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	<title>AOH Division 8 - Glen Cove, NY &#187; Irish People</title>
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		<title>THE 1798 REBELLION IN IRELAND</title>
		<link>http://www.glencoveirish.org/2009/03/14/the-1798-rebellion-in-ireland/</link>
		<comments>http://www.glencoveirish.org/2009/03/14/the-1798-rebellion-in-ireland/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 15 Mar 2009 03:38:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Joe McDonald</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[history]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[1790s]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[1798 Rebellion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Act Of Union]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[American Colonists]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Church Of Ireland]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Democratic Principles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Emigrants]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[English Parliament]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Favourable Situation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Freedom Of Expression]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Irish Economy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Irish History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Irish People]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Last Decade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Orange Order]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Protestant Ascendancy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Republicanism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sympathetic Ear]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Traditional Enemy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Worldwide Revolution]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[1. Background to the rebellion The last decade of the 1700s was a most important time in Irish history. Republicanism and Loyalism both found real identity, the Orange Order and Maynooth College were both founded as the century ended with the rebellion in Ireland and the subsequent Act of Union. The repercussions of these events [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a class="highslide" onclick="return vz.expand(this)" href="http://www.glencoveirish.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/memorial1798.jpg"><img class="alignright size-thumbnail wp-image-49" title="memorial1798" src="http://www.glencoveirish.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/memorial1798-150x150.jpg" alt="memorial1798" width="150" height="150" /></a>1. Background to the rebellion</p>
<p>The last decade of the 1700s was a most important time in Irish history. Republicanism and<br />
Loyalism both found real identity, the Orange Order and Maynooth College were both<br />
founded as the century ended with the rebellion in Ireland and the subsequent Act of Union.<br />
The repercussions of these events define Irish history even up to the modern day.</p>
<p>The rebels were very influenced by the effects of uprisings in America, France and Australia.<br />
They seized the opportunity to try to create a society not based on religion but based on<br />
democratic principles and freedom of expression. This policy was to prove popular with Irish<br />
people of different creeds who all wanted the same thing, freedom from English rule.</p>
<p>This philosophy was to provide a means whereby counter-revolutionaries could try to<br />
disrupt the organisation by inciting sectarian hatreds and fears within the movement.</p>
<p>Protestant ascendancy</p>
<p>The social and political systems in Ireland in the 1790s was such that the vast majority of<br />
the population of over 5 million people were excluded. Only the ruling Protestant class,<br />
comprising of about 10% of the population, were entitled to vote or to sit in parliament. The<br />
vast majority of the land in Ireland was owned by Church of Ireland emigrants from<br />
England. Ireland was independent in theory but in practice it was ruled by the English<br />
parliament who severely restricted the growth of the Irish economy. The presbyterian class<br />
were also excluded and many emigrated to America to seek out a more favourable situation.</p>
<p>The effects of worldwide revolution</p>
<p>It is not surprising, therefore, that when the American colonists revolted against British<br />
