald Boland, to place a tap on Walsh"s phone was, however, refused.
He was released in 1921 and supported the Anglo-Irish Treaty and went on to become a founding member of the new political party, Cumann na nGaedheal. During the Second World War, known at the time in Ireland as "The Emergency", Walsh"s connections with fascism, including his association with Ailtirí na hAiséirghe, brought him to the attention of the Directorate of Intelligence G2, the Intelligence branch of the Irish Army.
31st United Kingdom Parliament]
As a member of the 1st Dáil he was arrested for partaking in an "illegal" government.