Read De Valera's Irelands Online
Authors: Dermot Keogh,Keogh Doherty,Dermot Keogh
Tags: #General, #Europe, #Ireland, #Political Science, #History, #Political, #Biography & Autobiography, #Revolutionaries, #Statesmen
After the Second World War, Armistice Day was replaced by RemÂemÂbrance Day and held on the Sunday closest to 11 November. Names of those who had served or died in the war were added to existing meÂmoriÂals. Parades and services continued as they had done on Armistice Day, and they remained largely the concern of the Protestant and unionist comÂmunity. While the government had no formal involvement in these events it was quite common for the prime minister or a cabinet minister to take the salute of ex-servicemen on these occasions. There is little eviÂdence of involvement of Catholic clergy in public ceremonies at cenoÂtaphs or at council services. At the same time we should note that in some places, such as Dungannon, Newry and Sion Mills, parades of CaÂtholic and ProtÂestant ex-servicemen continued to take place as they had done in the 1930s.
29
The degree of polarisation between the two communities over this commemoration is revealed starkly in a comparison of coverage of these events in Belfast nationalist and unionist papers in the mid-1950s. In 1955 and 1956 the unionist papers, the
Belfast Newsletter
and the
NorthÂern Whig
gave extensive coverage to Remembrance Day in various places in Northern Ireland as well as in London, while the nationalist paper, the
Irish News
, ignored the occasion and carried not a single report on any event connected with the commemoration.
30
By the early 1900s, St Patrick's Day on 17 March was widely celebrated throughout Ireland, north and south. In 1903 an act of the WestÂminster parliament made St Patrick's Day a bank holiday, a measure supported by unionist and nationalist MPs. After 1921, St Patrick's Day was still obÂserved in Northern Ireland but on a lower key than in the south where it took on special importance. During the 1920s and 1930s in Northern Ireland the shamrock continued to be worn widely and the day remained a bank holiday when banks, government and municipal offices and schools were closed, although most shops and factories seem to have been unÂaffected.
31
In Catholic churches St Patrick's Day was an important feast day which was well-attended. The Ancient Order of Hibernians continued to organise demonstrations on this date and nationalist politicians often used the occasion to make speeches. From 1925, the BBC in NorthÂern IreÂland commenced an annual series of special St Patrick's day broadÂÂÂcasts.
32
The Patrician Year of 1932, which marked the anniversary of St PatÂrick's arrival in Ireland was marked by all the churches. At Saul, the site of St Patrick's first church, the Church of Ireland built a new church while the Catholic Church erected a statue of St Patrick on a nearby hill top. Each of the main denominations took advantage of the occasion to reÂaffirm its belief that St Patrick belonged exclusively to its tradition.
33
Sporting activÂities on St Patrick's Day, including the Ulster schools rugby cup, and speÂcial theatrical events, dances and dinners, were well attended in the 1920s and 1930s. On 18 March 1939 the
Belfast Newsletter
reported that âin BelÂfast and all over the province Ulster folk said goodÂbye to St Patrick's Day with dances and other entertainments'. Special ceremonies of the troopÂing of the colour and presentation of the shamÂrock to Irish regiments reÂmained a tradition (begun by Queen Victoria at the end of her reign). There was, however, no official involvement in or recognition of St PatÂrick's Day, apart from a number of dinners or dances on the day, organÂised by the Duke of Abercorn, as governor of Northern Ireland.
34
On the unionist and government side there was no attempt to hold parades or make speeches on 17 March. The speeches of southern politicians on the day denouncing partition or declaring Ireland's attachÂment to Rome were reported regularly in the northern press and someÂtimes criticised in ediÂtorials but there was no attempt by the government in this period to reÂspond.
After the war, banks and government offices continued to close on St Patrick's Day, while the wearing of the shamrock remained popular and the tradition of presenting it to the Irish regiments abroad conÂtinuÂed. Catholic churches still observed it as a special feast day and the AnÂcient Order of Hibernians organised parades and demonstrations as beÂfore. In the late 1940s and early 1950s the Northern Ireland prime minister, Lord Brookeborough, used the occasion of St Patrick's Day to issue pubÂlic addresses to Ulster people abroad, while members of his cabinet spoke at dinners organised by Ulster associations in Great Britain.
