April 1916

Mary contacts Pte M Courtney in Sofia who is in the same company as her son Charlie and may have been with him when he was captured. She also writes to the O'Mahony, who holds land in Bulgaria and has offered to help. She receives a letter from her daughter Marie who has met a Sgt. Chapman in hospital; he was with Charlie in Serbia the day he was wounded and is sure he has not been killed. Marie is leaving Malta where she has been nursing, and is returning home.

Mary's son Cecil contracts German measles so her children (who have been at boarding school) can’t come home for the school holidays. They are sent to stay with various relatives, so the Easter weekend starts off quietly. However, making their way home from Fairyhouse racecourse on Monday 24 April, Mary's daughters Ethel and Violet and their Aunt Rita find themselves caught up in the Sinn Fein Rising. Aunt Rita has to walk home through the barricade, but her husband, Jack, drives the two girls home, managing to reach his home near St. Dymphna's via Finglas.

The following day (Tuesday 25 April) the siege continues and there are also reports of risings in the cities of Cork, Limerick, Belfast and Derry. Sinn Fein is still in possession of the G.P.O. and a troop ship has docked in Kingstown, with all approaches being guarded by the military. 26 April sees reports of looting; Liberty Hall and the Herald Office have been levelled and the Jacobs Factory is one of the rebel strongholds. Overnight there are reports of fires, and troops continue to arrive on 27 April. On 28 April Mary hears that T&C Martin (the family company) has been burned, as has E&J Burke's bottling plant. There are reports that Connolly, Countess Markievicz and Sheehy-Skeffington have been shot. The fighting continues through to Saturday 29 April but on Sunday 30 April, despite the gunfire and pickets continuing, Mary hears that a truce has been called.