Winifred Carney.
♣
Francis Sheehy-Skeffington.
♣
Michael Collins.
♣
Éamon De Valera.
♣
From 1916 Portraits and Lives, edited by Lawrence William White and James Quinn
1907
NOVEMBER
Thomas J. Clarke returns to Ireland from America and helps to invigorate the Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB)
1909
16 AUGUST
Constance Markievicz and Bulmer Hobson found Na Fianna Éireann
10 DECEMBER
H. H. Asquith, the Liberal prime minister, promises ‘self-government’ for Ireland
1910
JANUARY
UK general election: Liberal party fails to win an overall majority and requires the support of John Redmond’s 70-strong Irish Parliamentary Party to govern
26 JULY
James Connolly returns to Ireland from America
DECEMBER
Another UK general election; Liberals still the largest party with Irish Parliamentary Party holding the balance of power
1912
9 APRIL
At a unionist demonstration at Balmoral, near Belfast, Andrew Bonar Law, leader of the Conservative party, pledges the support of British unionists to Ulster unionist resistance to home rule
11 APRIL
Asquith introduces home rule bill in House of Commons
28 SEPTEMBER
Unionists throughout Ulster sign the Solemn League and Covenant to resist home rule
1913
16 JANUARY
Third reading of home rule bill carried in House of Commons
30 JANUARY
Home rule bill defeated in House of Lords
31 JANUARY
Ulster Volunteer Force founded
15 JULY
After passing in the Commons, home rule bill again defeated in the Lords
26 AUGUST
Tram workers of James Larkin’s Irish Transport and General Workers Union go on strike – a general lockout of union members follows
19 NOVEMBER
Irish Citizen Army founded by trade unionists in Dublin
25 NOVEMBER
Irish Volunteers formed at meeting in Dublin, presided over by Eoin MacNeill
1914
20 MARCH
‘Curragh mutiny’ – General Hubert Gough and most of his officers in the 3rd Cavalry Brigade announce their unwillingness to enforce home rule on Ulster
2 APRIL
Cumann na mBan founded as women’s auxiliary to Irish Volunteers
24–25 APRIL
Ulster Volunteer Force gun-running: large quantity of rifles landed at Larne, Donaghadee and Bangor
25 MAY
Home rule bill passes through Commons for third time
28 JUNE
Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife by a Slav nationalist in Sarajevo, Bosnia
10 JULY
Ulster unionist provisional government meets in Belfast
21–24 JULY
Government, nationalists and unionists fail to reach agreement on the status of Ulster at Buckingham Palace conference
26 JULY
Rifles for Irish Volunteers landed at Howth; British troops who failed to disarm Volunteers fire on a crowd at Bachelor’s Walk, Dublin, killing four and wounding thirty
1 AUGUST
More rifles for Irish Volunteers landed at Kilcoole, Co. Wicklow
4 AUGUST
UK declares war on Germany after German invasion of Belgium
9 SEPTEMBER
At a conference in Dublin, militant nationalists (mostly IRB) discuss mounting an insurrection during the war
18 SEPTEMBER
Government of Ireland act, 1914, suspends the introduction of home rule for the duration of the war
20 SEPTEMBER
At Woodenbridge, Co. Wicklow, John Redmond encourages Irish Volunteers to join the British army
24 SEPTEMBER
Eoin MacNeill and other Volunteer leaders repudiate Redmond’s leadership; Volunteers split, the majority forming Redmond’s ‘National Volunteers’
OCTOBER
Volunteer minority, still calling themselves the Irish Volunteers, re-organise with Eoin MacNeill as chief of staff, Patrick Pearse as director of military organisation, Joseph Mary Plunkett as director of military operations, and Thomas MacDonagh as director of training
Sir Roger Casement travels to Berlin to seek German help for an Irish insurrection against British rule
1915
MAY
IRB creates a military committee of Pearse, Plunkett and Éamonn Ceannt to begin planning for an armed insurrection
1 AUGUST
Pearse gives stirring graveside oration at the funeral of Jeremiah O’Donovan Rossa warning that ‘Ireland unfree shall never be at peace’ [link]
DECEMBER
IRB military council of Clarke, Seán Mac Diarmada, Pearse, Plunkett and Ceannt formed
1916
JANUARY
IRB supreme council gives approval for armed insurrection
19–22 JANUARY
James Connolly confers with IRB military council and is co-opted into their plans (Thomas MacDonagh co-opted in April)
3 APRIL
Pearse issues orders to Volunteers throughout Ireland for manoeuvres beginning on Easter Sunday (23 April)
20 APRIL
A trawler, the Aud, arrives in Tralee Bay with German arms for the Irish Volunteers and is arrested by a British patrol ship
21 APRIL
Sir Roger Casement lands from a German submarine at Banna Strand, Co. Kerry, and is arrested
22 APRIL
Eoin MacNeill, of the Irish Volunteers, learns of planned insurrection and countermands orders for Easter Sunday manoeuvres
23 APRIL
Military council meets at Liberty Hall and decides to go ahead with insurrection on Easter Monday (24 April); a revolutionary proclamation is signed by the seven members of the council
24 APRIL
GPO and several other buildings in Dublin seized by Irish Volunteers and Citizen Army
An attack on Dublin Castle by a Citizen Army unit is repulsed; the unit briefly holds City Hall until overwhelmed later that day
