- Irish Volunteers
The Irish Volunteers ( _ga.
Óglaigh na hÉireann ) was a military organisation established in 1913 by Irish nationalists. Its declared primary aim was "to secure and maintain the rights and liberties common to the whole people of Ireland", [ [http://www.nli.ie/1916/pdf/3.1.5.pdf Constitution of the Irish Volunteers] , quoted in National Library of Ireland, "The 1916 Rising: Personalities and Perspectives", online exhibition, accessed 22 December 2007.] the safeguarding of Home Rule in other words. [National Library of Ireland, [http://www.nli.ie/1916/pdf/3.1.5.pdf "The 1916 Rising: Personalities and Perspectives"] , online exhibition, accessed 22 December 2007.] However on the part of the IRB, the real motivation for its involvement in the Volunteers was its plan to establish anIrish Republic . [Eoin Neeson, "Myths from Easter 1916", Aubane Historical Society, Cork, 2007, ISBN 978 1 903497 34 0; National Library of Ireland, [http://www.nli.ie/1916/pdf/3.1.5.pdf "The 1916 Rising: Personalities and Perspectives"] , online exhibition, accessed 22 December 2007.]It included members of the
Gaelic League , theAncient Order of Hibernians , andSinn Féin , [See list of members of Provisional Committee in letter from Patrick Pearse to John Devoy, 12 May 1914. Reproduced in National Library of Ireland, [http://www.nli.ie/1916/pdf/3.1.5.pdf "The 1916 Rising: Personalities and Perspectives"] , online exhibition, accessed 22 December 2007.] and, secretly, theIrish Republican Brotherhood . The initiative though and the impulse to the series of meetings leading up to the public inauguration of the Volunteers came from the IRB. ["Easter 1916: The Irish Rebellion", Charles Townshend, 2005, page 41, "The IRA", Tim Pat Coogan, 1970, page 33, "The Irish Volunteers 1913-1915", F. X. Martin 1963, page 24, "The Easter Rising", Michael Foy & Brian Barton, 2004, page 7, "Myths from Easter 1916", Eoin Neeson, 2007, page 79, "Victory of Sinn Féin", P.S. O’Hegarty, page 9-10, "The Path to Freedom", Michael Collins, 1922, page 54, "Irish Nationalism", Sean Cronin, 1981, page 105, "A History of Ireland Under the Union", P. S. O’Hegarty, page 669, "1916: Easter Rising", Pat Coogan, page 50, "Revolutionary Woman", Kathleen Clarke, 1991, page 44, "The Bold Fenian Men",Robert Kee , 1976, page 203, "The IRB: The Irish Republican Brotherhood from the League to Sinn Féin", Owen McGee, 2005, 353-354]Formation
The Irish Volunteers had its public origins in an article penned by
Eoin MacNeill , entitled "The North Began", which appeared in theGaelic League newspaper "An Claidheamh Soluis " on1 November 1913 .Bulmer Hobson , a prominent member of the IRB, had promptedThe O'Rahilly , to encourage MacNeill to form an Irish Volunteer force. [Bell, J. Bowyer, "The Secret Army: The IRA", RV Ed 1997, page 9, ISBN 1 85371 8130] [Foy, Michael & Brian Barton, "The Easter Rising", 2004, page 7-8] The IRB needed a highly regarded figure as a public front that would conceal the reality of deep penetration and control by the IRB. [Foy, Michael & Brian Barton, "The Easter Rising", 2004, page 7-8] [Coogan, Tim Pat, "The IRA", 1984 ed, page 33] The IRB found Eoin MacNeill the ideal candidate, Professor of Early and Medieval History atUniversity College , Dublin. McNeill’s academic credentials and reputation for integrity and political moderation had widespread appeal. [Foy, Michael & Brian Barton, "The Easter Rising", 2004, page 7-8] The establishment of the Ulster Volunteer Force in January 1913, had prompted Bulmer Hobson (the co-founder of the republican boy-scouts,Fianna Eireann ) to tell the Dublin IRB that they should use this as a pretext to persuade the public to form an Irish volunteer force.James Stritch , an old IRB advocate who grew up withJim Boland inManchester , immediately had a drilling hall built behind theWolfe Tone Club s headquarters at 41 Parnell Square, (the former site of the National Club, and then the Foresters’ Hall), he together with younger members of Fianna Eireann, began drilling a small number of IRB members associated with the Dublin GAA, and led by Jim Boland’s son, Harry. Simultaneously, labour leaders in Dublin began calling for the establishment of a citizens’ defence force in the aftermath of the lock out of 19 August 1913. Three months later, on 1 November, Eoin McNeill then article suggesting the formation of an Irish volunteer force with the encouragement of Deakin, Hobson and others. ["The IRB: The Irish Republican Brotherhood from The Land League to Sinn Féin", Owen McGee, Four Courts Press, 2005, ISBN 1 85182 972 5 pg.353-4]The background to O'Neill's article was the formation, in 1912, of the