government in the 1770s, they found a sympathetic ear amongst their kin in Ireland. In<br />
1778 France, Britain&#8217;s traditional enemy, entered the war on the American side, thus<br />
threatening Ireland with invasion. The British government was caught without an army to<br />
defend Ireland, since its regular troops had been sent to America, nor the revenue to raise<br />
an alternative, due to the economic dislocation caused by the war. An Irish Protestant army,<br />
the Volunteers, was raised to fill the breach, financed locally. Unfortunately for government<br />
it became the focus for various grievances, both political and economic. A convention of<br />
Ulster Volunteers (predominantly Presbyterian) at Dungannon in 1782 demanded<br />
parliamentary reform (a broadening of the franchise and the abolition of &#8216;rotten&#8217; boroughs)<br />
and Catholic emancipation (the abolition of remaining anti-Catholic laws). However a<br />
national Volunteer convention the following year split on the Catholic question and<br />
Volunteering declined thereafter.</p>
<p>The United Irishmen and the Catholic Convention</p>
<p>The outbreak of the French Revolution in 1789 with its ideals of liberty, equality and<br />
fraternity provided fresh impetus to the reform movement in Ireland. In the autumn of 1791<br />
Societies of United Irishmen were founded in Belfast and Dublin with the twin aims of<br />
parliamentary reform and Catholic emancipation. The leading ideologue was Theobald Wolfe<br />
Tone, a Church of Ireland lawyer from Dublin, who, having witnessed the disarray of the<br />
Volunteers on the Catholic question years earlier, was determined to forge a united reform<br />
movement of the various denominations. In addition he increasingly focused critical<br />
attention on the cornerstone of the existing Irish political system, &#8216;the connection with<br />
England&#8217;, although his evolution into fully fledged separatist and republican was to take a<br />
while longer. He found willing allies amongst the middle class leaders of the Catholic<br />
Committee who had recently displaced their more conservative land-owning predecessors.<br />
Determined to push more aggressively for concessions from government the new Catholic<br />
Committee appointed Tone as their secretary and over the course of 1792 mobilised for a<br />
&#8216;Catholic Convention&#8217; held in the Tailors&#8217; Hall, Dublin in December. The Convention<br />
presented its demands directly to the London government, over the head of the implacably<br />
hostile Dublin administration. The London government, anxious to maintain the loyalty of<br />
the Catholic majority in the face of the impending war with revolutionary France, conceded<br />
almost all of the demands, except the right of Catholics to sit in parliament.</p>
<p>Popular politics and Defenderism</p>
<p>The Catholic Convention had a politicising effect out of all proportion to the 233 delegates<br />
who directly participated. The delegates were elected in a series of meetings that reached<br />
down to parish level involving broad sections of the people in political activity for the first<br />
time. At the same time the country was awash with a deluge of political pamphlets. In<br />
particular the campaign politicised and broadened the horizons of the Defenders. This<br />
shadowy organisation first made its appearance in County Armagh in the late 1780s as a<br />
defence against the arms raids on Catholics of the &#8216;Peep o&#8217; Day Boys&#8217;, forerunners of the<br />
Orange Order, who, as a symbol of Protestant supremacy, were anxious to maintain the ban<br />
on Catholics bearing arms. By 1792/93 Defenderism had spread throughout south Ulster<br />
and north Leinster (it had even penetrated into Dublin City), and its propaganda had<br />
become more articulate and socially radical in tone. Throughout this period Tone, Samuel<br />
Neilson, Thomas Russell, and other radical United Irishmen, established contact with them<br />
which was to provide the basis for a mass-based revolutionary United Irish organisation<br />
later in the decade.</p>
<p>Loyalist reaction</p>
<p>Meanwhile the upholders of the status quo in Ireland were not idle in the face of these<br />
challenges. Along with the carrot of concessions to Catholics went the stick of repression:<br />
the gunpowder act which placed restrictions on firearms; the militia act, which envisaged a<br />
largely Catholic rank-and-file home defence force officered by Protestants, and which<br />
