1 |
T.P. O'Connor and the Irish Parliamentary Party, 1912-24Doherty, Erica Samantha January 2013 (has links)
This thesis is an examination of the political career of the Irish Parliamentary Party (IPP) politician, Thomas Power O'Connor, from 1912 to 1924. Its central focus is O'Connor's role within the leadership of the IPP during this period, with particular attention given to his position as go-between during the party's various Irish home rule negotiations with the British government. Moving away from the traditional historiographical focus on the other leaders involved, it utilises a wide range of both primary and secondary sources in an attempt to illustrate O'Connor's vital role during these turbulent years. It not only provides an in-depth account and analysis of O'Connor's parliamentary career but also contributes to the overall historical understanding of the IPP. Chapter one examines O'Connor's involvement surrounding the introduction and passing of the third Irish home rule bill Chapter two details his participation in supporting the British war effort and his reasons for doing so. Chapter three investigates his role as go• between during the Lloyd George Irish home rule negotiations of May-July 1916, whilst chapter four deals with the political fallout of these talks and their impact upon O'Connor's reputation. Chapter five details his party fundraising mission to American and the difficulties he faced there. Chapter six evaluates the success of O'Connor and the party rump at Westminster from 1918•24. By examining his political outlook and ideology, this thesis also engages with the historiographical debate surrounding O'Connor's identity as either a British or an Irish politician
|
2 |
Irish nationalist organisations in the north east of England, 1890-1925Shannon, Stephen January 2013 (has links)
This thesis is the first major study of organised Irish nationalism in the North East of England, set against the wider context of events in Britain and Ireland, from the division that followed Parnell’s fall in 1890 until shortly after the foundation of the Irish Free State and the Irish Civil War. It is a significant contribution to our understanding of the history of the largest ethnic group in Britain before the Second World War – the Irish. It is also an important regional study, revealing the vitality and diversity of the North East’s expression of Irish nationalism that was probably not equalled anywhere else in England and Wales, other than in London. That vitality was manifested in the raising of the Tyneside Irish Brigade for the British Army in 1914. The Tyneside Irish was the crowning achievement of the pre-1918 Irish nationalist organisations in the North East, and arguably in Britain, demonstrating the organisations’ commitment both to John Redmond and to the region, where so many Irish migrants had settled. Irish nationalism’s diversity in the North East was embodied in the Irish Labour Party, which, alone in England, took root on Tyneside, and sought to blend class and ethnic issues at a time of national crisis in Ireland. This organisation casts light on the complex issue of the transference of working-class Irish Catholic allegiance from nationalism to the labour movement in Britain, and, therefore, in the assimilation of that community into the wider British community. Though none of these nationalist organisations has left any extensive archive, this thesis utilises Irish and English manuscript sources, and a wide array of Catholic, labour, and regional newspapers, to demonstrate that these organisations were not only an important part of the history of the Irish in the North East, but also of the North East itself.
|
Page generated in 0.0147 seconds