Matthew Davis (politician) explained

Office:Teachta Dála
Term Start:July 1937
Term End:June 1938
Constituency:Athlone–Longford
Birth Date:c. 1892
Birth Place:County Roscommon, Ireland

Matthew Davis (died 29 August 1957) was an Irish Fianna Fáil politician.

He was a native of Kilteevan, County Roscommon. In 1934, aged 42, he won a county junior championship medal in Gaelic football for Kilteevan.

He joined the Irish Volunteers in 1917 and later became a member of the Kilteevan Company of the Irish Republican Army. He later served as quartermaster of the South Roscommon Brigade. During the Irish Civil War, he took the anti-Treaty side and he was officer commanding of the 3rd Western Brigade, 2n Western Division.

He was captured on Quaker Island on the River Shannon, interned in Athlone, sentenced to death but later reprieved.

Transferred to Mountjoy Prison, he spent 22 days on hunger strike and was released in 1924.

A member of Fianna Fáil from its foundation, he was elected for that party to Roscommon County Council in 1928. He was elected to Dáil Éireann as a Fianna Fáil TD for the Athlone–Longford constituency at the 1937 general election.[1] He lost his seat at the 1938 general election.[2]

In 1945, he left Fianna Fáil to join Clann na Talmhan and unsuccessfully contested the 1948 election for that party in the 1948 general election for the Roscommon constituency.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Matthew Davis. Oireachtas Members Database. 5 February 2009.
  2. Web site: Matthew Davis. ElectionsIreland.org. 5 February 2009.