provoked widespread disturbances; and the convention act, which outlawed any repeat of<br />
December 1792&#8242;s &#8216;Back Lane parliament&#8217;. The latter in particular stymied United Irish plans<br />
for a repeat of that success on the issue of parliamentary reform. An Ulster convention,<br />
dominated by United Irishmen, demanding parliamentary reform met at Dungannon in<br />
February 1793 just before the convention act was passed. The Dublin Society of United<br />
Irishmen was dispersed in May 1794, a fate shared by like-minded reform movements in<br />
England and Scotland. In the circumstances of Britain&#8217;s war with revolutionary France<br />
demands for reform were equated with subversion. The war acted as a pressure-cooker<br />
polarising the situation even further and Ireland became a crucial theatre in this wider<br />
ideological struggle. At grassroots level the struggle was joined by the Defenders who<br />
became increasingly bold in their actions. As law-and-order deteriorated in the countryside<br />
government repression intensified, culminating in commander-in-chief Carhampton&#8217;s brutal<br />
campaign against the Defenders in 1795. Liberal Protestant opinion was outraged at the<br />
scale of the illegalities many suspected Defenders were transported without a trial. The<br />
government response was the insurrection act which retroactively enshrined Carhampton&#8217;s<br />
activities in law.</p>
<p>The Orange Order and the founding of Maynooth</p>
<p>Sectarian hostilities flared up anew in County Armagh, culminating in the expulsion of<br />
thousands of Catholics and in the foundation of the Orange Order, dedicated to the<br />
maintenance of Protestant ascendancy. Under landlord and government sponsorship it<br />
spread rapidly over the following years providing the government with a mass-based<br />
counter-revolutionary alternative to the United Irishmen. A more subtle variation of the<br />
overall counter-revolutionary strategy was the foundation of a Catholic seminary at<br />
Maynooth. Catholic seminarians would no longer be obliged to get educated in France where<br />
many of them had developed an enthusiasm for the revolution. Thus the government<br />
cultivated the support of a Catholic hierarchy itself fearful of the spread of &#8216;French<br />
principles&#8217;.</p>
<p>The recall of Fitzwilliam</p>
<p>Early in 1795 the arrival of Fitzwilliam as lord lieutenant had raised Catholic hopes only for<br />
Those hopes to be dashed by his sudden recall having over-stepped his brief. His successor<br />
Camden reinstated the policy of defending Protestant Ascendancy at all costs. The United<br />
Irishmen, meanwhile, had continued to meet clandestinely under various guises. The recall<br />
of Fitzwilliam removed whatever lingering hope they may have entertained for constitutional<br />
reform. The Catholic Committee dissolved itself (on the basis that &#8216;there was no longer a<br />
Catholic question only a national question&#8217;); a new constitution was drawn up for a single<br />
mass-based revolutionary United Irish organisation; and Tone was dispatched to France (via<br />
America) to solicit military aid for an armed revolution.</p>
<p>Bantry Bay and the &#8216;dragooning of Ulster&#8217;</p>
<p>By the end of 1796 Tone&#8217;s mission had borne fruit in the form of the dispatch of 16,000<br />
French troops under General Hoche to Bantry Bay. Bad weather and bad French<br />
seamanship, however, prevented the landing of the force which in all probability could have<br />
liberated the country. Within Ireland, meanwhile, the United Irishmen had build a<br />
formidable underground network, especially in Ulster where they claimed 100,000 armed<br />
and organised men. While they waited confidently for another French invasion attempt,<br />
government forces went on the offensive. Throughout the spring and summer of 1797 the<br />
army under General Lake, augmented by the Orange Order, was let loose on the people of<br />
Ulster. The &#8216;dragooning of Ulster&#8217; effectively disarmed and crippled United Irish organisation,<br />
especially in the middle and south of the province.</p>
<p>2. The rebellion</p>
<p>The United Irishmen go-it-alone</p>
<p>By the winter of 1797/98, with hopes of a renewed French attempt fading, the United<br />
Irishmen were forced to adopt a go-it-alone military strategy focused on Dublin. Their<br />
organisation was strengthened in and around the capital and it also expanded in south<br />
