Introduction. Nationalists, who wanted Home Rule, had been committed to the war by John Redmond, leader of the Irish Parliamentary Party (IPP).

Similar documents
Of necessity, this presentation is limited and selective. Those wishing to study the Rising and its context in more detail may find the brief

The Home Rule Party 1870 to 1914

QUESTIONS & ANSWERS LESSON 1 // BEFORE THE REVOLUTION EXTENSION ACTIVITY 1 EXTENSION ACTIVITY 2 QUESTIONS & ANSWERS

The story of Winifred Carney. Key Stage Two Learning Resource

Subverting the Empire: Irish Nationalists and British Intelligence, Clare Norcio, Brandeis University

James Craig MP, 1 st Viscount Craigavon ( )

Michael Collins. Presented by. Alexandra Wiltheis & Katrin Schmidt

Leaving Certificate History The Pursuit of Sovereignty and the Impact of Partition,

2016 JANUARY THE CENTENARY CELEBRATION YEAR THE LONG ROAD TO IRELAND S INDEPENDENCE

Mabel FitzGerald Correspondence

EOIN MACNEILL ADDITIONAL PAPERS LA 1 / N. UCD Archives

NORTHERN IRELAND: A DIVIDED COMMUNITY, CABINET PAPERS OF THE STORMONT ADMINISTRATION

The British Parliament

Ireland The course will follow the following structure:

World History Irish Independence

Fighting for whom ?

Dear Delegates and Moderators,

1970s Northern Ireland. Topic C: Catholic Civil Rights

Celebrating 100 years of. Votes for Women was also the year in which the first woman was elected to the British Parliament at Westminster.

Leaving Certificate history case study Anglo-Irish Treaty ebook Read Michael Collins and Éamon de Valera s secret correspondence

Ireland Lesson plans, worksheets & other resources. Gary Hillyard. Ashfield School, Kirkby-in-Ashfield

Culture Clash: Northern Ireland Nonfiction STUDENT PAGE 403 TEXT. Conflict in Northern Ireland: A Background Essay. John Darby

IRELAND: A DIVIDED COUNTRY

Northern Ireland. Northern Ireland is created. John Redmond & Arthur Griffith 1922) The Ulster Covenant, 28 September 1912

Ireland in the 20th Century History Notes JC-Learn. JC-Learn. History Notes Ireland in the 20th Century. 1 P a g e

England and the 13 Colonies: Growing Apart

Witness. Identity. Member of Cumann na mban Captain Subject. Nil.

In Dublin City in 1913 The boss was rich and the poor were slaves The women working and the children hungry Then on came Larkin like a mighty wave

Ireland through French eyes: reports from Ireland in French newspapers in the 20th century

Those who Set the Stage Those concerned with Home Rule (for and against) Carson and the Ulster unionists

County Donegal in 1916 History and Heritage Education Pack - an introduction... 3 County Donegal in A brief overview... 4

Martin McGuinness' Jubilee handshake

Those who Set the Stage Republicans and those who would resort to physical force John Devoy, Joseph McGarrity and Clan na Gael

*GHY11* History. Unit 1: Studies in Depth. Foundation Tier [GHY11] MONDAY 3 JUNE, AFTERNOON. TIME 2 hours.

The Conflict in Northern Ireland

Someone, somehow, somewhere must strike the first blow for Ireland.

Towards a Lasting Peace in Ireland

For more on the suffrage campaign and the war:

file:///c /Dokumente%20und%20Einstellungen/Michael/Desktop/REFS/Ready%20to%20do/10_10_05/THENORTHERNIRELANDCONFLICT.html

4: TELESCOPING THE TIMES

GCSE. History CCEA GCSE TEACHER GUIDANCE. Unit 1 Section B Option 2: Changing Relations: Northern Ireland and its Neighbours,

Statement by Mr. Seán Saunders, 19. Phibsborough Avenue, N.C.Rd., Dublin. I joined the Fianna late in 1910 at 34, Lr.

Written & Illustrated by J. O Reilly

The 1916 Easter Rising and Irish Independence by Danielle Mazzo and Kerry Schaefer

NATIONAL ARCHIVES IRELAND

IRELAND: A DIVIDED COUNTRY

Sunday Bloody Sunday Web Quest. Historical, socio-cultural cultural and political issues

YEAR THREE / SECTION TWO POLITICAL DEVELOPMENTS IN 20 C IRELAND

HISTORY NOTES. SUBJECT: History LEVEL: Higher TEACHER: Sean Delap. The Institute of Education Topics Covered: Case Study: The Anglo Irish Treaty

Study Guide for Test representative government system of government in which voters elect representatives to make laws for them

University College Dublin. Institute for British-Irish Studies.

