Timeline
editDate | Event |
---|---|
1 November 1913 | "the North Began" |
11 November 1913 | Meeting at Wynn's Hotel |
25 November 1913 | Public meeting at the Rotunda, 27-member Provisional Committee |
9 June 1914 | Redmond ultimatum |
19 June 1914 | Redmond's 25 nominees published (he though original numbered 25 not 27) |
??? 1914 | Redmond's 25 added to original Provisional Committee under latter's protest |
14 July 1914 | Redmond's 25 nominees attend Provisional Committee for the first time |
26 July 1914 | Howth gun-running |
4 August 1914 | British entry into World War I |
"By August" | Some Volunteer companies had split.[1] |
20 September 1914 | Woodenbridge speech |
24 September 1914 | 20 of 27 of original Provisional Committee sign open letter repudiating Redmond; mention Casement would have signed if not absent[2] Take over HQ at 41 Kildare Street.[3] |
30 Sep 1914 | Redmondite meeting at Dublin City Hall; name mentions in resolutions proposed by:-
|
10 October 1914 | "Proposed Constitution of the Irish Volunteers"[4] |
14 October 1914 | Redmond presides at Dublin City Hall meeting of National Committee, agrees Constitution, which uses name "National Volunteers". |
25 October 1914 | 160 delegates at "First Convention" under McNeill endorse Constitution[4] Grob-Fitzgibbon says Redmond to "avoid confusion" announced name "National Volunteers" "immediately after this convention",[4] though maybe that's a thinko for 14 Oct "immediately after" 10 Oct. |
September 1916 | National Volunteers refers to itself as "the Irish National Volunteers" in a resolution (arguing against too close an association with the IPP).[5] |
Names
editGrob-Fitzgibbon says Redmond announced name "National Volunteers" to "avoid confusion".[4]
Charles Townshend says "by mutual consent" they adopted "Irish Volunteers" and "Irish National Volunteers" respectively; "Though it is often suggested that the latter title was invented at the time of the split, in fact it had been in use by many units from early 1914 onwards."[6] Cumann na mBan's founding document used "Irish National Volunteers".[6]
"By 15 June, the Irish Parliamentary Party had ‘in dramatic fashion’, taken charge of the movement which then became known as the National Volunteers."[7]
Medallists P. Quinn & Co. of Belfast made otherwise identical brass-and-enamel badges with "NV" or "IV".[8]
Self-designation from October 1914 | Dublin Castle names up to May 1915 | Police labels from May 1915 |
---|---|---|
Irish Volunteers | Irish National Volunteers, Irish Volunteers, Irish National Volunteers (Sinn Fein section), Irish Volunteers (Sinn Fein section), Irish Volunteers (MacNeill section) | Irish Volunteers (Sinn Fein) |
National Volunteers | Irish National Volunteers, Irish Volunteers, Irish National Volunteers (Redmondite section), Irish Volunteers (Redmondite section) | Irish National Volunteer Force |
Personnel
editGrob-Fitzgibbon says Redmond's committee included only his 25 nominees; Hobson says it included "five or six" of the original Provisional Committee.[3]
Name | Affiliation(s) | When joined | After split | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Eoin MacNeill | CnaG | Original | Irish | Secretary; then Chairman |
Laurence Kettle | AOH, IPP | Original | ??? | Secretary |
The O'Rahilly | SF | Original | Irish | Treasurer |
John Gore | AOH | Original | ??? | Treasurer |
Thomas MacDonagh | CnaG | Original | Irish | |
Joseph Plunkett | CnaG | Original | Irish | Irish Review |
Piaras Béaslaí | IRB | Original | Irish | |
Michael J. Judge | AOH | Original | Irish | |
Peter (Peadar) Macken | IRB, SF, CnaG | Original | Irish | Labour leader.[11] |
John Fitzgibbon | CnaG, SF | Original | Irish | Not John Fitzgibbon, IPP MP |
Patrick Pearse | CnaG | Original | Irish | St. Enda's School |
Patrick O'Riain | IRB, FÉ | Original | Irish | |
Bulmer Hobson | IRB, FÉ | Original | Irish | |
Eamonn Martin | IRB, FÉ | Original | Irish | |
