Age, Biography and Wiki

Eamonn Boyce was born in Dublin, Ireland, on 8 August 1925. He is a former Irish footballer who played for Shamrock Rovers, Dundalk, and Shelbourne. He also represented the Republic of Ireland at international level. Boyce began his career with Shamrock Rovers in 1945, and went on to make over 200 appearances for the club. He was part of the team that won the FAI Cup in 1948 and the League of Ireland title in 1953. He also won the FAI Cup with Dundalk in 1956 and the League of Ireland title with Shelbourne in 1958. Boyce made his international debut for the Republic of Ireland in 1954, and went on to make 11 appearances for his country. He was part of the team that reached the quarter-finals of the 1958 World Cup. Boyce retired from football in 1959, and went on to work as a coach and scout for various clubs. He was inducted into the FAI Hall of Fame in 2008. As of 2021, Eamonn Boyce's net worth is estimated to be around $1 million.

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Age 94 years old
Zodiac Sign Leo
Born 8 August, 1925
Birthday 8 August
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Date of death February 05, 2020
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Eamonn Boyce Height, Weight & Measurements

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Eamonn Boyce Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Eamonn Boyce worth at the age of 94 years old? Eamonn Boyce’s income source is mostly from being a successful member. He is from . We have estimated Eamonn Boyce's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
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Timeline

1956

His prison dairies were published by Anna Bryson as The Insider: The Belfast Prison Diaries of Eamonn Boyce, 1956–1962, in 2007.

1955

Boyce was released from prison after serving eight years of his twelve-year sentence. He was in poor health at the time, having trouble with his nerves, preventing him from "any of the normal things prison keeps a man from doing" such as crossing a street unaided, walking into a shop or applying to a labour exchange. This, he put down to the severe restrictions imposed on Category A Republican Prisoners & the 'Institutionalisation' of many years imprisonment. Boyce was a Sinn Féin candidate in absentia at the 1955 general election in Belfast West, where he placed last out of three candidates. The Ulster Unionist Patricia McLaughlin won the seat, defeating the then-incumbent Jack Beattie of Irish Labour.

1954

Boyce was later captured leading an IRA arms raid on the military barracks in Omagh, County Tyrone, on 17 October 1954, for which he was sentenced to twelve years' penal servitude in Belfast Gaol. Despite the raid's failure, the resulting publicity surrounding Boyce's trial brought considerable recruits and funding for the organisation. Forty years following his release, Boyce's prison diaries were published as The Insider: The Belfast Prison Diaries of Eamonn Boyce, 1956–1962 detailing daily life inside the infamous prison during the Border Campaign.

The man was posted to Armagh, and while there, kept in contact with Murphy and Boyce at soldiers' dances. The two men would leave the hall, appearing to court the various girls they brought with them to the dance, but, in actuality, were meeting their informants and doing scouting the area outside the installation, gathering substantial information on troop movements and weapons storage. This information was backed up with detailed maps and photographs taken with a Minix spy camera. The eventually felt confident enough to plan the raid for 12 June 1954.

On the night of 16 October 1954, Boyce led 35 men in a second weapons raid in Omagh, County Tyrone, the supply depot for the Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers. The previous week, Magan delivered 20 machine guns to a house in Dublin in preparation for the attack; a "carbon copy of the Armagh raid", it was also to have been co-led by Murphy but ordered to remain Dublin at the last minute. Gearóid Ó Broin, a leading republican during the period, was in charge of the transportation for the raid consisting of two small cars and a lorry. Equipment was also brought to jump start British army lorries which the raiders hoped to later commandeer at the base.

1925

Eamonn Boyce (8 August 1925 – 5 February 2020) was an Irish volunteer of the Irish Republican Army. He was considered among the leading young activists in the organisation in the early 1950s along with Charlie Murphy, Robert Russell, Tom Mitchell, Ruairí Ó Brádaigh and Joe Christle. He and Murphy were responsible for a successful raid on a British military barracks in Armagh in the summer of 1954.

Eamonn Boyce was born on North William Street, Dublin, on 8 August 1925, the eldest son of Edward Boyce and Mary Josephine Boyce (née Dunne). He was working as a CIÉ Bus Conductor when he was first recruited by the Irish Republican Army in 1952. His father had joined the Irish Volunteers in 1914 to fight for the Independence of Ireland, but he followed John Redmond’s call for Irishmen to join in the ‘Great War’ with the promise of Home Rule as the reward. Edward Boyce fought for the British Army in France during World War I.

1916

He learned that his mother had also suffered during his incarceration, not only because of the emotional stress, but through the loss of Boyce's income and reportedly unknowingly aiding his accomplices; for months, several hundredweights of gelignite had been hidden under her bed. He was eventually able to get his job back as a bus conductor and later married Dympna McConnell, a grand-niece of Michael Mallin, Chief of Staff of the Irish Citizen Army, executed on 8 May 1916 for his part in the Easter Rising. According to author Tim Pat Coogan, Boyce was a typical "example of what IRA men were like at the time and of what they encountered". Like of his contemporaries of the 1950s, he dropped out of the movement entirely.