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Irish Unionist Alliance

The Irish Unionist Alliance (IUA), also known as the Irish Unionist Party, Irish Unionists or simply the Unionists, was a unionist political party founded in Ireland in 1891 from a merger of the Irish Conservative Party and the Irish Loyal and Patriotic Union (ILPU) to oppose plans for home rule for Ireland within the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. The party was led for much of its existence by Colonel Edward James Saunderson and later by St John Brodrick, 1st Earl of Midleton. In total, eighty-six members of the House of Lords affiliated themselves with the Irish Unionist Alliance, although its broader membership among Irish voters outside Ulster was relatively small.

Irish Unionist Alliance
LeaderColonel Saunderson (First)
The 11th Baron Farnham (Last)
Founded1891; 133 years ago (1891)
Dissolved1922; 102 years ago (1922)
Merger ofIrish Conservatives
Irish Loyal and Patriotic Union
Succeeded byUlster Unionist Party
IdeologyConservatism
Irish unionism
Anglo-Irish interests
Political positionRight-wing
National affiliationConservative Party

The party aligned itself closely with the Conservative Party and Liberal Unionists to campaign to prevent the passage of a new Home Rule Bill. Its MPs took the Conservative whip at Westminster, and its members were often described as 'Conservatives' or 'Conservative Unionists',[1] even though much of its support came from former Liberal voters. Among its most prominent members were the Dublin barrister, Sir Edward Carson, and the founder of Ireland's cooperative movement, Sir Horace Plunkett. Its electoral strength was largely (although not exclusively) concentrated in east Ulster and south Dublin.

The IUA became wracked by internal disagreement during the early twentieth century, with the issue of the partition of Ireland proving to be particularly divisive. Many unionists outside Ulster became resigned to the political necessity of Home Rule, while unionists in Ulster established a separate organisation, the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP). In 1919 the IUA finally split apart with the founding of the break-away Unionist Anti-Partition League, effectively signalling the death of institutional unionism in most of Ireland. The UUP continued to operate in Northern Ireland, and would go on to dominate domestic politics there for much of the twentieth century.

History edit

Foundation edit

The Irish Unionist Alliance was founded in 1891 by the members of the Irish Loyal and Patriotic Union (ILPU), which it replaced.[2] The ILPU had been established to prevent electoral competition between Liberals and Conservatives in the three southern provinces on a common platform of maintenance of the union.[3] The IUA united this movement with unionists in the northern province of Ulster, where unionist sentiment and support was strongest.[4] As such, the new party sought to represent unionism on an all-Ireland basis. The party's founders hoped that this would coordinate the electoral and lobbying activities of unionists across Ireland. Prior to 1891, unionists had seen considerable electoral losses across southern Ireland at the hands of the pro-Home Rule Irish Parliamentary Party, founded a decade earlier.[5] It was deemed necessary for southern and northern supporters of the Union to more formally unite their efforts. At this stage, the majority of unionists in all parts of Ireland were opposed to the Irish Home Rule movement, especially following the collapse of the Irish wing of the Liberal Party.[5] The IUA's first leader was the Orangeman and former Conservative MP, Edward James Saunderson.[3]

1891–1914 edit

 
A Unionist anti-John Redmond poster from the 1910 election

In the House of Commons, the party closely aligned itself with the Conservatives and Liberal Unionists. In the 1892 general election the party won 20.6% of the Irish vote and 21 seats. In 1893, the party achieved a major success when it joined the Conservatives to defeat the Home Rule Bill. In the House of Lords, eighty-six peers affiliated themselves with the Irish Unionist Alliance. This high level of support reflected the strong unionist sentiment within Ireland's landed class. Unionists in the Lords proved to be instrumental in defeating attempts by the Liberals to introduce Home Rule legislation. In the 1900 general election the party won 32.2% of the vote in Ireland, most of its votes coming from Ulster.

Throughout the period, members of the IUA campaigned not only in Ireland, but also in Great Britain alongside the Conservative Party. This was especially the case in the two general elections of 1910. In December 1910, the IUA sent 278 workers to British constituencies to assist the Conservative candidates, distributing almost three million leaflets across England.[6] It was during that this time that a large number of Conservative MPs married into Irish Southern Unionist families.