25 APRIL
British army reinforcements arrive in Dublin and surround insurgent positions; martial law declared in Dublin
Citizen Army force in St Stephen’s Green comes under heavy fire and withdraws to College of Surgeons
26 APRIL
Liberty Hall destroyed and GPO damaged by British shelling
Francis Sheehy-Skeffington and two other prisoners summarily executed at Portobello barracks on orders of Captain J. C. Bowen-Colthurst [link]
Wexford Volunteers take over Enniscorthy
Heavy fighting as British troops advance on insurgent positions around the Four Courts and the South Dublin Union
Unable to hold the Mendicity Institute on Usher’s Island, the small Volunteer garrison under Seán Heuston surrenders
26–27 APRIL
British army reinforcements advancing on Mount Street bridge suffer heavy casualties at the hands of Volunteers from Éamon de Valera’s 3rd battalion
28 APRIL
Volunteers in north County Dublin under Thomas Ashe and Richard Mulcahy seize Ashbourne Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC) barracks and ambush an RIC patrol sent to re-take it
GPO on fire; insurgents evacuate building and set up their headquarters in 16 Moore Street
29 APRIL
Pearse and Connolly agree to unconditional surrender, and send orders to other insurgent posts to do likewise
30 APRIL
Final surrenders of rebel commandants in Dublin end the rising; 64 insurgents, 132 crown forces and about 230 civilians killed
2–9 MAY
Courts martial of 187 leading insurgents; 88 sentenced to death, with 73 commuted to various terms of imprisonment. Over 400 insurgents sent to Britain to be interned; over 3,000 other suspects also arrested, of whom about half are interned
2 MAY
Gun battle ensues between Kent family and RIC at Bawnard House, Castlelyons, near Fermoy, Co. Cork, when Kents resist arrest
3 MAY
Executions of Pearse, Clarke and MacDonagh
4–12 MAY
Executions of remaining insurgents; Connolly and Mac Diarmada the last to be shot
3 AUGUST
Found guilty of treason, Roger Casement is hanged in Pentonville jail, London
22 DECEMBER
Release from Frongoch camp and Reading jail of remaining untried Irish political prisoners; convicted insurgents remain imprisoned [their trades]
1917
16 JUNE
Remaining 120 Irish prisoners, including Eoin MacNeill, de Valera and Markievicz, released from British jails
25 SEPTEMBER
Thomas Ashe dies in Mountjoy jail after forced feeding
26 OCTOBER
De Valera elected president of Sinn Féin
1918
18 APRIL
A broad front of Irish nationalists oppose conscription at Mansion House conference
17–18 MAY
‘German plot’ arrests of Sinn Féin leaders
11 NOVEMBER
Great War ends
14–28 DECEMBER
General election: Sinn Féin wins 73 of 105 Irish seats [manifesto]
1919
21 JANUARY
First meeting of Dáil Éireann at Mansion House, Dublin, declares independence
Irish Volunteer attack on RIC at Soloheadbeg, Co. Tipperary kills two policemen and marks the beginning of the war of independence [link]
1920
23 DECEMBER
Government of Ireland Act, 1920, provides for two subordinate Irish parliaments, one for six Ulster counties, the other for the remainder of the country
1921
22 JUNE
George V opens Northern Ireland parliament in Belfast
9 JULY
Truce ends Irish war of independence
6 DECEMBER
Anglo–Irish treaty signed by British government and Sinn Féin delegates in London [link]
1922
7 JANUARY
Dáil Éireann approves Anglo–Irish treaty by 64 votes to 57 [Constans de Markievics against the treaty]
14 JANUARY
Irish Free State provisional government elected by protreaty representatives; Michael Collins elected chairman
28 JUNE
Free State troops attack antitreaty forces in Four Courts, beginning the civil war
20 JULY
Limerick and Waterford taken by Free State troops (Cork taken 11 August)
12 AUGUST
Arthur Griffith, president of Dáil Éireann, dies of cerebral haemorrhage
22 AUGUST
Michael Collins killed in ambush at Béal na Bláth, Co. Cork
17 NOVEMBER
First of 77 executions of anti-treatyites by Free State government (last on 2 May 1923) [link]
6 DECEMBER
Formal establishment of Irish Free State with W. T. Cosgrave as president of the executive council
1923
24 MAY
De Valera orders anti-treatyites to cease armed operations, ending the civil war
I am come of the seed of the people, the people that sorrow, That have no treasure but hope,. No riches laid up but a memory Of an Ancient glory. My mother bore me in bondage, in bondage my mother was born, I am of the blood of serfs; The children with whom I have played, the men and women with whom I have eaten, Have had masters over them, have been under the lash of masters, And, though gentle, have served churls; The hands that have touched mine, the dear hands whose touch is familiar to me, Have worn shameful manacles, have been bitten at the wrist by manacles, Have grown hard with the manacles and the task-work of strangers, I am flesh of the flesh of these lowly, I am bone of their bone, I that have never submitted; I that have a soul greater than the souls of my people’s masters, I that have vision and prophecy and the gift of fiery speech, I that have spoken with God on the top of His holy hill.
