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Overview
| 1798
Rebellion | 1845-1848 The Great
Hunger | 1916 Easter Rebellion | 1921
The Partition of Ireland
1972 Bloody Sunday
| 1980 The Hunger Strikes | 1994
IRA Cease-fire
1916
Easter Rebellion
Labor
Organized
During
the last decade of the nineteenth century and the first two
decades of the twentieth, the workers of Ireland, including
those in Dublin and Belfast, were organized by James Connolly
and James Larkin. In
Dublin, in August 1913, Larkin directed a tramworkers' strike,
during which a public meeting of strikers was brutally attacked
by police and three people killed. A federation of 400 Dublin
employers refused employment to members of the Irish Transport
and General Workers Union. British and continental trade unions
and groups sent funds and food to relieve the distress of
the 24,000 workers unemployed.
At the
time, housing conditions in Dublin were the worst in Europe
and there were in the city 21,000 families each living in
only one room. The strike ended in failure, but a workers'
militia known as the Irish Citizen Army was formed under James
Connolly's command which was to play an historic role in the
struggle for Irish freedom.
Gaelic
League,
Gaelic Athletic Association
and Literary Revival
Cultural
organizations which were to have an impact in the coming revolutionary
struggle were the Gaelic Athletic Association, founded in
1884 and the Gaelic League, founded in 1893 to promoted the
Irish language which had declined after the Great Famine of
1845-51. In 1841, Ireland had over 8,175,000 people, most
of whom spoke Irish as their everyday language. By 1851 the
figure should have been 9,000,000, but had dropped to 6,500,000
because between 1846 and 1851 two and one half million people
had either perished during the British managed famine or had
emigrated. Once the emigration to America and other parts
of the English speaking world began, it never stopped -- to
this day.
The Gaelic
League's championing the Irish language and the literary revival
of the late 19th and early 20th centuries cannot be underestimated
as catalysts of revolutionary struggle. The outpouring of
nationalistic literature reached an emotional crescendo with
the presentation of W. B. Yeats' play Cathleen Ni Houlihan
[a.k.a., "Mother Ireland"].
The
Irish Volunteers
In 1912,
an Irish Home Rule bill was put forward but was predictably
reacted to with outrage by pro-British Loyalists in the north
and political pragmatics in the British parliament who saw
the issue as little more than a way to gain and secure political
power.
In 1913,
the Ulster Volunteer Force, a quasi-legal army, was founded
and heavily armed with no resistance from the British government.
When ordered north to break up the illegal and provocative
activities of the Ulster Volunteers, the British army refused,
its officers threatening mutiny.
Later
in the year, the Irish Volunteers were formed by Eoin MacNeill
in reaction to events in the north "to secure and maintain
the rights and liberties common to all the people of Ireland
without distinction of creed, class or politics."
This time
the British government did not look on so passively. Yet some
arms, inadequate at best, with the help of Irish American
supporters and others, were procured and the Irish Volunteers
began to organize and train.
Soon WWI
was raging on the continent and the ordinary people of Ireland
were confused and divided.
Irish
Republican Brotherhood and Sinn Féin
As John
Redmond was pulling together what was left of the constitutional
Irish Party of John Parnell around the issue of Home Rule,
which was very much in limbo due to the reaction of unionists
in the north and British politicians playing for time and
leverage, the Irish Republican Brotherhood, the direct descendants
of the revolutionary Fenians, were regrouping and arming in
secret for armed struggle.
At this
time, Republican political activists were also being organized
by Arthur Griffiths, who founded the newspaper, The United
Irishmen, using the name of Wolfe Tone's organization which
had stage an armed insurrection a century earlier. Disenchanted
with Redmond's party and totally distrusting British home
rule promises, Griffiths, who formed Sinn Féin in 1905,
began to push his party into the political vacuum.
"Life
Springs from Death"
In 1915,
the body of Jeremiah O'Donovan Rosa, an unrepentant Fenian
who had emerged unbroken from the nearly insufferable torments
of years in British prisons, was returned to Ireland from
exile in America for burial. A massive, martyr's funeral was
held.
Padraig
Pearce. poet, schoolmaster, high ranking member of the Irish
Republican Brotherhood, and a leader in the Irish Volunteers,
gave an impassioned eulogy that to this day is seared into
Irish minds:
"...
Life springs from death; and from the graves of patriot men
and women spring living nations... The Defenders of this Realm
... think they have pacified Ireland... the fools, the fools,
fools! They have left us our Fenian dead, and while Ireland
holds these graves, Ireland unfree shall never be at peace."
The speech
and the reaction it received was to be a turning point for
those seeking to establish the revolutionary fervor necessary
to galvanize the spirits of those who were soon to challenge
in arms the might of the British army.
