) Since the establishment in November 1884, the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) has made a profound impact on Irish social, cultural, political and economic life. This is the opening sentence of the introduction to a new book commissioned by the GAA to celebrate its 125 anniversary The book is called The GAA A Peoples History. The authors of the book are Mike Cronin, Mark Duncan, and Paul Rouse They are no strangers to the GAA or its history. Mike Cronin and Paul Rouse were two of the editors of another book The Gaelic Athletic Association 1884-2009 which was published last March. Mark Duncan was central in establishing the GAA Museum in the mid-1990s The book is fabulously presented. It contains an amazing collection of photographs and images of letters and posters (many seen for the first time) which portray the story of the first 125 years of the GAA as effectively as the text. This is not to belittle the text; rather it is to show that no effort has been spared in the presentation of the book. Twenty five years ago when the GAA celebrated its centenary, the reading public were subjected to a plethora of publication that recorded the great games and characters of the first 100 years. 
Legends such as Ring, Mackey, Stockwell and Purcell, along with the triumphs of Kerry, Tipperary and Kilkenny were held up as the fruits of the GAAs impact Irish social, cultural, political and economic life. These publications and television programmes reflected the GAA of the time. It was still an association the felt it necessary to state and re-state its right to exist This insecurity was not peculiar to the GAA. It was a symptom of Irish society as it was structured in 1984. In contrast to then, the current crop of books (of which this book has so far been the most important) take a more analytical, and even critical, look at Irelands most important voluntary organisation. The GAA, A Peoples History does not record the winners and losers or the heroes and villains, or at least not those of the playing fields. Instead, it looks at the role the GAA has played and how generations of Irish people have spent their time in the hours between work and sleep and how this fascination with Gaelic games has more often than not featured at the cutting edge of a developing society. The images on the dust jacket underline this point. In 1984 the front of this is book would probably have been adorned by images of All-Ireland success or Cú Chulain, and stamped with a Celtic cross, the then symbol of GAA approval.

There are no logos of the GAA on the front, or back of this book. The front cover photograph features three young anonymous Kilkenny hurlers. One is barefoot, one is wearing boots that appear far too big and the third has shoes that seem much too small The picture was taken in 1925 by Fr Browne. The back cover shows a group of men watching a local game in Clare in 1954. These are certainly not the images of an organisation that is uncomfortable with its past. They are images of what the GAA feel they have represented for the past 125 years; the common man. The book is divided into 13 chapters that are meant to signify the essentials of the GAA. Chapter 1 examines the background to the founding of the association; the emergence of sport in Victorian Ireland and reasons behind the unusual alliance that was formed between Michael Cusack and Maurice Davin that led to the founding of the GAA.
One of the highlights of this chapter is the reproduction (on four pages) of a letter that Michael Cusack wrote to Davin in the summer of 1884. It contains the following paragraph. Dont bother your head about Dublin The place couldnt well be worse than it is Well have to look to the provinces for men. Dublin will have to fall in Those who organise clubs throughout the country, and who find their competitions constantly interfered with by the inter-county fixture list and financial monster that is Croke Park, must surely wonder if much has changed in 125 years. We are told that The games may be unrecognisable from those game rapturously described in the early press reports of Michael Cusack, but they have never been so popularWinning and maintaining possession are now standard priorities. Whether the modern games are better of worse than those that went before is the stuff of bar-room debate and subjective analysis. I was particularly taken by the chapter on Women and the GAA. It explains how womens participation in sport was practically ignored in the Victorian era.