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

Similar documents
The Home Rule Party 1870 to 1914

The British Parliament

Home Rule and Ireland. Ireland at the turn of the century

The Labour Government in Westminster and Northern Ireland

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

Ireland The course will follow the following structure:

James Craig MP, 1 st Viscount Craigavon ( )

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

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

H: IRELAND VISUALS. H1: Daniel O Connell, H2: Irish Potato Famine

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

Richard Rose is professor of politics at the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, Scotland.

Dear Delegates and Moderators,

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

Documents: Irish Home Rule

IRELAND: A DIVIDED COUNTRY

AP EUROPEAN HISTORY 2008 SCORING GUIDELINES (Form B)

Climb The Liberty Tree

AS History. The English Revolution, Component 2E The origins of the English Civil War, Mark scheme.

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

THIS CLASS DISCUSSION WILL BE GRADED. Some key terms, people and places to get your head round

Language & Religion Impacted by England. The Impact of English colonization on the language and religion of Australia

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

IRELAND: A DIVIDED COUNTRY

Chester County Immigration & Naturalization Maps

THE SUPPRESSION OF LABOUR PARTY POLITICS IN NORTHERN IRELAND AND ITS CONSEQUENCES

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

History. in Cl se-up. union and partition. Russell Rees Audrey M Hodge Norman Johnston Sheila Turner Johnston

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

AN ROINN OIDEACHAIS AGUS EOLAÍOCHTA LEAVING CERTIFICATE EXAMINATION ECONOMIC HISTORY HIGHER LEVEL CHIEF EXAMINER S REPORT

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

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

Michael Collins. Presented by. Alexandra Wiltheis & Katrin Schmidt

How the People Were Governed. Grade 8 Social Studies Unit II - Chapter 4

BRITISH AND AMERICAN LIFE AND INSTITUTIONS PRITISH AND AMERICAN HISTORY

Wednesday 18 May 2016 Afternoon

World History Irish Independence

The United Kingdom: Political Institutions. Lauren Cummings

Part Read about the regions of great Britain and Northern Ireland. Briefly describe its two regions:

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

NAME: DATE: LC History: Movements for Political and Social Reform, Movements for political and social reform,

The final exam will be closed-book.

Managing Perceptions in Conflict Negotiations. CDTs Joe Gallo and Luke Hutchison

English Civil War. Ch. 2 (p )

Leaving Certificate History Movements for political and social reform,

The FAMINE DECADE. Contemporary Accounts edited by JOHN KILLEN THE BLACKSTAFF PRESS BELFAST

Mabel FitzGerald Correspondence

Name Class Date. MATCHING In the space provided, write the letter of the term or person that matches each description. Some answers will not be used.

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

Department of History University of Wisconsin -- Madison Semester II, AY

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

Electoral franchise: who can vote?

Put students into pairs and give each pair a set of questions, cut into cards.

19 th Century. Ireland. The development of Unionism and Nationalism. Dr Russell Rees. Colourpoint Educational

Canada socially, politically, and economically?

HC Factsheets L No 8. (Previously Factsheet 15)

ELITE AND MASS ATTITUDES ON HOW THE UK AND ITS PARTS ARE GOVERNED DEMOCRATIC ENGAGEMENT WITH THE PROCESS OF CONSTITUTIONAL CHANGE

Cross Border Commuters Map - Persons commuting from Ireland to Northern Ireland to work or study by electoral division/ward, 2016

1919 Irish War for Independence

BRITISH PARLIAMENTARY ELECTION RESULTS

Civics and Economics Unit 1 Citizenship and the History of the United States

Republic of Ireland. History. Jorge Muñoz Rodenas. Press CTRL+L. History of Republic of Ireland November 28, 2007 p. 1/11

A Brief History of Orangeism in Ireland

What was the significance of the Coleraine University Controversy and/or the activities of the Apprentice Boys of Derry

GCE History A. Mark Scheme for June Unit : Y108/01 The Early Stewarts and the Origins of the Civil War

A BRIEF OVERVIEW OF IRISH HISTORY

A Level History Unit 17: Unionism and Nationalism Opposing the Second Home Rule Bill

HISTORY SPECIMEN ASSESSMENT MATERIALS GCE AS/A LEVEL. WJEC GCE AS/A LEVEL in. Teaching from 2015 ACCREDITED BY WELSH GOVERNMENT