Despite early hopes among some unionists that the IUA would expand the unionist presence across Ireland, the party failed to make any major electoral gains in the six subsequent general elections. In the south of Ireland, the IUA consistently won only the double seat representing the graduates of Dublin University, and a couple of the Dublin seats would occasionally fall to them. The party also won a surprise victory in Galway City in 1900. In local elections, the party maintained a geographically broader representation, although failed to win many new voters. Unlike in Ulster, the anti-Home Rulers were a scattered minority.

In Ulster, the IUA built upon solid unionist electoral foundations and became the dominant political force in much of the province. In the north and east of Ulster, unionists consistently won seats, often unopposed.[3] In the three counties of Ulster which would later become part of the Irish Free State, the unionists failed to come close to winning in Monaghan North, their strongest constituency of the eight in question, and never even contested West Donegal. Despite the prominence of many influential Southern Unionists in the party, Ulster remained the core of the IUA's support base. Ulster unionism was linked strongly to the former Conservatives, with their strong Orange Order links, rather than to the former Liberals, who had made some effort to encourage cross-denominational support for their unionist stance. The strength of the northern unionist wing played a vital role in the shift of power in the pro-union movement to Conservative and Orange elements. While the link between the Orange lodges and the new Unionist associations did introduce a populist, democratic element into unionist politics, it also served to reinforce the sectarian nature of unionism in the north. In 1905, this particular brand of unionism within the IUA led to the establishment of the Ulster Unionist Council (UUC).[7] Although Ulster Unionists were still within the broader framework of the Irish Unionist Alliance, the Ulster party began to develop its own distinct organisational structures and political goals. From 1907, the IUA's political activity was organised by the Joint Committee of the Unionist Associations of Ireland (JCUAI).[8][9] This body sought to coordinate the IUA's election and lobbying activity, whilst recognising the distinct differences between the northern and southern parties.

The prominence of the Ulster Unionist Council quickly grew thanks to the strong unionist sentiment in Ulster. From 1910, it became the dominant force and focus of resistance in the Irish unionist community.[10] The JCUAI was effectively controlled by Ulstermen, while the IUA's leadership remained largely in the hands of Southern Unionists. This led to the unionist movement gradually becoming 'Ulsterised' from 1910, which marginalised many more moderate unionists in the south.[10] Even so, in 1913, as the Third Home Rule Bill passed through Parliament, the Alliance appears to have become increasingly popular in the south and records show an increase in membership.[11]

Division (1914–1922) edit

 
The 1918 general election result in Ireland, showing the clear dominance of the IUA in Ulster, relative to its weakness in the rest of Ireland

By 1914, the conflict of interest between the unionists in southern Ireland and those in Ulster was wracking the IUA.[12] It was known that the passage of a Home Rule Bill for Ireland was becoming increasingly likely, and as a result many Southern Unionists began to seek a political compromise which would see their interests protected. Many unionists in the south became strongly opposed to any plan to partition the island, as they knew that it would leave them isolated from the unionist-majority areas. Several prominent Southern Unionists, such as Sir Horace Plunkett and Lord Monteagle, became convinced that a degree of home rule was going to be necessary if Ireland was to avoid partition and remain in the Union.[13] Others, such as the anti-partition party leader the 9th Viscount Midleton (later created the 1st Earl of Midleton in 1920), resented the growing dominance of Ulstermen in the party.[14][self-published source] Lord Midleton and his supporters feared that the Ulster wing of the party (now more formally organised as the Ulster Unionist Party) would abandon the south in order to gain a favourable settlement for the north from the British government.[15] In October 1913, the vice-chairman of the IUA, G. F. Stewart, had written to its leader, Sir Edward Carson, to complain that southern concerns were being ignored.[16] Several large unionist demonstrations took place in Dublin in early 1914, in which protesters complained as much about the Ulster Unionists as the Irish nationalists.[16] Despite these internal difficulties, between September 1911 and July 1914 the Joint Committee of the Unionist Associations of Ireland continued its campaign across the British Isles. In this period, the IUA distributed an estimated six million pamphlets and booklets throughout Britain, canvassed 1.5 million voters and arranged 8,800 meetings.[17]

