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| EFFECTS
OF 1916 |
BACKGROUND
Whether arrogant, or unable to read the will of the Irish
people, Westminster's response to the events of Easter 1916, prompted
a sea-change in Irish politics. Summary executions and arbitrary arrests
prompted strong public reaction against the Crown. A coalition bringing
Carson into the British Cabinet, did little to maintain faith in the
government's commitment to implementing Home Rule after the war.
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The Irish Party failed to provide the kind of leadership demanded
by the electorate and in the post-war general election, Sinn Féin
won the vast majority of Irish seats. Eamon de Valera emerged as a
political leader, refusing to take the seats at Westminster and establishing
Dáil Éireann.
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Those Irishmen serving in the Great War would see the 1916 Rising
as a betrayal. They were dealt a double blow: not only did many high
ranking British officers treat the Irish with suspicion and distrust
after the insurrection, but many Irish civilians cast aspersions on
them for serving in the army of the 'oppressor'.
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'D' Company, RDF, 1915.

5th
Royal Irish Lancers leaving Mass at Aughrim Street, Dublin.
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EASTER
RISING
When Redmond pledged support for England in the war to defend 'small
nations', the Irish National Volunteer movement split. Those members
of the Irish Republican Brotherhood holding powerful positions in
the Volunteers, decided then to mount a rebellion against Britain.
The Citizen Army, controlled by James Connolly, co-operated with the
IRB leaders, culminating in the Easter Rising of 1916.
On Easter Monday, April 24, the rebels seized a number of buildings
including the GPO. The 10th (Commercial) Battalion of the Royal Dublin
Fusiliers repelled an attempt to take Dublin Castle. I.R.F.U. President,
F. Browning, was one of five unarmed men unaware of the insurrection,
killed in an ambush en route from an Easter Monday parade.
The Rising itself was short-lived and most Dubliners were either indifferent
or actively hostile towards the rebels. At that time, hundreds of
men in the 48th and 49th Brigades of the 16th Irish Division were
being gassed in the trenches at Hulluch, near Loos. For the Irish
soldiers at battle-fronts, the dead, the wounded and their families
or friends at home, the Rising was a bitter betrayal.
The government, however, made an appalling mess of the situation.
Treasonous though rebellion was, the Irish people had no taste for
the executions and began to protest. Of ninety condemned men, sixteen
were excuted. Martial law was imposed and more people than had participated
in the Rising were arrested. Sheehy Skeffington, a pacifist, not a
rebel, was arrested and shot without trial. Public outrage grew and
over the next few months, Sinn Féin was the only party offering
acceptable leadership.
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POST-WAR
ELECTIONS
In the 1918 General Election, Sinn Féin won 73 seats, the
Unionists took 26 and the Irish Party was virtually wiped out, with
only six seats. Eamon de Valera, had been involved in the 1916 Rising
and was sentenced to death. Because he was born in the U.S. and
Britain wanted to maintain good relations with America, his life
was spared. Somewhat ironically, he won the East Clare by-election
caused by the death of Willie Redmond, M.P. (brother of John). He
now led the Sinn Féin M.P.s, abstaining from Westminster
and declaring an Irish parliament, called Dáil Éireann.
Westminster's attempts to quash Irish resistance to British rule
was met with guerrilla warfare. Towards the end of 1921, they finally
agreed the Anglo-Irish Treaty, which provided for the partition
of Ireland, allowing the Unionists to remain within the United Kingdom.
Nationalists split over partition. The bloody civil war which followed
changed nothing about the Treaty arrangements.
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