Leinster. The planned insurrection was to have been a three-phased affair: the seizure of<br />
strategic positions within Dublin city; co-ordinated with the establishment of a crescent of<br />
positions outside in north County Dublin, Meath, Kildare and Wicklow; and backed up by the<br />
engagement of government forces in the counties beyond to prevent reinforcement.<br />
Disaster struck on 12 March 1798 with the arrest of most of the Leinster leadership. Further<br />
arrests on the very eve of the rising in May effectively decapitated the movement. The<br />
seizure of Dublin from within was aborted; as they waited for orders that never came,<br />
United Irish positions outside the city succumbed one by one; of the counties beyond, only<br />
in Wexford did the United Irishmen meet with success. A fortnight later (7-9 June), despite<br />
the mauling at the hands of Lake&#8217;s forces the year before, the United Irishmen of Antrim<br />
and Down managed to rise up but they too were quickly defeated.</p>
<p>Wexford</p>
<p>The Wexford insurgents met with a string of early successes but were ultimately prevented<br />
from spreading the insurrection beyond their own county by defeats at New Ross (5 June)<br />
and Arklow (9 June). Massive government forces began to move in for the decisive military<br />
showdown at Vinegar Hill, outside Enniscorthy (21 June). Although the insurgents suffered<br />
defeat, the bulk of their forces escaped encirclement and carried on the struggle for another<br />
month, one group in the Wicklow mountains and the other in a &#8216;long march&#8217; into the<br />
midlands before being worn down and forced to surrender. A month later (22 August) over<br />
a thousand French troops under General Humbert landed at Killala, County Mayo, but it was<br />
too little too late. Despite some initial successes, including a spectacular victory at<br />
Castlebar, Humbert and the United Irishmen who flocked to his standard were defeated at<br />
Ballinamuck, County Longford (8 October). The insurrection of 1798 was over.</p>
<p>3. Effects of the Rebellion</p>
<p>The defeat of the United Irishmen also signalled the end of Protestant Ascendancy in Ireland<br />
as the Act of Union of 1800 abolished the parliament in College Green and moved all<br />
authority back to the parliament in London.</p>
<p>Some United Irishmen welcomed this development as the first step on the road to<br />
parliamentary reform as did many of the Catholic peasantry who envisaged their election in<br />
the English parliament. Catholic Emancipation followed in 1929 by which time the context<br />
had changed from being a wholly national issue to being a Catholic issue.</p>
<p>The United Irishmen ideals of a non-sectarian democracy became obscured by the politics of<br />
the ballot box based on religion. The rebellion of 1798 heightened the awareness to the<br />
Catholic peasantry of the situation that they were in and showed them that there may be<br />
alternatives to be won.</p>
<p>Daniel O&#8217;Connell, the Irish Famine, Parnell, Davitt and the land reform movements, all did<br />
the same thing as the majority of people in Ireland demanded more and more freedom and<br />
privilege.</p>
<p>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<br />
(C) Copyright The Information about Ireland Site, 2000<br />
The Leader in Free Resources from Ireland<br />
Free Irish coats of arms, screensavers, maps and more</p>
<p>http://www.ireland-information.com</p>
<p>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~</p>
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		<title>THE EASTER RISING IN IRELAND, 1916</title>
		<link>http://www.glencoveirish.org/2009/03/14/the-easter-rising-in-ireland-1916/</link>
		<comments>http://www.glencoveirish.org/2009/03/14/the-easter-rising-in-ireland-1916/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 15 Mar 2009 03:34:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Joe McDonald</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[history]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Coffin Ships]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[English Occupation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Great Famine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ireland 1916]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Irish Birth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Irish Nation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Irish People]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Irish