The internal divisions simmered during the First World War. Southern Unionist members sided with Irish Nationalists against the Ulster Unionists during the 1917–18 Irish Convention in an attempt to bring about an understanding on the implementation of the suspended Home Rule Act 1914.[18] The Alliance's official opposition to partition led to it being marginalised in the 1918 general election, which showed the rising influence of the republican Sinn Féin party on the one hand and the strength of Ulster Unionist Council on the other. Despite this, the Alliance won its largest number of seats, with the IUA candidate managing to win a surprise victory in Rathmines. Against the backdrop of the subsequent Irish War of Independence unionists began to openly disagree. At a meeting of the party on Molesworth Street, Dublin, on 24 January 1919, Lord Midleton proposed a motion to the party which would have denied Ulster Unionists a say on government proposals affecting the south of Ireland.[12] The motion was defeated, with a majority of both southern and northern unionists rejecting the plan. Ulster Unionists believed that the motion would have the effect of dividing the unionist cause. The party split anyway, with Lord Midleton and senior southern leaders forming the break-away Unionist Anti-Partition League that same day.[19] Many ordinary members of the southern IUA (Protestant farmers, shopkeepers and clergymen) initially stayed with the remaining rump of the IUA in the south, led by the 11th Baron Farnham, a County Cavan landowner.[12]

Although the IUA hoped to play a part in the Parliament of Southern Ireland envisaged under the 1920 Home Rule Act, the parliament never functioned. The Irish Times, said to be the "voice of Southern Unionists", realised that the 1920 Act would not work and argued from late 1920 for "Dominion Home Rule", the compromise that was eventually agreed upon in the 1921–22 Anglo-Irish Treaty. Under the Treaty, Northern Ireland became a part of the Irish Free State from its creation on 6 December 1922; the Parliament of Northern Ireland voted to leave the Free State two days later.

Irish Free State edit

The split effectively ended the realistic electoral chances of the Irish Unionist Alliance in what became the Irish Free State.[14] The results of the 1920 Irish local elections show that, outside of Ulster, unionist support was strongest in urban areas. As the partition of Ireland became more likely, Southern Unionists (those unionists outside of nine-county Ulster) formed numerous political movements in an attempt to find a solution to the "Irish Question". Among these were the Irish Dominion League[20] and the Irish Centre Party.[21] As such, the southern rump of the IUA became increasingly fractured and in 1922 it lost its reason to exist with the establishment of the Irish Free State. Leading unionist figures, such as the 1st Earl of Midleton (as he had become in 1920), the 4th Earl of Dunraven and Mount-Earl, the 1st Baron Glenavy and Sir Horace Plunkett, were appointed in December 1922 by W. T. Cosgrave to the Free State's first Senate.[22][23] Amongst others, Sir Horace Plunkett's home in County Dublin was then burnt down during the Irish Civil War (1922–23) because of his involvement in the Irish Senate. The IUA helped form the Southern Irish Loyalist Relief Association to assist war refugees and claim compensation for damage to property.[24][25][26] From 1921 IUA voters began to support the mainstream Cumann na nGaedheal party.

In the 1923 election three formerly loyalist businessmen were elected as the Business and Professional Group. From 1921 to 1991 the proportion of Southern Irish Protestants declined from 10% to 3% of the population; these had provided the bulk of the IUA's support base.[27] Unionists continued to have a majority on Rathmines Council until 1929, when the IUA's successors lost their last elected representatives in the Irish Free State.

Northern Ireland edit

In Northern Ireland, unionists of the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP; previously known as the Ulster Unionist Council) continued to dominate domestic politics. The party would hold its powerful position in the unionist community for much of the rest of the twentieth century, until the rise of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) in the late 1980s.

General election results edit

 
Graph of Irish UK MPs 1885–1918 in numbers
Election House of Commons Seats Government Votes
1892 25th Parliament
19 / 103
Liberal victory 12.5%
1895 26th Parliament
17 / 103
Conservative and Liberal Unionist victory
1900 27th Parliament
17 / 103
Conservative and Liberal Unionist victory 32.2%
1906 28th Parliament
16 / 103
Liberal victory 42.7%
1910 (Jan) 29th Parliament
18 / 103
Liberal government in hung Parliament 32.7%
1910 (Dec) 30th Parliament
16 / 103
Liberal government in hung Parliament 28.6%
1918 31st Parliament
25 / 105
Coalition victory 25.3%

Note: Results from Ireland for the UK general elections contested by the Irish Unionist Alliance.[28] These figures do not include MPs elected for the Liberal Unionists, who were officially a separate party. IUA MPs sat with the Liberal Unionists and Conservatives at Westminster, and were often simply called 'Conservatives' or 'Unionists'.