Ulster Volunteers , formed to oppose the passage and implementation of the Third Home Rule Bill. The O’Rahilly editor of "An Claideamh Soluis" (Sword of Light) asked MacNeill to write an editorial for the first issue of a new series. O’Rahilly suggested that it should be on some wider subject than mere Gaelic pursuits. It was this suggestion, which gave rise to the article. "There is nothing to prevent" MacNeill wrote, "the other twenty-eight counties from calling into existence citizen forces to hold Ireland for the Empire. It was precisely with this object that the Volunteers of 1782 were enrolled, and they became the instrument of establishing Irish self-government." [Kee, Robert, "The Bold Fenian Men", 1976, page 203] ["The Irish Volunteers 1913-1915", F. X. Martin (cited) 1963, page 71] Indeed, as Irish historianDiarmaid Ferriter points out, the article "threw down the gauntlet to nationalists to follow the lead given by Ulster unionists in their formation of the UVF". [Ferriter, Diarmaid, "The Transformation of Ireland: 1900-2000", London: Profile, 2004, p. 122, ISBN 1 86197 307 1]The O'Rahilly then encouraged him to follow through with this idea. The first meeting was held on11 November 1913 , at Wynn's Hotel,Dublin , and several others were soon to follow, as prominent nationalists sat down to plan the formation of the Volunteers. Among those present at these early meetings were Bulmer Hobson, Eoin Mac Néill,Patrick Pearse ,Seán Mac Diarmada , W. J. Ryan,Eamonn Ceannt , The O'Rahilly, Joseph Campbell, James Deakin, Seán Fitzgibbon, Robert Page,Piaras Béaslaí , Seamus O'Connor,Eamon Martin , Colm O'Loughlin, Michael Judge and Colonel Maurice Moore. Ceannt, Mac Diarmada, and several others were members of theIrish Republican Brotherhood . [Aengus Ó Snodaigh, [http://republican-news.org/archive/1998/November26/26hist.html "The Irish Volunteers founded"] ,An Phoblacht/Republican News ,26 November 1998 ] Some time later, the organisation was publicly launched at a meeting attended by 7,000 people. [Ferriter, Diarmaid, "The Transformation of Ireland: 1900-2000", London: Profile, 2004, p. 122, ISBN 1 86197 307 1]First public meeting
On
November 25 the Volunteers had their first public meeting and enrolment rally at the Rotunda in Dublin. The IRB organised this meeting to which all parties were invited. [Coogan, Tim Pat, "The IRA", 1970, page 33] The hall was filled to its 4,000 person capacity, with a further 3,000 spilling onto the grounds outside. Over the course of the following months the movement spread throughout the country, with thousands more joining every week.From its inception, the leadership of the Volunteers were naturally heavily influenced by the
Irish Republican Brotherhood . This was in keeping with the IRB's policy of infiltrating, as withGaelic League , or creating nationalist movements such as the GAA and theLand League . [McGee, Owen, "The IRB: The Irish Republican Brotherhood from the League to Sinn Féin", 2005, page 64, 164] MacNeill himself was not a member, and at the time was unaware of the IRB's intentions. [MacNeill approved of armed resistance only if the British attempted to impose conscription on Ireland for the World War or if they launched a campaign of repression against Irish nationalist movements, in such a case he believed that they would have mass support. MacNeill's view was supported within the IRB by Bulmer Hobson. Nevertheless, the IRB hoped either to win him over to their side (through deceit if necessary) or bypass his command altogether.Fact|date=December 2007] However, the IRB was unable to gain complete control of the organisation after the leader of theIrish Parliamentary Party ,John Redmond , demanded that the Volunteers accept his own personal appointments to its Provisional Committee, which effectively placing the organisation under his control. While the moderates did not like the idea, they were prepared to go along with it in order to prevent Redmond from forming a rival organisation, which would draw away most of their support. The IRB was completely opposed to Redmond's demands, as they would end their control of the Volunteers, but were unable to prevent the motion from being carried in Redmond's favour.Leadership
The Irish Volunteers were led by a 30-member "Provisional Committee", which in May 1914, shortly before the organisation split, comprised (the names of the organisations with which they identified are provided in brackets):
*"Honourable Secretaries":Eoin Mac Néill (Gaelic League (GL)), Laurence J. Kettle (Ancient Order of Hibernians (AOH));
*"Honourable Treasurers":The O'Rahilly (GL,Sinn Féin (SF)),John Gore (AOH);
*"Members":Piaras Béaslaí ,Sir Roger Casement (GL),Eamonn Ceannt (GL, SF), John Fitzgibbon (GL, SF), Liam Gogan,Bulmer Hobson (Fianna Éireann (FÉ)), Michael J. Judge (AOH),Thomas Kettle (AOH), James Lenehan (AOH), Michael Lonergan, Peter (Peadar) Macken (Labour leader, SF, GL),Seán Mac Diarmada ("Irish Freedom"),Thomas MacDonagh ,Liam Mellows , Col. Maurice Moore (GL,Connaught Rangers ), Séamus O'Connor, Colm O'Loughlin (St. Enda's School ), Peter O'Reilly, Robert Page,Patrick Pearse (GL),Joseph M. Plunkett ("Irish Review"), John Walsh (AOH), Peter White (Celtic Literary Society);
*"Fianna Éireann representatives":Con Colbert ,Eamon Martin , Patrick O'Ryan. [Source National Library of Ireland, [http://www.nli.ie/1916/pdf/3.2.5.pdf 3.2.5 Eoin MacNeill and the Irish Volunteers] , in "The 1916 Rising: Personalities and Perspectives", p. 10, accessed 1 January 2008.]Arming the Volunteers
Shortly after the formation of the Volunteers,
