- American Committee for Relief in Ireland
The American Committee for Relief in Ireland was formed through the initiative of Dr. William J. Maloney and others in 1920, with the intention of giving financial assistance to civilians in
Ireland who had been injured or suffered severe financial hardship due to the ongoingIrish War of Independence . It was only one of several US based philanthropic organisations that emerged following theGreat War with a view to influencing the post-war settlement from their perspective of social justice, economic development and long term stability in Europe. Some of them concentrated their efforts on events in Ireland, and while activists of Irishethnicity were well represented, membership was far from confined to Americans of Irish heritage. Apart from the ACRI, bodies such as the American Commission on Irish Independence and the American Commission on Conditions in Ireland raised money and attempted to influence US foreign policy in a manner sympathetic to the goal of Irishsecession from the United Kingdom.Political Background
This period of Irish political radicalism coincided with a
Red Scare in the United States. Jim Larkin, an Irish trade unionist, who had been closely associated withJames Connolly in Ireland and with theWobblies in the USA, was serving a five year sentence inSing Sing prison for promoting his socialist agenda. While his political views differed fundamentally from most of the Sinn Féin leadership, IrishRepublicanism was seen by many of the American establishment as based on a questionableideology . At this time, the activities of Irish-American fund-raising organisations were viewed with suspicion and kept under close scrutiny by the intelligences services includingJ. Edgar Hoover , head of the General Intelligence Division of the Bureau of Investigation. [Whelan p263, ] US policy towards Irish concerns, initially hostile or at best indifferent, became somewhat less so following the 1920 US Presidential election and the landslide victory ofWarren G. Harding overPresident Wilson .Genesis of the ACRI
Following the burning of parts of Cork city on the 11th December 1920 by elements of the British security forces known as the
Black and Tans , approaches were made by the city's Lord Mayor, Donal O'Callaghan to theAmerican Red Cross for humanitarian assistance. The society, having taken advice fromPresident Wilson , the British embassy, the Foreign Office and the British Red Cross, declined at this time to act on his appeal. [Whelan p266] Numerous organisations and committees across the United States, operating independently in raisinghumanitarian aid money for Ireland realised that their funds would not be channelled through the U.S Committee of the Red Cross and so another distribution channel was needed. Five days after the inferno at Cork, a widely publicised meeting took place at the Banker's Club inNew York . It was organised by William Maloney with the intention of establishing a single nationwide organisation. It would have as its goal, explicitly and solely for the purpose of humanitarian relief, the raising and distribution in Ireland of $10,000.000. [Whelan p311] The body which soon emerged styled itself 'The American Committee for Relief in Ireland'. One of its founding members,Levi Hollingsworth Wood , approached a Dublin based businessman and fellowQuaker , James Douglas, requesting his assistance in the local distribution of the funds on a non-partisan basis. In Ireland, Douglas spoke with Laurence O'Neill, theLord Mayor of Dublin , who in turn contacted senior members of Sinn Féin to inform them of the wishes of the American Committee. These meetings culminated in the establishment of the Irish White Cross , for the purpose of local distribution of the Committee's funds.Bibliography
Douglas, James G. Ed. J. Anthony Gaughan: "Memoirs of Senator James G. Douglas- Concerned Citizen":University College Dublin Press: 1998: ISBN 1-900621-19-3
Whelan, Bernadette : "United States Foreign Policy and Ireland - From Empire to Independence, 1913-29" :Four Courts Press : 2006 ISBN 9781846820106
References
External Links
New York Times contemporary report on the burning of Cork. "Ambush on Troops the Supposed Cause" [http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9E05E2D7163CE533A25750C1A9649D946195D6CF]
Account of the firestorm from a Nationalist perspective. [http://homepage.eircom.net/~corkcounty/Timeline/Cork%20burning.htm]
[http://www.archive.org/details/irelandcommitt00amerrich"Report of American Committee for Relief in Ireland": 1922?] atInternet Archive
[http://www.archive.org/details/reportofirishwhi00irisrich Report of the Irish White Cross] at Internet Archive
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