Support base edit

Southern Unionists edit

 
Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland after partition

The leadership of southern unionism was dominated by wealthy, well-educated men who wanted to live in Ireland, felt British and Irish, and who had Irish roots. Many were members of the privileged Anglo-Irish class, who valued their cultural affiliations with the British Empire, and had close personal connections to the aristocracy in Britain.[29] This led to their pejorative description by some opponents as "West Brits".[30] They were generally members of the Anglican Church of Ireland, although there were several notable Catholic unionists, such as The 5th Earl of Kenmare, and Sir Antony MacDonnell. Many of the IUA's leading figures were associated with the Kildare Street Club, a gentleman's club in Dublin. The electoral support base of the IUA in southern Ireland was largely drawn from its Protestant population, many of whom were farmers, small business owners or Church of Ireland clergymen. In 1913, the IUA had a southern core of 683 members, with approximately 300,000 supporters spread across the three southern provinces.[31][32][33] In March 1919 Sir Maurice Dockrell told the House of Commons that the supporting population was "about 350,000".[34] The IUA never achieved "mass party" status in the south. Its local branches varied in strength, and generally followed geographic patterns of Protestant population density. As a result, the IUA's support base was severely limited to certain sections of the population, described as usually being "Protestant, anglicised, propertied and aristocratic".[31]

Although their numbers were small, a considerable amount of industry in Southern Ireland had been developed indigenously by Southern Unionist supporters. These included Jacob's Biscuits, Bewley's, Beamish and Crawford, Brown Thomas, Cantrell & Cochrane, Denny's Sausages,[35] Findlaters,[36] Jameson's Whiskey, W.P. & R. Odlum, Cleeve's, R&H Hall, Dockrell's, Arnott's, Elverys, Goulding Chemicals, Smithwick's, The Irish Times and the Guinness brewery, then southern Ireland's largest company. They controlled financial entities such as the Bank of Ireland and Goodbody Stockbrokers. They were concerned that a new home rule state might create new taxes between them and their markets in Britain and the Empire, that would add to their costs and probably reduce sales and therefore employment.

Many Southern Unionist landowners had inherited large estates. From 1903, many of these were persuaded to sell land to their tenant farmers under the Land Purchase (Ireland) Act 1903. As a group, Southern Unionist landowners were richer than their fellow Irishmen by about £90 million by 1914, which would either stay in the Irish economy, given a favourable political arrangement, or leave if the outcome appeared too uncertain or too radical.[37] This temporarily gave them a voice far beyond their number in the Irish electorate. Some of the more progressive supporters of the IUA attempted to introduce a moderate form of devolution through the Irish Reform Association. Many Southern Unionists were members of the landed gentry, and these were prominent in horse breeding and racing, and as British Army officers.

Southern Unionists are regarded as having been considerably less confrontational than their Ulster neighbours.[38] They were always in the minority in southern Ireland, and many had close personal connections with figures in nationalist politics. As a group, they never threatened or organised violence in order to resist Home Rule or partition, and were generally placid in their politics.[39] Lord Midleton described Southern Unionists as "lacking political insight and cohesion" and "restricting themselves to the easy task of attending meetings in Dublin".[38] In discussing problems of civic morality in 2011 in the Republic of Ireland, former Taoiseach Garret FitzGerald remarked that before 1922: "In Ireland a strong civic sense did exist – but mainly amongst Protestants and especially Anglicans".[40]

Ulster Unionists edit

Ulster Unionists were largely Protestant Presbyterians, rather than Anglicans. The Ulster support base was considerably more working class than in the south. Although often led by aristocrats, the IUA attracted high levels of support in some of the poorer areas of Belfast. Many Ulster Unionists were also drawn from the province's prosperous middle class, who had benefited greatly from heavy industrialisation in the region. As such, many in Northern Ireland supported unionism due to the industrial growth of Belfast after 1850, which depended on the economic integrity of the Union. The Protestant religious composition and concentration, motivation and ethos of the Ulster Unionists made its wing of the IUA distinct from unionists in the south, and a fear of Rome Rule (the worry about a Catholic-controlled Irish parliament) dominated the political discourse. These factors made Ulster Unionists noticeably more confrontational and violent in their political rhetoric and action.[38] In the tense period between the Parliament Act 1911 and the Home Rule Act 1914, the Ulster unionists created their own paramilitary group, the "Ulster Volunteers", raising the spectre of civil war. The volunteer force was created by the then-leader of the Irish Unionist Alliance, Edward Carson. This tradition of resistance to Irish nationalism would later manifest itself in groups such as the Ulster Defence Association and the Ulster Volunteer Force during The Troubles.