Republican Brotherhood]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[James Stephens]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Michael Doheny]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Military Groups]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Peter Langan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Propaganda Machine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Republican Cause]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Revolutionary Ideals]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Revolutionary Tactics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Saint Patricks Day]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Thomas Clarke]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Timber Yard]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Underground Organisation]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[1. BACKGROUND TO THE RISING THE IRISH REPUBLICAN BROTHERHOOD (IRB) One of the main and lasting effects of the Great Famine of 1845-47 was emigration. The &#8216;Coffin Ships&#8217; carried tens of thousands of the poorest Irish people who fled Ireland to avoid starvation. They created a new Irish nation within America whilst remembering the injustice [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a class="highslide" onclick="return vz.expand(this)" href="http://www.glencoveirish.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/gpo1916.jpg"><img class="alignright size-thumbnail wp-image-56" title="gpo1916" src="http://www.glencoveirish.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/gpo1916-150x150.jpg" alt="gpo1916" width="150" height="150" /></a>1. BACKGROUND TO THE RISING</p>
<p>THE IRISH REPUBLICAN BROTHERHOOD (IRB)</p>
<p>One of the main and lasting effects of the Great Famine of 1845-47 was<br />
emigration. The &#8216;Coffin Ships&#8217; carried tens of thousands of the poorest Irish<br />
people who fled Ireland to avoid starvation. They created a new Irish nation<br />
within America whilst remembering the injustice of the English occupation of their<br />
homeland as well as harboring a deeply felt hatred of landlords and evictions.</p>
<p>A Clann na Gael source estimated that there were over one and one half million<br />
people of Irish birth in America towards the end of the nineteenth century. These<br />
people supported the republican cause by giving money, weapons and,<br />
significantly, a propaganda machine which has continued to this day.</p>
<p>The Irish Republican Brotherhood was formed in a Dublin timber-yard on Saint<br />
Patricks Day in 1858. James Stephans was assisted by Thomas Clarke Luby,<br />
James Denieefe, Garret O Shaugheynessy and Peter Langan.</p>
<p>Joe Denieefe brought financial support back from America. He had left Ireland<br />
after the Ballingarry defeat in 1848. James Stephens , Michael Doheny and the<br />
John O&#8217;Mahony fought in Ballingarry in 1848. Stephens was injured but still<br />
manage to escape to Paris where he familiarised himself with the revolutionary<br />
tactics of that country. He came back to Ireland to try to establish an<br />
underground organisation to remove the English from Ireland.</p>
<p>Denieefe and Luby traveled the country extensively and organised military groups<br />
called &#8216;circles&#8217;. They formed oathbound secret societies of loyal patriots. Popular<br />
opinion did not support the revolutionary ideals of the IRB nor did the Church<br />
whop were strongly opposed. The mainstream support came from the poorer<br />
classes who, despite their poverty, were often highly idealistic.</p>
<p>At the time of the 1867 rising the membership of the IRB was estimated at over<br />
80,000.</p>
<p>INFORMERS</p>
<p>Informers such as Corydon and Magle did untold damage to the IRB by betraying<br />
their oath and giving information to the English.</p>
<p>The Fenian movement split in America in 1865. John O&#8217;Mahony took over from<br />
the Stephans. O&#8217;Mahony was later himself to be deposed when his hesitation in<br />
calling an insurrection dissatisfied the soldiers he commanded (many of which<br />
were veterans of the American Civil War). Colonel Thomas J. Kelly,<br />
was appointed Chief of Staff of the IRB in 1867 and departed for Ireland.</p>
<p>A rising was planned for February 1867. Chester Castle in England was to be<br />
attacked and simultaneous raids in Ireland were to be carried out. The English<br />
knew in advance however as the informer, Corydon, kept them informed.</p>
