Ashe was released from jail in June 1917 under the general amnesty which was given to republican prisoners. Upon release, Ashe returned to Ireland and began a series of speaking engagements. In August 1917, Ashe was arrested and charged with
sedition for a speech that he made in
Ballinalee,
County Longford, where
Michael Collins had also been speaking. He went on the run but was captured in Dublin and detained at the Curragh but was then transferred to
Mountjoy Prison in Dublin. He was convicted on the sedition charge and sentenced to two years hard labour. Ashe and other prisoners, including other Kerrymen
Fionán Lynch and
Austin Stack, demanded
prisoner of war status. The Lord Mayor of Dublin
Laurence O'Neill visited Ashe in prison and said Ashe asked for no privileges but refused to be treated as a criminal. As this protest evolved, Ashe again went on hunger strike on 20 September 1917. As this was a breach of prison discipline, the authorities retaliated by taking away the prisoners' beds, bedding and boots. After five or six days lying on a cold stone floor, the prisoners were subjected to forcible feeding. On 25 September, Fionán Lynch saw Ashe being carried away to receive this treatment and called out to him, "Stick it Tom". Ashe called back, "I'll stick it, Fin". That was the last time they spoke to each other. Ashe was carried back, blue in the face and unconscious. He was removed to the
Mater Misericordiae Hospital (which faces the prison), where he died within a few hours. At the
inquest into his death, the jury condemned the staff at the prison for the "inhuman and dangerous operation performed on the prisoner, and other acts of unfeeling and barbaric conduct". They concluded that Ashe had died of heart failure and congestion of the lungs, and that this was due to force-feeding combined with the previous removal of his bed and boots (which had left him in a physically weakened state). The death of Ashe and the subsequent funeral procession had a striking effect on the attitude of the Irish people and became a rallying call to the standard of the Irish Republic. Ashe was given a military funeral and a volley of shots was fired over his coffin, following which
Michael Collins declared "Nothing additional remains to be said, that volley which we have just heard is the only speech which it is proper to make above the grave of a dead Fenian". Though not on the scale of
Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa's funeral two years previous, the military aspect of the funeral proved that the Irish Volunteers were well on their way to being restored to pre-1916 levels. Ashe's remains were removed to the Pro-Cathedral on Thursday evening and placed on a
catafalque in the main entrance. Requiem Mass was celebrated by
Fr. Michael O'Flanagan on Friday morning before removal to City Hall, where his body lay in state for two days. "Tom Ashe's body lay in state in the City Hall, dressed in his Volunteer Republican uniform, and 30,000 mourners filed by." He was related to American actor
Gregory Peck. In 2017 a statue of Ashe was unveiled outside
Round Towers GAA in Lusk. In the same town there is a 'Thomas Ashe Park'. The
Ashe Memorial Hall in
Tralee, County Kerry was named after him. The words "Halla Tomáis Ághas" are embossed on the front of the building. Nearby Ashe Street (formerly Nelson Street) is also named for him. ==See also==