When
Dublin proposed that the ban on
hockey players be removed in 1939 a special delegate conference was called. Ulster Council wanted a single delegate per county at this conference, in effect enabling them to outvote Dublin, which had three quarters of the members and half the registered clubs of the association at the time. Ulster Council then organised a boycott of the special delegate conference at which the
Dublin and
Kildare delegates unanimously removed the ban on hockey players. The rest of the affiliated counties seceded en masse as did the Central Council of the
Camogie Association, but not, crucially the president
Máire Gill or the secretary
Esther Ryan. The Dublin-based
Camogie Association life president
Agnes O'Farrelly and the energetic national organiser
Sean O'Duffy kept contact with both sides. This left
Dublin and its client clubs in Leinster as the only remaining members of the "old association" while the rest discussed a "new" National Camógaíocht Association at Jury's Hotel in Dublin on 23 July 1939. It was established soon afterwards at a meeting in Jury's Hotel on 26 August, at which Rosemary Marron of Antrim presided, with Jean Condon from Ashbourne as its president. Delegates attended from Wexford, Meath and Cork as well as the Ulster counties and letters of support were read from Galway, Louth and a few Dublin clubs that were in favour of the retention of the ban. They sought the help of the GAA to further their objectives and expected to stage their All-Ireland final at
Croke Park on the first Sunday that the ground was available in November. Dublin's strong league structure and access to playing fields in the
Phoenix Park enabled it to carry on as normal without any change to practice. In the meantime the National Camógaíocht Association organised the All Ireland championships in
1939 and
1940, albeit without the
O'Duffy Cup, which remained in Dublin custody. In
1941 the
CIÉ Club affiliated to the Central Council and qualified for the All Ireland semi-final, setting an important precedent and putting Dublin's position of isolation under pressure. In October 1941
Pádraig Ó Caoimh, General Secretary of the GAA mediated a settlement under which Dublin reaffiliated,
Máire Gill and
Esther Ryan stood down,
Lil Kirby was elected new president and
Jean McHugh became new secretary of the
Camogie Association. The reaffiliated Dublin team met Cork in the All Ireland finals of
1942 and
1943, re-establishing their hegemony as the two leading counties in the game. ==Alternative All-Ireland final: Cork==