And because I am of the people, I understand the people, I am sorrowful with their sorrow, I am hungry with their desire: My heart has been heavy with the grief of mothers, My eyes have been wet with the tears of children, I have yearned with old wistful men, And laughed or cursed with young men; Their shame is my shame, and I have reddened for it, Reddened for that they have served, they who should be free, Reddened for that they have gone in want, while others have been full, Reddened for that they have walked in fear of lawyers and of their jailors With their writs of summons and their handcuffs, Men mean and cruel! I could have borne stripes on my body rather than this shame of my people.
And now I speak, being full of vision; I speak to my people, and I speak in my people’s name to the masters ofmy people. I say to my people that they are holy, that they are august, despite their chains. That they are greater than those that hold them, and stronger and purer, That they have but need of courage, and to call on the name of their God, God the unforgctting, the dear God that loves the peoples For whom He died naked, suffering shame. And I say to my people’s masters: Beware, Beware of the thing that is coming, beware of the risen people. Who shall take what ye would not give. Did ye think to conquer the people, Or that Law is stronger than life and than men’s desire to be free? We will try it out with you, ye that have harried and held. Ye that have bullied and bribed, tyrants, hypocrites, liars!
—Pádraig Pearse |
Since the wise men have not spoken, I speak that am only a fool; A fool that hath loved his folly, Yea, more than the wise men their books or their counting houses, or their quiet homes, Or their fame in men’s mouths; A fool that in all his days hath done never a prudent thing, Never hath counted the cost, nor recked if another reaped The fruit of his mighty sowing, content to scatter the seed; A fool that is unrepentant, and that soon at the end of all Shall laugh in his lonely heart as the ripe ears fall to the reaping-hooks And the poor are filled that were empty, Tho’ he go hungry.
I have squandered the splendid years that the Lord God gave to my youth In attempting impossible things, deeming them alone worth the toil. Was it folly or grace? Not men shall iudge me, but God.
I have squandered the splendid years: Lord, if I had the years I would squander them over again, Aye, fling them from me! For this I have heard in my heart, that a man shall scatter, not hoard, Shall do the deed of to-day, nor take thought of to-morrow’s teen, Shall not bargain or huxter with God; or was it a jest of Christ’s And is this my sin before men, to have taken Him at His word?
The lawyers have sat in council, the men with the keen, long faces, And said, “This man is a fool,” and others have said, “He blasphemeth;” And the wise have pitied the fool that hath striven to give a life In the world of time and space among the bulks of actual things, To a dream that was dreamed in the heart, and that only the heart could hold.
O wise men, riddle me this: what if the dream come true? What if the dream come true? and if millions unborn shall dwell In the house that I shaped in my heart, the noble house of my thought? Lord, I have staked my soul, I have staked the lives of my kin On the truth of Thy dreadful word. Do not remember my failures, But remember this my faith.
And so I speak. Yea, ere my hot youth pass, I speak to my people and say: Ye shall be foolish as I; ye shall scatter, not save; Ye shall venture your all, lest ye lose what is more than all; Ye shall call for a miracle, taking Christ at His word. And for this I will answer, O people, answer here and hereafter, O people that I have loved shall we not answer together?
—Pádraig Pearse |