COSANTA. ROINN. BURO STALREMÍLEATA (BureauofMilitaryHistory ), 26 RAEDHNANIARTHARACH, (26WestlandRow), BAILEATHACLIATH (Durblin)

The History of the Twentieth Century

Canada socially, politically, and economically?

AS History. Paper 2M Wars and Welfare: Britain in Transition, Additional Specimen Mark scheme. Version/Stage: Stage 0.1

Cumulative Percent. Frequency Percent Valid Percent Traditional Unionist Voice Sinn Fein

NOTES: People of the Revolution (Part 1)

Chapter 7 APUSH Lecture

Coimisiún na Scrúduithe Stáit State Examinations Commission

Anderson Stockley Accredited Training Ltd

HISTORY HIGHER LEVEL (180 MARKS)

The South Secedes By USHistory.org 2016

ROINN COSANTA. BUREAU OF MILITARY HISTORY, Identity. Subject. stipulated by Witness. Nil.

Year 11 History Easter Revision 10 th April 2017

CHAPTER 1. Isaac Butt and the start of Home Rule, Ireland in the United Kingdom. Nationalists. Unionists

After the Scotland Act (1998) new institutions were set up to enable devolution in Scotland.

European Union. European Regional Development Fund Investing in your future. St Andrews Agreement. An Aid for Dialogue

Coimisiún na Scrúduithe Stáit State Examinations Commission

A Brief History of the Spanish Civil War

Revolutions of 1848 France February Revolution

The Declaration of Independence

The Irish Folly : The Easter Rising: the Press; the People; the Politics.

LESSON ONE: THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE

Mary Spring Rice to Michael Joseph (The) O Rahilly, 1 and 9 May 1914

WHY DID AMERICAN COLONISTS WANT TO FREE THEMSELVES FROM GREAT BRITAIN?

Northern Ireland Dr Gordon Gillespie July 2016

persons are imprisoned on the authority of a senior politician and without due process or

Important dates (International, national, Cork)

Guide to the John Byrne Collection

Political Opinion Poll

The American Revolution: From Elite Protest to Popular Revolt,

From Protest to Rebellion Constitutional Issues

BY WITNESS. Witness. Seamus Mac Diarmada, 8 Owen Roe Terrace, Cavan, Co. Cavan. Identity. Subject. Nil

The United Kingdom: Political Institutions. Lauren Cummings

When was Britain closest to revolution in ?

Northern Ireland during World War II

Sectional disagreements moved settlers into the new territories. Settlers remained Northerners or Southerners.

The Long. Walk To Freedom. 3rd Human Rights Day Candlelit March 10 December pm

General Election Opinion Poll. January 2017

Louth County Archives Service. Saorstát na héireann documents,

PRESS WATCH - Facing up the the dark side of the 'Four Glorious Years. Eoghan Harris in the Irish Independent yesterday.

Declaring Independence. ESSENTIAL QUESTION: What motivates people to act?

Unit 3 A New Nation; Chapter 9: The Thirteen Colonies Rebel ( )

Causes of the American Revolution

The Boston Tea Party

20/03/2018. A short Tour of Ireland

The Federalist Papers

Can your decisions win the Civil War?

Revolution in Thought 1607 to 1763

5. Base your answer on the map below and on your knowledge of social studies.

Transcription:

Introduction In the years leading up to the First World War, Nationalists and Unionists were opposed over the issue of Irish Home Rule. The Nationalists wanted their own Parliament in Dublin, while Unionists were opposed to this on religious and economic grounds. By 1914 the Home Rule Crisis had deepened and sharply divided the country, leading to the formation of the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) and Irish Volunteers. Both groups had armed themselves with guns covertly brought in from Germany. The outbreak of war in August 1914 temporarily defused the situation as both sides throughout Ireland provided recruits and generally supported the war effort. Nationalists, who wanted Home Rule, had been committed to the war by John Redmond, leader of the Irish Parliamentary Party (IPP). A minority of the Irish Volunteers, led by Eoin MacNeill, disagreed with Redmond and broke away. The larger Redmonite group became known as National Volunteers, and was supported by most Nationalists in south Armagh and south Down. The anti-war minority retained the name, Irish Volunteers. The Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB), a secret revolutionary group, exercised influence with the Volunteers and planned the Rising without MacNeill s knowledge. Despite two major setbacks, the interception of a ship carrying weapons from Germany and the subsequent cancellation order given by MacNeill, rd the Rising took place on Easter Sunday 23 April 1916. Poster advertising a Home Rule meeting in Newry, 1911 Armagh County Museum Collection Illuminated front cover of Newry s Roll of Honour Newry had reputedly one of the highest enlistment rates of any town in Ireland and the Roll of Honour records 867 names. It remains unfinished as no further names were added after April1915. From 1916 onwards, recruitment began to fall away due to the heavy losses sustained on the western front. By 1918 supporters of Sinn Féin began to disrupt some of the recruiting rallies, most notably in Newry at the end of August 1918. The Rising had some direct impact on the local area. A Newry man, Patrick Rankin, took part in the Rising and was involved in forming barricades in the General Post Office (GPO), and in street fighting. Newry IRB members, John Southwell and Robert Kelly, were arrested after the Rising and imprisoned. The shooting of Francis Sheehy-Skeffington, a famous pacifist, writer and supporter of women s suffrage, by Captain Bowen-Colhurst had local repercussions as Skeffington was originally from Downpatrick. Members of the South Down UVF marching through Kilkeel Courtesy of PRONI d2638/d/49/145 Postcard of Downpatrick under Home Rule These postcards were issued by Unionists to show what they thought towns in Ireland might be like under Home Rule. Down County Museum Collection

