| History | Kathleen Lynn was born 28 January 1874 in county Mayo, the second child of Robert Lynn, a church of Ireland clergyman, and his wife Catherine nee Wynne.
Lynn's family upbringing was comfortable and her connections aristocratic, she was educated in Manchester, Düsseldorf and Alexander College, Dublin. In 1899 she graduated from Cecilia Street (the Catholic University medical school) and after working in the United Sates, became a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons in 1909.
Lynn ran a private practice from her home in Rathmines, as well as working on the staff of Sir Patrick Dun's Hospital, at the Rotunda Lying-in Hospital, and from 1910 to 1916 at the Royal Victoria Eye and Ear Hospital.
Aside from her medical career, Lynn was an active suffragist, labour activist and nationalist, and was friends with many of the leading figures of the day. The influence of James Connolly, her work in the soup kitchens during the 1913 lockout, and involvement with the Irish Women Workers' Union, of which she was Honorary Vice-President in 1917, brought her into close contact with the Dublin poor. Which lead to a lifelong campaign to improve the living conditions of Dublin's poorer citizens.
A member of the Irish Citizen's Army, she taught first-aid to Cumann na mBan and was the Chief Medical Officer during the 1916 rising. In the aftermath of the rising she was imprisoned in Kilmainham with her close friends Madeleine ffrench-Mullen, Helena Molony and Constance Markievicz. Following her release Lynn was an active member of Sinn Fein, serving as Vice-President of the Executive in 1917, as well as being a leading figure in Cumann na dTeachtaire (the league of Women delegates).
Lynn was elected TD for Dublin County on the anti-treaty side in 1923 but did not take her seat, which she failed to retain it in the 1927 election. From this point her role in national politics faded, although she remained an active member of the Rathmines Urban District Council between 1920 and 1930.
Lynn's medical career is defined by her work in Saint Ultan's Hospital, which she established in 1919 with a group of female activists to provide medical and educational facilities for impoverished mothers and infants.
In response to Lynn's earlier difficulties in getting a staff position at a hospital because of her gender, Saint Ultan's was managed entirely by female doctors although males were employed as specialists. The hospital provided much needed opportunities for female doctors, and many of the most prominent Irish female doctors of the period worked there with Lynn. On opening in 1919 the hospital had only two cots, but rapidly grew and developed.
In 1937 Dr Dorothy Stopford-Price introduced the BCG vaccination for TB. The hospital became the headquarters for the National BCG Committee. The success of the hospital owed much to the hard work and commitment of Lynn and its founders, and the donations and fundraising of its supporters.
From 1903 to her death in 1955 Lynn lived at 9 Belgrave Road, Rathmines, a home she shared with her friend and confidante Madeleine ffrench-Mullen, until Madeleine's death in 1944. Lynn died on 14 September 1955, and was buried in the family plot in Deans Grange Cemetery with full military honours. |
| Custodial History | Following the donation of the diaries to the College, Margaret Connolly was employed to create a full transcript of the diaries. During this work she removed loose items held within the diaries and classified them, this material can be found in part two of the collection list. |