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CHAPTER 8 The Anglo-Irish Settlement
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CHAPTER 8 The Anglo-Irish Settlement
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CHAPTER 8 The Anglo-Irish Settlement
WWI
Supported by both Ulster Unionists and the INP
In response a Home Rule Act was to be enacted for the end of the year
Irish economy prospered and 150,000 Irish men were in active service
But the legnth of the war and British govs insesitivity (Ulster volunteer force but not Irish Volunteers had a special division)
Result: REVOLUTIONARY NATIONALISM
The Easter Rebellion 1916
Irish Nationalists - Fundementally the Fenians - had been opposed war and tried to prevent recruitment
1914 the volunteer movement split - those loyal to Redmond (& war) formed 'National Volunteers'
Others under Eoin MacNeill formed the 'Irish Volunteers'
Despite MacNeill's rejection of a premature uprising a small group of fellow commanders(Clarke, PEARCE, CONNOLLY) planned an uprising for Easter
Pearce was looking for a "glorious revolution" whereas Connolly believed that rebellion could be successful if there was support from the Irish masses
Arms were obtained from Casement from Germany. The plans were very secret - it was to be carried out under the guise of field manuevres
On Easter monday they seized Dublin and declared Ireland a Republic, establishing a provinical government with Pearce as the head
Result: Revolutionary Nationalism influenced by Cultural Nationalism
Aims: IRISH REPUBLIC
Reasons for failure
#1 Rebellion was confined to Dublin, where there was little support anyway
#2 The Provincial units (under instruction from MacNeill) did not join in the uprising
#3 They recieved no outside help, a German Arms ship was intercepted and Casement was arrested
#4 The rebels were outnumbered by soliders and armed police
Aftermath
Pearce surrendered unconditionally; leaving 450 rebels and civillians killed and 2000 injured,
It was not a 'national rising' as a minority of a minority group, it was condemned by the Catholic Church, Redmond and moderate Nationalists
British Government Response
Asquieth handed over problem to army -> Marital Law proclaimed and draconian policy of wholesale arrests made
Improsionment and Internment followed by executions - 15 were executed, including Connolly and Casement
Eamon De Valera had death sentence commuted to imprisonment
The harsness of the British response revitalised Irish Nationalsim
Rebels given 'moral credence' - Anti war and Anti British sentiments hardened
Under pressure from Ireland and America Lloyd George negotiated a Home Rule solution
Exclusion of 6 Protestent counties in Ulster (Redmond led to belive that exclusion was temporary but Carson beleived it to be permenant)
Redmond's career distroyed as well as his party thus Constitutional Nationalism effectively dies
Sinn Fein's absence came to occupy the dominant force of irish Nationalism formally held by the IPP
Sinn Fein
Founded by Arthur Griffith as a militant but non-violent organisation became commited to Irish Republic
Gained Influence after the Easter Rising because of the creation of martyrs, spread of revolutionary ideas and Unionist veto on Home Rule
Won two by-election seats usually Redmondite
Under pressure from America England released prisioners which provided new revolutionary recruits for Sinn Fein
Llyod George called an Irish Convention in July 1917 to create and Irish Settlement but his real focus was on winning the war
Went on till May 1918 but was afailure as Sinn Fein boycotted the convention and the Ulster Unionists remained firm
The IPP failed and popularity declined
In July 1917 de Valera is elected MP for East Clare whcih extended and strengthened support and organsiation
In October 1917 de Valera was elected President and Head of the Irish volunteers
This combined the leadership of both the political and militant wings of the Irish Revolutionary movement
Conscription Crisis
As a result of the heavy casualties in WWI Britain contemplated introducing Irish conscription. The Act was pushed through despite warnings
Dillion (leader of IPP) walked out of Westminster and went to Dublin, where they formed an alliance with Sinn Fein
Together they organsied a nationwide campaign against conscription - one day strike and support from Catholic Church