Easter Week During Easter Week 1916 a small group comprising Irish Volunteers and members of James Connolly s Irish Citizen Army, seized Dublin s GPO and proclaimed an Irish Republic. British forces were brought into Dublin to put down the Rising, which lasted for almost a week. Letter written by an unknown author who attended the month s mind mass for Thomas MacDonagh, one of the leaders executed after the Rising Éamon Donnelly Collection, Newry and Mourne Museum Collection There was Requiem Mass this morning in the University Church for the repose of the soul of Professor Mac Donagh Mrs Mac Donagh was weeping all the time. She was dressed in black (excepting of course the Republican colours) the little boy was with Miss Grace Gifford and had a white suit on him and the little girl had a little white frock. Poor little things. Postcard featuring the signatories of the Irish Proclamation which was issued during the Easter Rising, by the Irish Volunteers and Irish Citizen Army Courtesy of Cathy Brooks Outside of Dublin, some Irish Volunteer units had also mobilised in places such as Cork, Galway and Coalisland, but because of Eoin MacNeill s countermanding order, most of them returned home without fighting In Dublin 64 of the rebels were killed, along with 132 British soldiers and around 230 civilians. Public opinion was initially unsympathetic to the rebels due to the loss of life and the destruction of public buildings in Dublin. In Newry, the Nationalist Frontier Sentinel newspaper described the events in Dublin as a Wicked and Insane Movement. After the execution of the key leaders of the Rising, including Patrick Pearse and James Connolly and mass arrests of IRB members and Sinn Féin supporters, there was an upsurge of sympathy among many of the Nationalist population. Postcard showing Sackville Street, Dublin, after the Rising Design: G. Watters 07929131753

Patrick Rankin participant The following witness statement given to the Bureau of Military History in 1948 refers to the Easter Rising of 1916: Born in Newry in 1889, Patrick Rankin was a painter by trade. In 1907 he became a member of the IRB. Courtesy of Joe Murray Peter McCann proposed that the three of us (Peter, my brother Owen and myself) should go to Dublin. I thought it over, one brother in the family was sufficient, and Peter McCann was better living for Ireland... I got John Southwell s bicycle as it was more free than my own, which was a Pierce of Wexford, and very heavy It rained very heavily... until I arrived in Dublin about 7.30 p.m. (I carried a six inch revolver on my journey and, fortunately, I was not stopped by the police). In a short time I was brought before Tom Clarke who knew me previously and he asked me had I any news of the North. I told him I had none. I think the old veteran knew as much as I did, but he never said a bad word about any man or county in the North. He thanked me for getting through to the G.P.O. but he would have been delighted and happy to have had some hundreds of his own people from the Patrick Rankin (left) in the uniform of the Northern Counties present. Philadelphia National Guard Courtesy of the Irish Military Archives In June 1914 Patrick Rankin went to live in Philadelphia, where he joined the National Guard. In his witness statement of 1948, Rankin said that he had joined the National Guards to train and prepare for the future. Rankin s descriptive account after his arrest highlights the diverse views of the Dublin public on the Rising. This includes an old woman saying God bless you boys, but others were not so sympathetic; with women following the prisoners shouting to the soldiers; use your rifles on the German so and so s. Courtesy of Joe Murray Rankin was later imprisoned in Stafford prison in England, before being interned at Frongoch Camp in Wales. He was held until July 1916, and allowed to return to Newry. Ruins of the General Post Office in Dublin after the Rising Down County Museum Collection