35
By the mid 1950s, however, these attempts to match the political use made of St PatÂrick's Day by the southern government had mostly ceased. In the late 1950s a government information officer urged the cabinet that it might be wise to âquietly forget' St Patrick's Day and abolish it as a bank holiÂday.
36
The suggestion was rejected, but it is clear from newspaper reports in the 1950s that for many people St Patrick's Day was âbusiness as usual'. Many schools dropped it as a holiday and shops and businesses remainÂed open.
37
Correspondents in the unionist press denounced the political overtones of the day in the south and elsewhere. One letter on 17 March 1961 stated that âthe day is now chiefÂly memorable to the averÂage UlsterÂman as the day on which repeated threats against his stand for constituÂtional liberty are pronounced in the Republic and on which Ulster's position is vilified throughout the EngÂlish-speaking world.'
38
Nonetheless, it should be noted that there were some in unionist and Protestant church circles who believed that more attention should be given to the event. From the mid-1950s the editorial in the
Belfast TeleÂgraph
often urged that the day should be a full public holiday, a reÂquest backed by the Church of Ireland diocesan synod of Down and Dromore.
39
In 1961 a resolution of the Young Unionists' Conference deÂplored the apathy in Northern Ireland towards St Patrick's Day.
40
In the 1950s the Church of Ireland inaugurated an annual St Patrick's Day pilÂgrimage and special service at Downpatrick and Saul, which was well attended. Such events were still strongly limited by denominational barriers alÂthough small elements of change were occurring. In 1956 the nationalist members of Downpatrick council refused an invitation to participate in a joint wreath-laying ceremony at St Patrick's grave on the grounds that the Catholic Church âhad arranged adequate celebrations for the Feast and they could not add anything to them'. Eight years later, however, when the Archbishop of Canterbury was the special guest at the St Patrick's Day service at the Church of Ireland cathedral in DownÂpatrick, nationaÂlist councillors turned up to greet the archbishop at the entrance to the cathedral, although they felt unable to enter the building.
41
Commemoration at Eastertime of the 1916 Rising was low-key and without much public notice in Northern Ireland until 1928 when well-publicised ceremonies were held at republican plots in Milltown cemeÂtery in Belfast and in the city cemetery in Derry. In the following year and throughout the 1930s, the government, using the Special Powers Act, proÂhibited these commemorations. In support of the ban the Minister of Home Affairs, R. D. Bates, stated that those involved were âcelebrating one of the most treacherous and bloody rebellions that ever took place in the history of the world' and claimed that there was IRA involvement in the commemorations.
42
The nationalist leader, Joe Devlin, challenged this view in parliament in 1932 and argued that the ban on the commemoraÂtions was a denial of people's right to free speech and referred to one such event in Newry as simply âan annual commemorÂation for all those who died for Ireland'.
43
Every Easter during the 1930s, commemorative meetings were anÂnounced and then declared illegal by the government, but there were often attempts to get round the ban.
44
In 1935, for example, about five hundred people gathered on Easter Monday some fifty yards beyond the cemetery gates at Milltown graveyard where they recited a decade of the rosary, while in Derry, republicans held their commemorations a week before Easter to get round the ban at Eastertime.
45
On a number of occasions in Derry and Armagh wreath-laying ceremonies were perÂformed on Saturday night, hours before the ban came into operation on Easter Sunday.
46
Tension arose frequently over the flying of the tricolour and the wearing of the Easter lily. The most serious confrontation beÂtween the police and republican organisers came in 1942, when active IRA units became involved in the commemorations, leading to shooting in both Dungannon and Belfast, and the murder of a Catholic police conÂstable in Belfast.
47
By 1948, the government had decided not to impose a general ban on Easter commemorations of 1916. From this time on commemorative events were held in a number of centres by a range of organisations. In 1950, for example, the main event at Milltown cemetery in Belfast was organised by the National Graves Association.