Government gave way but the damage had already been done to the Union
1918 General Election
Radicalisation of opinion in Southern Ireland helped the Republican cause
in April 1918 Grifith returned to East Cavan by an overwhelming majority
Authorities responded by arresting Republican leaders (with the excuse of their involvment in a 'German plot'
This antagonised public opinion and helped Sinn Fein demonstrated in the general election in December 1918
Sinn Fein virtually destroyed the IPP - Sinn Fein (73 seats), IPP (6 seats), Unionists (26 seats)
The Dail Eireann
As a result of the 1918 election Sinn Fein could claim the will of the Irish people
Their MPs did not take their seats in Westminster
Instead they returned to Sublin on 21st January 1919 to consttute themeselves as the parliament of the Irish Republic
The Dail issued a declaration of Independence, demanding English withdrawal from Ireland and a provincial government was set up under de Valera
British government released prisoners but the Dail has already established its own courts and collected taxes
The Dail was backed by the Irish Republican Army (IRA) - formally the Irish volunteers - under Michael Collins
Michael Collins organised an intelligence system and held domestic posts in the Irish provincial government
Deadlock
British govenment demanded allegiance based on mandate and established treaty rights
Irish Provincial goverment rested on the mood of Irish people in establishing a nationhood
In 1919 two policemen were killed by the IRA in County Tipperary. This was seen as the opening shots of war for Irish independence.
Meanwhile the British government was working on a new constituional initiative
The Anglo-Irish Treaty
It became clar that neither side would win the war - IRA were short of men and materials. England not prepared for an war with Catholic Ireland
Lloyd George aware of the unpopularity of war in Ireland, espicially towards the methods persued by the Black-and-Tans
Also understood that the IRA and Sinn Feins were a formidable group whos demands for independence were backed up by the majority of Irish people
In 1920 Lloyd George ateempted to bring peace but early moves failed - this was however a phychological victory for Sinn Fein
Partition had cleared the way for the treaty - following Sinn Fein's refusual to attend parliament noone was governing Southern Ireland
King George V appealled to Irish peace - de Valera and Collins faced peace more as a result of the hard military facts
The republican leaders also acknowledged that Lloyd George was considering 'dominion status' which for a British priminister was good
Truce agreed on 11th July 1921
Th treaty discussion was legnthy and comlicated. 'Dominion Satus' meant full control of domestic affairs, membership of British Empire and alliegence
Hardline Republican's of the Dail Eireann did not want the oath of alliegence but de Valera was willing to comprimise and sent a delegation to London
The Irish Delegation led by Griffith and Collins, de Valera remained in Dublin causing confusion and tension amognst leaders
On the one hand the delegates were plenipotentiaries and on the other they had to submit draft treaties to de Valera
This played into the hands of the experienced British side - Lloyd George, Churchill, Austin Chamberlin and Birkenhead
Three main discussions taking place
#1 British security and defence (settled easily, three naval bases in Ireland was agreed)
#2 Ulster (Irish leaders did not want partition but they weren't prepared to challenge the new state - N. Ireland given right to opt out of treaty)
Lloyd George persuaded the Irish delegates to accept the idea of a Boundry Commission (pure bluff)
#3 The powers of the new state (argument was symbolic as opposed to political, agreed to 'Dominion status' but oath of alliegence was watered down)
Lloyd George gives the Republicans an ultimatum - unless Sinn Fein representatives accepted the treaty there would be war in three days (Mon 5th Dec)
Fearful of the consequences of rejection the delegates signed the treaty on 6th December 1921. Lloyd George was probably bluffing
Results of the Treaty
In Britain the treaty was popular and it passed through parliament comfortably
In Ireland it brought not unity but dicord and conflict. Irish cabinant was divided on whether to accept.
