Liam Clifford Explained

William Peter "Liam" Clifford (27 June 1876 – 24 February 1949) was the ninth president of the Gaelic Athletic Association (1926–1928).

Involved in the dairy co-operative movement in Limerick and neighbouring Clare for many years, Clifford became the Department of Agriculture’s chief dairy inspector in 1936.[1]

Clifford was chairman of the Limerick county board for 20 years, and also had a term as chairman of the Munster board.

Under Liam Clifford's leadership, the Tipperary team toured America.[2] Brendan Fullam stated ‘the Tipperary hurling team – All-Ireland champions of 1925 – boarded the SS Bremen in early May and set forth on a most successful tour of the States’.[3]

Additionally, during Clifford's presidency, the GAA decided to allocate ten percent of gate receipts for ground development, which led to the provision of grounds throughout the country,[4] for which Clifford has been called "the great apostle of grounds development".[5] Therefore, Clifford was described as ‘the first President to encourage the various County Committees to purchase and develop grounds to be used exclusively for Gaelic Games’.[6] Eamonn Sweeney stated ‘in the implementation of Clifford’s grounds programme; the GAA was unrivalled in its ability to provide grounds and facilities in the smallest of villages and towns’.[7]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: GAA Presidents . Gaa.ie . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120503201547/http://gaa.ie/about-the-gaa/gaa-history/gaa-presidents/ . 3 May 2012 .
  2. Web site: Great Limerick Athletes : William P. Clifford. PDF. Askaboutireland.ie. 9 July 2022.
  3. Brendan Fullam, The Throw-In: The GAA and the Men Who Made It (Dublin, 2004), p.74
  4. Web site: Fedamore. Visitballyhoura.com.
  5. Book: Sweeney, Eamonn . 2004-08-13 . O'Brien Pocket History of Gaelic Sport . The O’Brien Press . 9780862788544 . 2014-09-02 .
  6. Munster GAA Story Volume 2, 2001.
  7. Eamonn Sweeney, O'Brien Pocket History of Gaelic Sports (Dublin, 2004), p.14.