48
This was followed by a separate service organised under the auspices of the Republican Socialist party, addressed by Harry Diamond MP, who referred to âthe shadow of a foreign occupation of a portion of their country'. Finally, there was anÂother ceremony held by the âOld Pre-Truce IRA'. In Newry a commÂemoÂrative service was followed by a large parade, led by members of Newry Urban Council, and including members of the Catholic Boy Scouts, the Foresters and the Hibernians. There were also Easter commemorative events in County Armagh and County Tyrone and Derry city. Similar events occurred during the 1950s with few problems, although someÂtimes there was conflict between organisers and police over the flying of the tricolour, as for example in Lurgan in 1952 and 1953 when the Royal Ulster Constabulary confiscated flags and made arrests. In Newry in 1957, arrests were also made over the flying of the tricolour at the Easter commemorations, and in the following year a parade to commemorate 1916 was prohibited in the town, although the ban was ignored.
49
In the new Irish Free State, St Patrick's Day quickly took on special significance. By 1922 it had been made a general holiday and from 1925, thanks to the Free State Licensing Act, all public houses were closed on that day. In Dublin, an annual army parade now replaced the processÂions organised by the Lord Lieutenant and Lord Mayor. Throughout the country there were parades, often involving army marches to church for mass. Dances, sporting activities, theatrical events and excursions were run on the day. The Irish language was specially promoted on the day, frequently with events organised by the Gaelic League. In 1926 the southÂern premier W. T. Cosgrave made the first official radio broadcast on St Patrick's Day. He called for mutual understanding and harmony and declared that:
The destinies of the country, north and south, are now in the hands of IrishÂmen, and the responsibility for success or failure will rest with ourselves. If we are to succeed there must be a brotherly toleration of each other's ideas as to how our ambition may be realised, and a brotherly co-operation in every effort towards its realisation.
50
In his St Patrick's Day's speech in 1930, Cosgrave declared that âas we have been Irish and Roman, so it will remain', but he took care to preface his statement with the remarks that he was speaking for the majority of people in the state.
51
In 1931 in a St Patrick's Day broadcast to the Irish in America, and reported in the Irish press, Cosgrave again sought to make a reconciliatory gesture âwhatever be your creed in religion or politics, you are of the same blood â the healing process must go on'.
52
With the accession to power of Eamon de Valera and Fianna Fáil in 1932, St Patrick's Day took on added significance. Links between Church and State were publicly stressed with the annual procession on St PatÂrick's Day of de Valera and his Executive Council, complete with a cavalry troop, to the Dublin pro-Cathedral for mass.
53
The Patrician Year of 1932, which included the Eucharistic Congress, gave an opportunity for large demonstrations, with considerable official involvement, emphasising conÂnections between Ireland and Rome.
54
This religious aspect was taken up again by de Valera in his St Patrick's Day broadcast of 1935 in which he reminded people that Ireland had been a Christian and Catholic nation since St Patrick's time: âShe remains a Catholic nation,' he declared.
55
De Valera now used the St Patrick's Day broadÂcasts, which were transmitÂted to the USA and Australia, to launch vigorÂous attacks on the British government and partition. These speeches reached a peak in 1939, when, in Rome for St Patrick's Day, de Valera declared how he had made a pledge beside the grave of Hugh O'Neill that he would never rest until âthat land which the Almighty so clearly designed as one, shall belong undivided to the Irish people'. He urged his listeners to do likewise.
56
At the same time, however, the links between Catholicism and Irish identity as expressed on St Patrick's Day were not absolute. For example, the ProtÂestant President of Ireland, Douglas Hyde, attended a St Patrick's Day service in the Church of Ireland cathedral of St Patrick's in Dublin in 1939.
57
During the war, celebrations on St Patrick's Day were low-key alÂthough de Valera continued to make his annual broadcast. In 1943 he spoke of the restoration of the national territory and the national lanÂguage as the greatest of the state's uncompleted tasks. He also talked of his dream of a land âwhose fields and villages would be joyous with the sounds of industry, the romping of sturdy children, the contests of athÂletic youths and the laughter of comely maidens'.
58
After the war St PatÂrick's Day became a major national holiday once again. In 1950 the miliÂtary parade in Dublin was replaced by a trade and industries parade. In their St Patrick's Day speeches in the 1950s, heads of government, Eamon de Valera and John A. Costello, continued to use the event to make strong denunciations of partition. In his St Patrick's Day broadcast in 1950, CosÂtello declared that âour country is divided by foreign interÂference'.
59