The Law Commission (LAW COM No 335) CONTEMPT OF COURT: SCANDALISING THE COURT Appendix A: Summary of Responses

AGE OF REVOLUTIONS. By 1750, English settlers in America had established 13 Colonies. These were, in order of their founding;

KEYPOINT REVISION: MIGRATION & EMPIRE KEY POINTS FOR LEARNING

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

What were the main Social and Economic changes in

Paramilitary Groups (Northern Ireland)

Reflections on Human Rights and Citizenship in a Changing Constitutional Context Speech given by Colin Harvey

CHAPTER 2 ORIGINS OF AMERICAN GOVERNMENT SECTION 1: OUR POLITICAL BEGINNINGS

HIS MAJESTY THE KING OF ITALY: M. Benito MUSSOLINI, Member of Parliament, Prime Minister and Minister for Foreign Affairs;

THE IRISH IDENTITY: INDEPENDENCE, HISTORY, & LITERATURE

NORTHERN IRELAND-AN ANTI-IMPERIALIST STRUGGLE

Apprentice Boys of Derry (Case Study) POLITICS & SOCIETY IN NORTHERN IRELAND,

Presidential Address THE POLITICS OF DRINK IN BRITAIN: ANGLO-AMERI- CAN PERSPECTIVES

CHAPTER 58 LEGAL ADVICE AND PROCEEDINGS. (MOD Sponsor: NAVY COMMAND DCS LAW)

Coimisiún na Scrúduithe Stáit State Examinations Commission

The Enlightenment The Birth of Revolutionary Thought What is the Enlightenment?

The Weekly Law Reports 28 March W.L.R. *Ex parte MOLYNEAUX AND OTHERS Nov. 25 Taylor J.

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

The sure bet by Theresa May ends up in a hung Parliament

Chapter 7 APUSH Lecture

Overstating and Misjudging the Prospects of Civil War: The Ulster Volunteer Force and the Irish Volunteers in the Home Rule Crisis,

BRITISH GENERAL ELECTION MANIFESTOS

NEIGHBOURHOOD PLANNING BILL EXPLANATORY NOTES

HISTORY HIGHER LEVEL (180 MARKS)

UNISON S POLITICAL FUNDS WHAT THEY DO

Compare the vote Level 3

From Stand by Their Men to The Whole Human Sisterhood : Gender, Religion, and. Power in the Ulster Unionist Movement. Undergraduate Thesis

Coimisiún na Scrúduithe Stáit State Examinations Commission

Historical Perspective-Development of Legal Profession In India

Compare the vote Level 1

Chapter 5: DEFINING AMERICAN WAR AIMS

Nationalist Parties PROFESSOR VERNON BOGDANOR FBA CBE 6 MARCH 2018

Transcription:

3.0 3.1 3.1.4 Those who Set the Stage Those concerned with Home Rule (for and against) Carson and the Ulster unionists Carson and the Ulster unionists contributed to the Rising by returning the threat of violence to Irish public life and showing that such methods were productive. If it were not for developments in Ulster, the Irish Volunteers would probably never have been established: the republican separatists would not have had such an effective para-military force to power the 1916 Rising. Edward Henry Carson (1854-1935) was a Dubliner, born into a professional family at 4 Harcourt Street. Educated at Portarlington School, Trinity College, Dublin and King s Inns, he practised at the Irish bar. Much of his early work involved representing tenant farmers claiming reductions under Gladstone s 1881 Land Act; his talents were later employed on the side of landlords when, as crown counsel, he prosecuted cases arising from the Plan of Campaign. In 1892 he was appointed solicitor-general for Ireland. He next practised at the bar in England where he was successful in many high-profile cases, such as in his masterly defence of the Marquis of Queensberry in the libel suit brought by Oscar Wilde - his contemporary at Trinity College. In 1900 he became solicitorgeneral for England, a ministerial office with a knighthood attached. 1

