Kathleen Lynn was born on 28 January 1874 in the
townland of Mullafarry, near
Killala in
County Mayo, to a
Church of Ireland clergyman, Robert Young Lynn, and his wife, Catherine Wynne, and was their second of four children. Her mother, Catherine, was a great granddaughter of
Owen Wynne of
Hazelwood House, County Sligo. In 1882, the family moved to
Shrule in County
Longford where her father took over as the clergyman of the Ballymahon parish. Later on in her young life, in 1886 Lynn and her family moved to
Cong, a village bordering Mayo and Galway, to where her father's parish was being funded by the
Lady Ardilaun of
Ashford Castle. She was sent to the
Alexandra College, of which Lady Ardilaun was the patron, in Dublin, which she attended till she was sixteen years old. She was distantly related to
Countess Markievicz through her aunt's marriage. Growing up in the aftermath of
The Great Famine (1845 – 1852), She was deeply saddened by the deadly diseases and poverty suffered by the people in her local area. This led to her desire at sixteen, when she left school, to become a doctor. Lynn's family didn't approve of her role in the Rising. In fact, at the time, Lynn's family were so disgusted with her activities that they would not let her return home to Cong, County Mayo, for Christmas. She instead had to spend Christmas 1917 with her aunt Florence in Dublin. She did the same the following year. This personal split was eventually settled before her father's death in 1923. Lynn lived in
Rathmines from 1903 to her death in 1955, sharing her home with her life partner
Madeleine ffrench-Mullen. She also had a holiday cottage in
Glenmalure,
County Wicklow - not far from
Glendalough where a number of her Wynne cousins lived. She left the cottage to
An Óige, the Irish youth hostel association, on her death. Lynn wrote a diary from Easter 1916 until 1955, beginning with her involvement in the 1916 Rising until two months before her death. ==Education==