Con Colbert | IRB, FÉ | Original | Irish | |
Éamonn Ceannt | IRB, CnaG, SF | Original | Irish | Assistant to the O'Rahilly as treasurer |
Seán Mac Diarmada | IRB | Original | Irish | Irish Freedom |
Séamus O'Connor | IRB | Original | Irish | |
Liam Mellows | IRB | Original | Irish | |
Colm O'Loughlin | IRB | Original | Irish | St. Enda's School |
Liam Gogan | Original | Irish | Poet[citation needed] | |
Peter White | Celtic Literary Society | Original | Irish | |
Roger Casement | CnaG | Original | Irish | |
Thomas Kettle | IPP, AOH | Original | ??? | |
James Lenehan | AOH | Original | ??? | |
Michael Lonergan | IRB, FÉ | Original | ??? | |
Maurice Moore | IPP, CnaG, Connaught Rangers | Original | ??? | |
Peter O'Reilly | AOH | Original | ??? | |
Robert Page | IRB, GAA | Original | ??? | |
John Walsh | AOH | Original | ??? | |
Right Rev. Mgr. A. Ryan, | P.P., V.G., Tipperary ; | Redmond | ||
Very Rev. Canon Murphy, | P.P., Macroom ; | Redmond | ||
Very Rev. J. McCafferty, | Adm., Letterkeuny; | Redmond | ||
Rev. F. J. O'Hare, | C.C., Newry; | Redmond | ||
W. H. K. Redmond, | M.P. ; | Redmond | ||
Joseph Devlin, | M.P. ; | Redmond | ||
T. J. Condon, | M.P. ; | Redmond | ||
the Lord Mayor of Dublin ; | Redmond | |||
the Mayor of Sligo ; | Redmond | |||
Michael Governey, | Chairman Co. Council, Carlow ; | Redmond | ||
J. Creed- Meredith, | B.L., Dublin; | Redmond | ||
John D. Nugent, | T.C., Dublin; | Redmond | ||
John T. Donovan, | B.L., Dublin; | Redmond | ||
John P. Gaynor, | B.L., Dublin; | Redmond | ||
P. Murphy, | Solicitor, Waterford; | Redmond | ||
T. P. Curley, | Dublin; | Redmond | ||
Joseph Hutchinson, | Dublin; | Redmond | ||
E. J. Kenny, | J.P., Dublin; | Redmond | ||
Stephen J. Hand, | Dublin; | Redmond | ||
J. J. Scannell, | J.P., Dublin; | Redmond | ||
J. F. Dalton, | J.P., Dublin; | Redmond | ||
Martin J. Burke, | Solicitor, Belfast; | Redmond | ||
J. F. Small, | J.P., Clones; | Redmond | ||
George Boyle, | Derry; | Redmond | ||
Dr. T. J. Madden, | Kiltimagh, Mayo. | Redmond |
References
editSources
edit- Brown, Shane (2018). "What happened to Redmond's National Volunteers?". History Ireland. 26 (1): 34–37. ISSN 0791-8224. JSTOR 90017335.
- Finnan, Joseph P. (2004). John Redmond and Irish Unity, 1912-1918. Syracuse University Press. ISBN 978-0-8156-3043-2. Retrieved 15 May 2020 – via Google Books.
- Grob-Fitzgibbon, Benjamin (2007). Turning Points of the Irish Revolution: The British Government, Intelligence, and the Cost of Indifference, 1912–1921. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-230-60432-2. Retrieved 15 May 2020 – via Google Books.
- Hobson, Bulmer (1918). A short history of the Irish volunteers. Dublin: Candle Press. Retrieved 15 May 2020 – via Internet Archive.
- Martin, F. X., ed. (2013). The Irish Volunteers 1913-1915: Recollections and Documents (2nd ed.). Merrion Press. ISBN 978-1-908928-43-6. Retrieved 15 May 2020 – via Google Books.
- Whearity, Peter Francis (December 2011). The Irish Volunteers in north Co. Dublin, 1913–17 (PDF) (MA). NUI Maynooth. p. 25. Retrieved 15 May 2020.
Citations
edit- ^ Whearity 2011 p.51
- ^ Hobson 1918 pp.198–202
- ^ a b Hobson 1918 p.202
- ^ a b c d Grob-Fitzgibbon 2007 p.86
- ^ Finnan 2004 p.151
- ^ a b Townshend, Charles (2006). "England's Difficulty". Easter 1916: The Irish Rebellion. Penguin. ISBN 978-0-14-190276-0. Retrieved 15 May 2020.
- ^ Whearity 2011 p.25
- ^ "Lot 93: National Volunteers brass and enamel pin". The Eclectic Collector. Whyte's Auctions. 3 February 2018. Retrieved 7 June 2020. "Lot 94: Irish Volunteers brass and enamel pin". The Eclectic Collector. Whyte's Auctions. 3 February 2018. Retrieved 7 June 2020.
- ^ Grob-Fitzgibbon 2007 pp.86–87
- ^ Hobson p.19
- ^ "Ó MAICÍN, Peadar (1878–1916)". ainm.ie (in Irish). Retrieved 15 May 2020.; Callan, Charles (2006). "Labour Lives no. 8: Peadar Macken (1878-1916)". Saothar. 31: 121–123. ISSN 0332-1169. JSTOR 23199972.