The
Rising of Easter 1916
It was
a leisurely Easter Monday, a bank holiday, and the people
in the streets paid little notice as scantily armed units
of Volunteers and Citizen Army deployed to take on an empire.
For several
months there had been dissension among the ranks of the Volunteers
under its founder Eoin MacNeill, who was content to not commit
the forces unless the British tried to disarm them or conscript
them into the British army for duty on the continent.
The more
militant, Republican coalition was lead primarily by Padraig
Pearse, of the Irish Volunteers and IRB, and the leader of
the Irish labor movement James Connolly, who also lead the
Irish Citizen Army.
MacNeill
was persuaded at first to go along with nationwide "maneuvers"
on Easter Monday, which was in reality to be the call for
an armed rising against British rule. But when a German freighter
was caught by a British naval patrol and scuttled itself with
twenty thousand riffles destined for the Volunteers, and Roger
Casement, who had negotiated the deal with the Germans, was
captured, MacNeill issued a countermanding directive calling
off any action.
Despite
the MacNeill counter order, the decision was made to carry
on. Only fifteen hundred men mustered at Liberty Hall, Dublin,
that morning. Only half were armed. The rest of the country
was effectively demobilized.
From Liberty
Hall the men that showed up deployed and established predetermined
positions throughout the city. One group attacked the Magazine
Fort in Phoenix Park; another actually entered an unguarded
Dublin Castle, but instead of occupying the symbol of British
rule, withdrew to a biscuit factory nearby. Other units established
strategic positions about the city. Countess Markiewisc took
the College of Surgeons on College Green, Edward Daly seized
the Four Courts, filled with British army records, and Eamon
de Velera commanded five undermanned companies of Volunteers
at Boland's Flour Mill which bisected a key routes from the
port to the south onto the city.
Pearse
and Connolly, with full knowledge that they were engaged in
a suicide mission, marched up the main street, Sackville Street
to the British and O'Connell Street to the Irish, halted in
front of the General Post Office and barricaded themselves
in. They sent back to Liberty Hall for a flag which arrived
in a brown paper bag, a green flag with the golden harp and
the words in Irish "The Irish Republic" and a second
flag that had never been seen before: a tricolor of green,
white and orange. They flew together over the GPO as Pearse
read a proclamation to a bewildered and somewhat indifferent
crowd that had gathered outside:
"Irishmen
and Irishwomen: In the name of God and of the dead generations
from which she receives her old tradition of nationhood, Ireland,
through us, summons her children to her flag and strikes for
her freedom...
"We
declare the right of the people to Ireland to the ownership
of Ireland..."
The
Irish Republican Army
The Citizens'
Army, the Volunteers, and the Irish Republican Brotherhood
now united and became the Irish Republican Army with Padraig
Pearse as President of the the "Provisional Government."
A detachment
of British Lancers confidently charged down Sackville Street
to break up the incipient revolt, but were repelled by a fusillade
of rebel gunfire.
The insurgents
fought with typical Irish determination and gallantry, attacked
by British soldiers using heavy artillery and outnumbering
them 20 to 1. Cut off from all possible support from units
from the countryside, they held out for almost a week until
their food and ammunition ran out, the GPO burning down around
them. The other rebel outposts fought bravely as British troops
encircled them. Dublin itself was in flames and over 3,000
people died. Pearse issued a surrender order to save further
civilian suffering and deaths.
The leaders
knew their rising was bound to fail, but they were prepared
to batter their lives against the possibility of their dreams
of a united Irish republic coming true after their personal
sacrifice in blood.
The leaders
were given quick secret military trials. Beginning Wednesday,
May 3, and continuing through Friday, May 13, they were shot
dead at a rate of one to four per day in Stonebreakers Yard,
Kilmainham Jail. Nearly all of them were scholars with early
education by the Christian Brothers, some were musicians,
some poets, and hardly a military man among them. Pearse said
of himself and Thomas MacDonagh and Joseph Plunket at the
start of the rising, "If we do nothing else we shall
rid Ireland of three bad poets." They met their ends
without regret, each making a last statement of defiance,
even joy, as they faced their deaths.
James
Connolly, severely wounded at the GPO, was the last of the
16 to be executed. He was carried out to be shot tied to a
chair. The British imposed martial law and hundreds of captured
rebels were imprisoned in England.
Roger
Casement was hanged in England on August 3, long after any
danger of insurrection was gone.
By these
sixteen brutal executions the British had accomplished what
the rebels themselves could not
have accomplished; they enraged a lethargic Irish people against
their historic oppressors. A great fire of patriotism was
set ablaze that would carry the Irish people through the coming
years of widespread suffering and open, armed rebellion.
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