<p>The news had not filtered through to the Fenians in Ireland and sporadic battles<br />
took place in Kerry and Dublin.</p>
<p>THE MANCHESTER MARTYRS</p>
<p>The IRB was reorganised in Manchester in July of 1867 and a supreme council<br />
elected. Colonel Kelly and Jim Deasy were captured by the English and then<br />
rescued by the Fenians in a daring raid in which a police officer was killed. Allen,<br />
Larkin and O&#8217;Brien were hanged for their complicity in the events and they<br />
became known as &#8216;The Manchester Martyrs&#8217;.</p>
<p>These mass funerals and events with the Land League focused the minds of the<br />
popular masses on the injustice of English rule in Ireland.</p>
<p>CLAN NA GAEL</p>
<p>The IRB delegates in Manchester broke away from the feuding factions of<br />
Fenianism in America and supported Clan na Gael who were founded there in<br />
June of 1867. The objectives of Clann na Gael was to secure an independent<br />
Ireland and to assist the IRB in achieving this aim. John Devoy was the mainstay<br />
behind the Clan.</p>
<p>Devoy became involved in the &#8216;New Departure&#8217; and assisted Davitt and Parnell in<br />
their fight against the landlords. Independence remained his main aim however<br />
as he felt that the Land League was not militant enough to remove the landlords.</p>
<p>Devoy, assisted by Doctor Pat McCartan, founded a newspaper, &#8216;The Gaelic<br />
American&#8217;.</p>
<p>Doctor Pat McCartan transferred from Clan na Gael to the newly formed<br />
&#8216;Dungannon Clubs&#8217;, a separatist organisation which was denounced by the<br />
Church.</p>
<p>Tom Clarke became a member of the Supreme Council of the IRB in 1909 and<br />
helped form the revolutionary paper &#8216;Irish Freedom&#8217;. He became the link with<br />
Clan na Gael in America.</p>
<p>In 1912 the IRB sent Sean MacDiarmada as a delegate to the Clan convention<br />
and he succeeded in securing the enormous sum of $20,000 for the IRB at home.</p>
<p>IRISH VOLUNTEERS</p>
<p>In November 1913 the Irish Volunteers were formed in Dublin and 4,000 enrolled<br />
on that first night. In 1914 Padraig Pearse went to America to raise funds to save<br />
his Gaelic school, St. Enda&#8217;s. This was achieved and Pearse turned his attention to<br />
revolutionary matters.</p>
<p>On his return from America he sought 1,000 rifles from McGarrity. He as assisted<br />
by Seán Mac Diarmada, Eamonn Ceannt and Seán Fitzgibbon. Pearse was<br />
convinced that the revolutionary force in Ireland had never been better organised<br />
or equipped. His speech in 1914 reflected this:-</p>
<p>&#8221; It is my matured conviction that, given arms, the Volunteers who have<br />
adhered to us as against Redmond may be depended upon to act<br />
vigorously, courageously, promptly, and unitedly if the opportunity comes.<br />
We are at the moment in an immensely stronger position than ever<br />
before. The whole body of Volunteers that has supported our stand against<br />
recruiting may be looked upon as a separatist body. In other words, the<br />
separatist organisation has been multiplied by a hundred.</p>
<p>In Dublin, we have some 2,500 admirably disciplined, drilled, intelligent,<br />
and partly armed men. Nationalist Ireland has never before had such an<br />
asset. Our main strength is in Dublin, but large minorities support us<br />
everywhere, especially in the towns and in the extreme South and West.<br />
We expect to have 150 companies, representing 10,000 to 15,000 men,<br />
represented by delegates at next Sunday&#8217;s Convention.</p>
<p>This small, compact, perfectly disciplined, determined separatist force is<br />
infinitely more valuable than the unwieldy, loosely-held together mixum-<br />
gatherum force we had before the split. The Volunteers we have with us<br />
now may be relied upon to the death, and we are daily perfecting their<br />
fighting effectiveness and mobilisation power. It seems a big thing to say,<br />
but I do honestly believe that, with arms for these men, we shall be ready<br />
to act with tremendous effect if the war brings us the moment.</p>
<p>The spirit of our Dublin men is wonderful. They would rise tomorrow if we<br />
gave the word. A meeting of Dublin officers the other night was as<br />
exhilarating as a draught of wine.</p>
<p>We gain daily in the country as Redmond&#8217;s treachery or imbecility<br />
becomes more manifest. The recruiting campaign has failed utterly, and<br />
already he is a discredited politician.&#8221;</p>