Local involvement Harry Willis On his way home from Dublin on Easter Monday evening, Harry Willis had his car commandeered by a group of armed Volunteers from Castlebellingham. The following account is taken from the Frontier Sentinel, 6th May 1916: Mr. Harry Willis, son of Mr. Thomas P. Willis, Newry, was one of those who on Easter Monday evening had his motor car commandeered by the Sinn Féiners near Castlebellingham, when he was returning from Dublin. The other occupants of the vehicle Dr. Cronin, Mr. W. C. M. Thomas P. Willis, father of Harry Willis, was a staunch Unionist, who had been Chairman of Newry Urban District Council Smith, V.S., and Mr. W. H. Connor were ordered out, and till 5 a.m. on Tuesday morning he had a most exciting time conveying parties of insurgents to Tara Hill, Oldcastle, Drumcondra, and other parts. Mr. Willis s father is a member of the Carsonite Provisional Government, and additional humour is lent to the performance through the same motor having participated in the memorable gun-running scenes at Larne a few years ago. John Bannon From Newry, Jack Bannon was in Dublin during Easter 1916. Like a number of army reservists, he had been called up with the outbreak of war. The following information comes from his diary which details his wartime experiences: Then came the Dublin Rebellion Easter Week 1916 when we were ordered for Dublin. A troop train left Belfast with a few hundred troops aboard, From the moment we arrived in Dublin we were sniped from every quarter house, top gates and windows, and from John Bannon in the uniform of the Royal Irish Rifles After the Rising John Bannon applied to be a Drill Instructor in any part of Africa, and served in the King s African Rifles in East Africa until April 1919. Courtesy of Patrick Bannon houses overlooking the station, and any of our boys who tried to leave the Station generally got knocked out by these snipers. After two days we left the railway station and got into the city, but in doing so we lost quite a few men. The British Forces were in several parts of the city at this time, but were not in touch with one another, with the result one party at a time was firing at each other and caused a number of casualties. We had little to do with this affair and all were delighted when it was over. Courtesy of Patrick Bannon Éamon Donnelly and his eldest child, Eleanor (Nellie), c.1923 On Easter Sunday 1916 Donnelly joined with Volunteers from the north who mobilised at Coalisland, Co. Tyrone. He later acted as director of elections in 1918 for the Sinn Féin party in north east Ulster and was a founder member of Fianna Fáil. Éamon Donnelly Collection, Newry and Mourne Museum Collection

Political Aftermath As Nationalist attitudes hardened with the execution of the leaders of the Rising, many former supporters of the IPP turned to Sinn Féin. The death of the south Armagh IPP MP, Dr. Charles O Neill, provided the opportunity for the first electoral clash in Ulster between Sinn Féin and the IPP. Violence characterised some of the campaigning, Countess Constance Markievicz was pelted with eggs in Newry and Éamon de Valera was reputedly injured near Crossmaglen, while supporting the Sinn Féin candidate Dr. Patrick MacCartan. The IPP candidate, Patrick Donnelly, was a Newry Painting of Éamon de Valera by Margaret Clarke, 1928 Éamon de Valera, the only leader of the Easter Rising not to be executed, was a member of Sinn Féin until 1926. He founded a new party, Fianna Fáil, and was subsequently elected Taoiseach or Prime Minister three times and then President of the Irish Republic. Margaret Clarke (nee Crilly) was a Newry-born artist who became one of Ireland s foremost portrait painters in the inter-war years. solicitor and his campaign included visits by leading members of the IPP including Joseph Devlin and John Dillon. The election was won by the IPP, but the campaign had helped boost the profile of Sinn Féin in the area. In the general election held in December South Armagh by-election poster produced by Sinn Féin, 1918 From a by-election contest precipitated by the death of the sitting MP. In response to a fall in recruitment across the British Isles from 1915 onwards, various levels of conscription were introduced in a series of Military Service Acts. The threat of conscription being extended to Ireland became a contentious issue in Irish politics after 1916. Reproduced courtesy of The Irish News and Fiana Griffin. Photography by Bryan Rutledge. 1918, as part of an electoral pact, the Sinn Féin candidate in the South Down constituency, Éamon de Valera, withdrew his candidature to ensure a victory for the IPP candidate, Jeremiah McVeagh. Across Ireland as a whole, though, the election was a disaster for the IPP. Sinn Féin gained 73 out of the 105 seats, while the Unionists took 26 seats and the IPP only six. Local Nationalists Standing, Frank Aiken (2 nd from left), John McCoy (4 th from left),and seated Padraig Quinn (left) and Ned Fitzpatrick (right). In April 1917, Aiken hoisted a number of Sinn Féin flags around Camlough and in April 1918 he was arrested and imprisoned for illegal drilling. Reproduced by kind permission of UCD Achives