During the
Civil War, Grace Plunkett was arrested with many others in February 1923 and interned at Kilmainham Gaol for three months. She painted pictures on the walls of her cell, including one of the
Blessed Virgin and the
Christ Child. The current picture of the Madonna displayed in her cell is a recreation of the original by Thomas Ryan RHA. She was released in May 1923. When the Civil War ended, she had no home of her own and little money. Like many Anti-Treaty Republicans, Grace was the target of social ostracism and had difficulty finding work. Her talent as an artist was her only real asset; her cartoons were published in various newspapers and magazines, including
Dublin Opinion, the
Irish Tatler,
Sketch, and on one occasion in 1934,
Punch. She illustrated
W. B. Yeats'
The Words upon the Window Pane in 1930. She moved from one rented apartment to another and ate in city centre restaurants. She befriended many people and had many admirers, but had no wish to remarry. Her material circumstances improved in 1932 when she received a Civil List pension from
Éamon de Valera's
Fianna Fáil government. At around this time, she joined the
Old Dublin Society, where she met the noted Irish
harpsichord maker
Cathal Gannon. When Cathal married, Grace gave him and his wife Margaret a present of two single beds and a picture. From the late 1940s onwards, Grace's health declined. In 1950 she was brought to
St Vincent's Hospital, then in the city centre. She convalesced in a nursing home, which she did not like, mainly because it restricted her freedom. Grace Gifford Plunkett died suddenly on 13 December 1955 in her apartment in
South Richmond Street,
Portobello. Her body was removed to
St Kevin's Church, Harrington Street and among the attendees at her funeral was President
Seán T. O'Kelly. She was buried with full military honours close to the republican plot in
Glasnevin Cemetery. ==Cultural depictions==