British Parliament banned the importation of weapons into Ireland. Yet, in 1914, theUlster Volunteers successfully imported weapons in theLarne Gun Running , which brought the Irish Volunteers to the realisation that it too would have to follow suit if they were to be taken as a serious force. Indeed, many contemporary observers commented on the irony of "loyal" Ulstermen arming themselves and threatening to defy the British government by force.Patrick Pearse famously replied that "the Orangeman with a gun is not as laughable as the nationalist without one." Thus O'Rahilly, SirRoger Casement andBulmer Hobson worked together to coordinate a daylight gun-running expedition toHowth , just north ofDublin . The plan worked, and Erskine Childers brought nearly 1,000 rifles to the harbour and distributed them to the waiting Volunteers, without interference from the authorities. As the Volunteers returned to Dublin, however, they were met by a large patrol of theDublin Metropolitan Police and theBritish Army . The Volunteers escaped largely unscathed, but when the army returned to Dublin they fired on a group of unarmed civilians who had been heckling them at Bachelors Walk. This shooting of four civilians and the wounding of a further 37 caused enlistments in the Volunteers to soar. The remainder of the guns smuggled from Germany for the Irish Volunteers were landed atKilcoole a week later by SirThomas Myles .The Split
The outbreak of
World War I in August 1914 provoked a serious split in the organisation. Redmond, in the interest of ensuring the enactment of theHome Rule Act 1914 then on the statute books, encouraged the Volunteers to support the British and Allied war commitment and joinIrish regiment s of the British New Army divisions, an action vigorously opposed by the founding members. Given the wide expectation that the war was going to be a short one, the majority however supported the war effort and the call to restore the "freedom of small nations" on the European continent. They left to form theNational Volunteers , which fought in the 10th and16th (Irish) Division , side-by-side with their volunteer counterparts from the36th (Ulster) Division . Unlike the latter, however, the 16th Division had no trained military Irish officers of its own, and were commanded by British officers, with the exception of Irish General William Hickie. [ [http://www.taoiseach.gov.ie/eng/index.asp?docID=2517 Irish Soldiers in the First World War] , Department of the Taoiseach.] The National Volunteers ceased to exist after the Armistice in 1918 when their battalions were disbanded in 1922 under the terms of theAnglo-Irish Treaty . A minority believed that the principles used to justify the Allied war cause were best applied in restoring the freedom to one small country in particular. They retained the name "Irish Volunteers", were led by MacNeill and called for Irish neutrality. The National Volunteers kept some 175,000 members, leaving the Irish Volunteers with an estimated 13,500. This split proved advantageous to the IRB, which was now back in control of the organisation.Following the split, the remnants of the Irish Volunteers were often, and erroneously, referred to as the "Sinn Féin Volunteers", or "Shinners", after
Arthur Griffith 's political organisationSinn Féin . The term began as a derogatory one, but soon became ubiquitous in Ireland. Although the two organisations had some overlapping membership, there was no official connection between Griffith's then moderate Sinn Féin and the Volunteers. The political stance of the remaining Volunteers was not always popular, and a 1,000-strong march led by Pearse through the garrison city ofLimerick onWhit Sunday , 1915, was pelted with rubbish by a hostile crowd.The Easter Rising, 1916
The official stance of the Irish Volunteers was that action would only be taken were the British authorities at
Dublin Castle to attempt to disarm the Volunteers, arrest their leaders, or introduceconscription to Ireland. The IRB, however, was determined to use the Volunteers for offensive action while Britain was tied up in the First World War. Their plan was to circumvent MacNeill's command, instigating a Rising, and to get MacNeill on board once the rising was a "fait accompli". Pearse issued orders for three days of parades and manoeuvres, a thinly disguised order for a general insurrection. MacNeill soon discovered the real intent behind the orders and attempted to stop all actions by the Volunteers. He succeeded only in putting the Rising off for a day, and limiting it to about 1,000 active participants within Dublin and a further 2,000-3,000 elsewhere. Almost all of the fighting was confined to Dublin. TheIrish Citizen Army supplied slightly more than 200 personnel for the Dublin campaign.The Rising was a failure in the short term, and large numbers of Irish Volunteers were arrested, even some who did not participate in the Rising. In 1919 the Irish Volunteers became the
Irish Republican Army , swearing its obedience to theFirst Dáil during the course of August 1920.References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.