Life in Scotland Connolly moved to Scotland around 1889, arriving in
Perth, where she believed James had been living. By the time she arrived he had moved to
Dundee. She moved as she had the expectation of marriage, which seemed to surprise James, and he did not immediately travel to meet her. She left Perth to move to
London to find employment. They were married in St John the Baptist Church, Perth, on 30 April 1890, having been granted dispensation by the Catholic Bishop of Dunkeld. Following their marriage, they moved to
Edinburgh and lived at 22 West Port in the
Grassmarket area. James worked as a labourer and then as a manure carter with Edinburgh Corporation. They had seven children (six daughters and one son), with six of them reaching adulthood: • Mona, born 11 April 1891 • Nora, born 14 November 1892 • Aideen, born 3 March 1896 • Ina Mary (Mollie), born in November 1896 • Moria Elizabeth, born 1 January 1899 • Roderick James (Roddy), born 11 February 1901 • Fiona, born 22 August 1907 During the first 4 years of their marriage, the Connollys moved 5 times to different addresses in Edinburgh. Their home at 6 Lothian Street became the centre for local socialist meetings. Owing to her better education, Connolly helped her husband's speeches and writing. She shunned the public aspects of her husband's work entirely, only attending one meeting only to flee when he took the stage out of fear. By 1895 the Connollys' financial situation was so straitened that they considered emigrating to
Chile.
Life in Dublin The family returned to Dublin in May 1896 as paid organiser of the Dublin Socialist Society, first living on
Queen Street and later at 76 Charlemont Street. Despite the family's poverty and the tenements in which they lived, her children recalled Connolly as maintaining a very neat appearance and being inventive in her reuse of materials to ensure the longevity of their belongings and clothing. After the premature birth of her daughter, Ina, in November 1896, Connolly visited with her former employers the Wilsons with her new baby. During this period the Connollys were very poor, and Connolly hid from her husband the various ways in which she was lent and given money to pay the rent and for food. In 1897, Connolly met
Maud Gonne after James was arrested. James founded the
Irish Socialist Republican Party in May 1896, and in 1898 ''The Workers' Republic'' newspaper, the first Irish Socialist paper, from their home at number 54 Pimlico. The Connollys never recovered from this tragedy. Connolly and her other children passed through
Ellis Island a few days later in August 1904, being reunited with her husband. The family lived in a large house at 76 Ingalls Avenue, later moving to
Newark. The family moved to
The Bronx in 1907, where Connolly worked as a washerwoman to supplement her husband's unstable earnings.
Return to Ireland In 1910, the family moved back to Ireland when James was offered a job as organiser in
James Larkin's
Irish Transport and General Workers' Union, living in the South Lotts Road in
Ringsend. Connolly and the children moved to
Belfast to help secure employment for their daughters, Nora and Ina. They lived at 1 Glenalina Terrace near the Falls Road. For a period, James lived at
Constance Markievicz's home in Dublin. James would travel up to east
Ulster every weekend. When her husband went on hunger strike while he was imprisoned during the
1913 Lockout, Connolly travelled from Belfast to the
Mansion House and successfully demanded that
Lord Aberdeen order his release. Connolly found life in Belfast hard, and became very isolated despite her daughters' best efforts. ==Easter Rising==