<p>THE GAELIC LEAGUE AND THE GAA</p>
<p>The IRB were influential in many cultural and national organisations. Most of the<br />
leaders like Pearse, Plunket and McDonagh were fluent Irish speakers and were<br />
members of the Gaelic League. The Gaelic Athletic Association (the GAA) was<br />
formed by Cusack in November 1884.</p>
<p>THE GREAT WAR 1914-18</p>
<p>At the outbreak of the first world war, Redmond urged the Irish Volunteers to join<br />
in the fight against the oppressors of small nations (Germany). 170,000 of the<br />
Volunteers supported Redmond whilst 11,000 supported Pearse.</p>
<p>Tom Clarke urged the Supreme Council of the IRB that a rising must happen<br />
before the end of the war, especially as the Irish Home Rule bill had been<br />
suspended at the outbreak of the war. Pearse, Plunket and Ceannt drafted the<br />
first military plans.</p>
<p>ROGER CASEMENT</p>
<p>Prior to the rising and thanks to Hobson, Casement and Childers, guns were<br />
landed at Howth and Wicklow. Casement went to Germany where he published<br />
the Irish cause in German newspapers. His efforts to secure weapons were dealt<br />
a severe blow when he and the weapons they were attempting to smuggle into<br />
the country were captured on Banna Strand.</p>
<p>Casement, an English subject, was eventually convicted of treason and hanged.</p>
<p>PLANS FOR THE RISING</p>
<p>Thomas Clarke was the main instigator of the rising, supported by Pearse, Seán<br />
Mac Diarmada, Eamonn Ceant and Seán T. O Ceallaigh who went to America for<br />
further assistance. Thomas McDonagh, Joseph Plunket and James Connolly. were<br />
later brought on to the Supreme Council.</p>
<p>During all this activity Eoin McNeill was unaware of the secret body that was<br />
organising the rising. Few penetrated the IRB as they prepared for the rising.</p>
<p>James Connolly used his paper &#8216;The Workers&#8217; Republic&#8217; to call for an armed revolt.<br />
He used the Citizens Army to protect the paper.</p>
<p>The Irish Volunteers were holding recruiting meetings throughout Ireland and<br />
training enthusiastically. They awaited the signal to act as the rising had been set<br />
for Easter Saturday, 22nd of April, 1916.</p>
<p>Setbacks to the plan included the capture of Casement and the weapons, the<br />
capture of Austin Stack, commandant of the Kerry Brigade and the discovery of<br />
the plans for an uprising following a raid on German officials in New York.</p>
<p>The Supreme Council decided unanimously decided to proceed with the uprising<br />
despite the fact that they knew it had little chance of success. It was decided to<br />
strike on Easter Monday. In spite of the order from McNeill not to revolt, over<br />
2,000 soldiers made a strike for freedom.</p>
<p>2. THE INSURRECTION</p>
<p>On Easter Monday, 24th April, 1916 the GPO was occupied by the revolutionary<br />
forces. Pearse read the Proclamation of the Republic to a bemused gathering:</p>
<p>POBLACHT NA H EIREANN<br />
THE PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT<br />
OF THE<br />
IRISH REPUBLIC<br />
TO THE PEOPLE OF IRELAND</p>
<p>IRISHMEN AND IRISHWOMEN: In the name of God and of the dead generations<br />
from which she receives her old tradition of nationhood, Ireland, through us,<br />
summons her children to her flag and strikes for her freedom.</p>
<p>Having organised and trained her manhood through her secret revolutionary<br />
organisation, the Irish Republican Brotherhood, and through her open military<br />
organisations, the Irish Volunteers and the Irish Citizen Army, having patiently<br />
perfected her discipline, having resolutely waited for the right moment to reveal<br />
itself, she now seizes that moment, and, supported by her exiled children in<br />
America and by gallant allies in Europe, but relying in the first on her own<br />
strength, she strikes in full confidence of victory.</p>
<p>We declare the right of the people of Ireland to the ownership of Ireland, and to<br />
the unfettered control of Irish destinies, to be sovereign and indefeasible. The<br />
long usurpation of that right by a foreign people and government has not<br />
extinguished the right, nor can it ever be extinguished except by the destruction<br />
of the Irish people. In every generation the Irish people have asserted their right<br />
to national freedom and sovereignty; six times during the last three hundred<br />
years they have asserted it to arms. Standing on that fundamental right and<br />
again asserting it in arms in the face of the world, we hereby proclaim the Irish<br />
