- Joseph Neale McKenna
Sir Joseph Neale McKenna [His name is variously found as McKenna, MacKenna or M’Kenna and this should be born in mind in computer text searches] (1819 ["Who Was Who" has 1819; "The Times" has 1817 in the obituary dated 17/8/1906 but 1819 in the candidate biography of 27/11/1885] –
August 15 1906 ) was an Irish banker and politician and MP in the House of Commons of theUnited Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland whose career extended from the elite politics of the mid-nineteenth century to the fall of Parnell, whom he supported in later years.He was a Member of Parliament for Youghal from 1865 to 1868, representing the
Home Rule League and its successor theIrish Parliamentary Party from 1874 to 1885, and again for South Monaghan from 1885 to 1892. He was an early participant in theHome Rule movement, led byIsaac Butt , and played a leading role in formingIrish Nationalist thinking on the over-taxation of Ireland. He was knighted in 1867, and was a magistrate and Deputy Lieutenant forCo. Cork and a magistrate inCo. Waterford .A Catholic, [See e.g. "Freeman’s Journal", 16/8/1906] he was born in
Dublin , the son of Michael McKenna, and educated atTrinity College Dublin . In 1842 he married Esther Louise Howe of Dublin, and after her death married Amelia, widow of R. W. Hole. He was called to the Irish bar in 1849. ["Who Was Who" has 1849. "The Times" has 1849 in the obituary dated 17/8/1906 but 1848 in the candidate biography of 27/11/1885.] He was an able financier, was chairman of the National Bank of Ireland and became wealthy.He entered Parliament as member for Youghal, Co. Cork, at the general election of 1865, defeating the incumbent
Isaac Butt , the later Home Rule leader, by 122 to 30 votes, the electorate being a tiny 237. Both stood as Liberals. McKenna lost the seat toChristopher Weguelin , also a Liberal, in 1868 by 127 votes to 106, and accepted defeat although Weguelin’s election was declared void on account of bribery (which was a viable tactic with such a small electorate).McKenna joined the
Home Government Association in September 1873. He attended the founding conference of theHome Rule League in Dublin on 18-21 November 1873 and moved one of the resolutions. In 1874 McKenna stood as a Home Rule candidate at Youghal and regained the seat, defeating the ConservativeRobert Uniacke-Penrose-Fitzgerald by 124 to 106. He also defeated a renewed Conservative challenge in 1880.McKenna worked closely with
Isaac Butt and took part in parliamentary obstruction with the more radical Irish members including Joseph Biggar. But in the vital vote of 17 May 1880 in which Parnell displaced William Shaw as chairman of theIrish Parliamentary Party , McKenna voted for Shaw.The 1885 general election was fought on new boundaries with a greatly enlarged electorate. McKenna had insufficient support to stand in the new East Cork constituency into which Youghal was absorbed, and moved to South Monaghan, where he defeated a Conservative by nearly five to one in 1885 and a Unionist by a similar margin in 1886.
When the Irish Parliamentary Party split in December 1890 over Parnell’s leadership, McKenna joined the
Parnellite minority which supported Parnell. He was one of only two MPs who had opposed Parnell’s takeover in the vote of May 1880 who supported Parnell in the split of 1890, the other being Richard Power.McKenna retired at the subsequent general election in 1892, being then well over 70.
Footnotes
Publications
* Speech of Joseph Neale McKenna Esq., M.P., to his Constituents at Youghal Court House, September 21st, 1866, London, Keating & Co., 1866
*"Sir J. N. McKenna’s Statement to the Shareholders of the National Bank", London, printed for private circulation, 1869
*"The National Bank: A Case with Proofs", London, Wertheimer, Lea, 1870
*"The incidence of imperial taxation on Ireland": a speech delivered at the Rotunda, Dublin, on Tuesday 2nd November 1875, Dublin, Irish Home Rule League, 1876
*"Imperial taxation: the case of Ireland plainly stated for the information of the English people and of those others whom it may concern", London, Rivingtons, Waterloo Place, 1883
*"The Irish Land Question. Where the funds for its solution are to be found etc." London, W. Ridgway, 1887
*"Silver, the burning question of the century. An analysis and exposition of it." London, Chapman and Hall, 1894ources
*T. P. O’Connor, "The Parnell Movement", London, Kegan, Paul, Trench & Co., 1886
*"The Times" (London), 27 November 1885, 17 August 1906
*David Thornley, "Isaac Butt and Home Rule", London, Macgibbon & Kee, 1964
*Brian M. Walker (ed.), "Parliamentary Election Results in Ireland, 1801-1922", Dublin, Royal Irish Academy, 1978
*"Who Was Who, 1897-1916"
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