Collins belived these were the best terms. De Valera opposed it and resigned as President, replaced by Griffith
The Dail accepted it narrowly - 64 votes to 57 on 7th Jan 1922
The terms of the Treaty were carried out immediately - provincial gov handed over to Collins, British Army withdraws handing over to IRA
Elections in June 1922 gave Collins and the pro-treaty group a convincing majority
Despite this the anti-treaty faction continued the 'troubles' which were bloodier than the Anglo-Irish war
Violence spread to N Ireland and some Conservatives regretted accepting the treaty however in the Spring of 1923 the rebels accepted the new regime
The Constitution for the Irish Free State
By the end of 1922 the Irish government (headed by William Cosgrove following deaths of Griffiths and Collins) promulgated a formal Constituion
Appouved by Dail and British government. N Irleand exercised its right to opt out
Irish free state and N Ireland established
Assessment of the Treaty
Flaws and Ambiguities
The constitutional settlement was the product of no definite plan
It rested on no clear cut principles
It did not conform to the origional ideals of any of the participants
However it ended the Anglo-Irish War and inaugurated Ireland giving them some peace and stablity
There was a greater degree of liberty than envisioned by O'Connell, Parnell or Redmond and offered the opportunity for peaceful unity
British safety was not comprimised
All that remained of the Act of Union was the symbolic office of Governer-General and membership of the British Empire
Long-term results
Eventually the Treaty whcih rejected the sovereignty of the irish Free State were rejected by the Irish Prime Minister de Valera
In 1949 following announcment of neutrality during WWII, Eire cut the last remaining ties with Britain and Commonwealth and became a free state
Clement Attlee accepted irelands status as a republic but passed the Ireland Act - which protected N Ireland
The Government of Ireland Act 1920
The general election in Britainled to an overwhelming victory for Lloyd George's govenerment with the Irish question still needing addressing
Involvement in the war had led to a new emphasis on national self-determination (Treaty of Versailles)
Home Rule was now strong prospect - as long as it recognised Ulster's rights and Irleand remained within the Empire
Terms of the Act
Establishement of two separate Parliaments for Northern Ireland and Southern Ireland
Election to the parliaments decided by proportional representation
Powers similar to the 1914 Home Rule Act (no control over foreign policy, defence, external trade, customs or police)
Supremacy of UK parliament to justify intervention in Northern Ireland
Ulster Unionist argument accepted (6 counties with Protestant majority)
Both parts of Ieland represented at Westminster with Council for both to deal with common problems
Ulster Unionists supported the Act in light of the IRA's violence throughout Ireland
Accepted by the North (James Craig became Prime Minister)
Failed in the South
Sinn Fein relected without contest and the boycotted the new parliament. Ulster Unionists ironically became commited Home Ruler's
In the South the political revolution meant that Home Rule was no longer a viable option for Nationalists
The Act was 'essentially constructed to solve the Irish problem as it stood in 1914 not in 1920'
The Anglo-Irish War
At the same time as the Government of Ireland Act Westminster was trying to cope with the IRA violent campaign (aimed at police and British soldiers)
Sinn Fein and the IRA beleived their legitimacy on behalf of an existing Irish Republic
British Government had little idea what was going on in Ireland and so for a long time they refused to recognise the existence of war
Under pressure from Conservative backbenchers - Sinn Fein and IRA was outlawed, the Dail was considered illegal, special powers of arrest introduced
To maintain law and order the government relied on the police (who were short staffed and demoralised by attacks against them 176 policemen killed)
Recrutiment strengthened by the recruitment of toush ex-soldiers, 'Black-and-Tans,' who were ill-diciplined and semi-military
In 1920 the IRA campaign became more widespread, more calculated and more brutal, they attacked civillians
The Black-andTans responded similarly and were condoned by the British government, this was condemned by British opinion
British realised they were at war and committed troops on a wider scale and introduced martial law in south - Geurilla Warfare
Bloody Sunday
21st November 1920 in Dublin. IRA killed 11 English civillians (believed to be British intelligence)
Black-and-Tans respond by killing players on a sports ground, leaving behind 12 dead and 60 injured. In December much of Cork was burned
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