In the meantime, Carson had entered politics, becoming a Unionist MP for Trinity College in 1892. He was dedicated to furthering what he saw as the best interests of Ireland, warning British ministers against their everlasting attempt to make peace in Ireland by giving sops to one party at the expense of the other. In February 1910 he became leader of the Irish Unionist MPs at Westminster, then about twenty in number. Apart from a few instances in the south such as Trinity College and South County Dublin, most Unionist constituencies were in Ulster. Ulster had a substantial unionist element, descendants of English and Scottish settlers, who had arrived mainly in the seventeenth century. Their numbers, approximately 900,000 in 1911 - one fifth of the total Irish population - had enabled them to maintain their ethnic identity, their religion (mainly Presbyterian or Anglican), their cultural traditions, and their loyalty to the British crown - a loyalty which was not, however, unconditional: in the late eighteenth century large numbers took part in the rebellion of the United Irishmen in pursuit of an Irish republic. Mostly middle or working class, they had a flourishing industrial economy, the linen and ship-building industries being particularly strong. Apart from being unionist in sympathy, the Ulster Protestants did not want to be governed by a Home Rule parliament and administration dominated by Catholics, the slogan Home Rule is Rome Rule succinctly expressing their fears. Carson s strategy was to exploit Ulster unionist opposition as a means of preventing Home Rule and maintaining the whole of Ireland within the Union. He believed that if Ulster could not be coerced into accepting Home Rule, the policy would be abandoned. Accordingly, he used the unionist opposition skilfully orchestrated by James Craig to his advantage: he supported the Solemn League and Covenant, he sanctioned the establishment of the Ulster Volunteer Force in 1912 and its arming in 1914, and he was prepared to head an Ulster provisional government designed to take control on the enactment of Home Rule. He used the underlying threat of violence and civil war to force a settlement acceptable to Ulster, never being effectively challenged by Asquith s government. 2

When it became clear that Home Rule was inevitable, he concentrated on having those counties with substantial unionist populations excluded from its jurisdiction, of necessity abandoning the considerable numbers of unionists in the counties to be included. On the outbreak of war and the temporary shelving of Home Rule, Carson enthusiastically supported the war effort, pledging the Ulster Volunteer Force for service overseas. Following the 1916 Rising, he offered the services of the UVF for the maintenance of the King s authority. In the House of Commons, he pleaded for clemency for the leaders, concluding one of his statements: Whatever is done, let it be done not in a moment of temporary excitement, but with due deliberation in regard both to the past and to the future. 3

Sir Edward Carson MP, leader of the Irish Unionist Parliamentary Party. (Ulster s Covenant. The Great Resolve, 1912). 4

The Ulster Unionist Council was established in 1904-5 as a co-ordinating body for various unionist organisations. 5

The Ulster Unionist Council was established in 1904-5 as a co-ordinating body for various unionist organisations. 6

Beck s Linen Factory, Belfast; in contrast to the rest of Ireland which was industrially under-developed, Ulster had a flourishing economy as evidenced by such great factories. The economic disparity was one of the reasons why many Ulster people opposed Home Rule. (Lawrence R2414). 7

8 The text of a major speech by Carson, 27 Sept. 1912, the eve of the signing of Ulster s Solemn League and Covenant. (Ulster s Covenant. The Great Resolve, 1912).

9 The text of a major speech by Carson, 27 Sept. 1912, the eve of the signing of Ulster s Solemn League and Covenant. (Ulster s Covenant. The Great Resolve, 1912).

10 The text of a major speech by Carson, 27 Sept. 1912, the eve of the signing of Ulster s Solemn League and Covenant. (Ulster s Covenant. The Great Resolve, 1912).

11 The text of a major speech by Carson, 27 Sept. 1912, the eve of the signing of Ulster s Solemn League and Covenant. (Ulster s Covenant. The Great Resolve, 1912).

12 The text of a major speech by Carson, 27 Sept. 1912, the eve of the signing of Ulster s Solemn League and Covenant. (Ulster s Covenant. The Great Resolve, 1912).

13 The text of a major speech by Carson, 27 Sept. 1912, the eve of the signing of Ulster s Solemn League and Covenant. (Ulster s Covenant. The Great Resolve, 1912).

14 The text of a major speech by Carson, 27 Sept. 1912, the eve of the signing of Ulster s Solemn League and Covenant. (Ulster s Covenant. The Great Resolve, 1912).

15 The text of a major speech by Carson, 27 Sept. 1912, the eve of the signing of Ulster s Solemn League and Covenant. (Ulster s Covenant. The Great Resolve, 1912).

Carson signing the Covenant, Belfast City Hall, 28 Sept. 1912. 16

Certificate issued to signatories of Ulster s Solemn League and Covenant.(Proclamations). 17