Republic as a Sovereign Independent State, and we pledge our lives and the lives<br />
of our comrades-in-arms to the cause of its freedom, of its welfare, and of its<br />
exaltation among the nations.</p>
<p>The Irish Republic is entitled to, and hereby claims, the allegiance of every<br />
Irishman and Irishwoman. The Republic guarantees religious and civil liberty,<br />
equal rights and equal opportunities to all its citizens, and declares its resolve to<br />
pursue the happiness and prosperity of the whole nation and all of its parts,<br />
cherishing all of the children of the nation equally and oblivious of the differences<br />
carefully fostered by an alien government, which have divided a minority from the<br />
majority in the past.</p>
<p>Until our arms have brought the opportune moment for the establishment of a<br />
permanent National, representative of the whole people of Ireland and elected by<br />
the suffrages of all her men and women, the Provisional Government, hereby<br />
constituted, will administer the civil and military affairs of the Republic in trust for<br />
the people.</p>
<p>We place the cause of the Irish Republic under the protection of the Most High<br />
God. Whose blessing we invoke upon our arms, and we pray that no one who<br />
serves that cause will dishonour it by cowardice, in humanity, or rapine. In this<br />
supreme hour the Irish nation must, by its valour and discipline and by the<br />
readiness of its children to sacrifice themselves for the common good, prove itself<br />
worthy of the august destiny to which it is called.</p>
<p>Signed on Behalf of the Provisional Government.</p>
<p>Thomas J. Clarke,<br />
Sean Mac Diarmada,<br />
Thomas MacDonagh,<br />
P. H. Pearse,<br />
Eamonn Ceannt,<br />
James Connolly,<br />
Joseph Plunkett</p>
<p>The Volunteers seized and fortified six positions In Dublin city: the GPO, the Four<br />
Courts, Boland&#8217;s Mill, St. Stephen&#8217;s Green, Jacobs Factory and the South Dublin<br />
Union. Attempts to seize Dublin Castle and Trinity College failed. This latter<br />
failure severely restricted the Volunteers mans of communicating with each other.</p>
<p>The failure of the country to rise made it impossible to prevent the arrival of<br />
English reinforcements. By Wednesady the revolutionaries were outnumbered by<br />
20 to 1. The English secured a cordon about the city and closed in. They<br />
concentrated their attack on the GPO whilst none of the other strongholds came<br />
under the same sort of concentrated bombardment.</p>
<p>A gun-ship, the Helga, arrived in Dublin and field-guns were mounted on Trinity<br />
College. The effect of the continuous shelling of O&#8217;Connell St. virtually destroyed<br />
it and the surrounding areas. By Friday the GPO was engulfed in flames and<br />
Pearse gave the order to surrender. 450 people, many of whom were civilians,<br />
were dead with over 2500 wounded. The city was in ruins with the damage<br />
estimated at a massive 2 Million pounds.</p>
<p>Over 3,500 people were subsequently arrested country-wide (including DeVelera<br />
and Collins), although 1,500 were freed after questioning. 1,841 of these were<br />
interned without trial in England, and 171 were tried by secret court martial<br />
resulting in 170 convictions. 90 were sentenced to death but 75 of these<br />
sentences were commuted to life imprisonment. The seven signatories of the<br />
proclamation of independence (Pearse, Connolly, Clarke, MacDonagh,<br />
MacDermott, Plunkett, and Ceannt) were all executed to the outrage of the Irish<br />
public who had now begun to revise their opinion of the insurgents to that of a<br />
heroic nature.</p>
<p>3. EFFECTS OF THE REBELLION</p>
<p>The rising was critical in terms of the overall fight for an Irish Republic.</p>
<p>For the first time the masses of the country wanted an end to English rule.<br />
Nationalism swept the country especially as the details of the secret executions<br />
became known.</p>
<p>National attention was brought to the Irish cause and to the oppressive ways in<br />
which the English ruled the country.</p>
<p>These realisations were in all probability the main aim of the insurgents. The War<br />
of Independence which followed in 1919, the subsequent Civil War of 1922, the<br />
formation of the Irish Free State in 1923 and the declaration by Costello of an<br />
Irish Republic can all be traced back to the events of Easter week, 1916.</p>
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