Leadership edit

The Irish Unionist Alliance had no formal method of electing and deposing of its leadership, and leaders of the IUA were more informally 'acknowledged' by other prominent figures. The party's first leader was Colonel Edward James Saunderson, a former Conservative Member of Parliament, who was most active in attempting to create an all-Ireland unionist movement. Towards the end of the party's existence, leadership became fractured between the northern and southern unionist movements within the alliance.

Leaders edit

Name Tenure
The Right Honourable
Edward James Saunderson
MP for North Armagh
1891–1906
The Right Honourable
Walter Long
MP for South Dublin
1906–1910
The Right Honourable
Sir Edward Carson
MP for Dublin University
1910–1921

Notes edit

  1. ^ B. M. Walker, 'Political affiliations' in Parliamentary Election Results in Ireland, 1801–1922 (Royal Irish Academy, 1978), xiv.
  2. ^ Alvin Jackson, The Oxford Handbook of Modern Irish History (Oxford University Press, 19 March 2014), 52.
  3. ^ a b c Graham Walker, A History of the Ulster Unionist Party: Protest, Pragmastism and Pessimism (Manchester University Press, 4 September 2004)
  4. ^ Grenfell Morton, Home Rule and the Irish Question (Routledge, 15 July 2014), 32.
  5. ^ a b Travis L. Crosby, Joseph Chamberlain: A Most Radical Imperialist (I.B.Tauris, 30 March 2011), 102.
  6. ^ Alan O'Day, Reactions to Irish Nationalism, 1865–1914 (Reactions to Irish Nationalism, 1865–1914), 385.
  7. ^ Graham Walker, A History of the Ulster Unionist Party: Protest, Pragmastism and Pessimism (Manchester University Press, 4 September 2004), 22.
  8. ^ Alan O'Day, Reactions to Irish Nationalism, 1865–1914 (Reactions to Irish Nationalism, 1865–1914), 374.
  9. ^ John Ranelagh, A Short History of Ireland (Cambridge University Press, 11 October 2012), 180.
  10. ^ a b Jeremy Smith, Britain and Ireland: From Home Rule to Independence (Routledge, 12 May 2014), 61.
  11. ^ IUA, Annual Reports, 1906–13, reported in the party AGM, 25 April 1913.
  12. ^ a b c Pádraig Yeates, Dublin: A City in Turmoil: Dublin 1919 – 1921 (Gill & Macmillan Ltd, 28 September 2012)
  13. ^ Thomas Hennessey, Dividing Ireland: World War One and Partition (Routledge, 20 June 2005), 186.
  14. ^ a b Desmond Keenan, Ireland Within The Union 1800–1921 (Xlibris Corporation), p. 228.
  15. ^ G. K. Peatling, ‘The last defence of the Union? The Round Table and Ireland, 1910–1925’, in Andrea Bosco and Alex May, eds., The Round Table: the empire/commonwealth and British foreign policy (London, 1997), p. 291
  16. ^ a b Alan O'Day, Reactions to Irish Nationalism, 1865–1914 (Bloomsbury Publishing, 1 July 1987), 378.
  17. ^ Alan O'Day, Reactions to Irish Nationalism, 1865–1914 (Bloomsbury Publishing, 1 July 1987), 386.
  18. ^ Jackson, Alvin, Home Rule: An Irish History 1800—2000, Phoenix Press (2003), ISBN 0-7538-1767-5
  19. ^ Alvin Jackson, The Two Unions: Ireland, Scotland, and the Survival of the United Kingdom, 1707–2007 (Oxford University Press, 2012), 309.
  20. ^ John Kendle, Ireland and the Federal Solution: The Debate over the United Kingdom Constitution, 1870–1920 (McGill-Queen's Press – MQUP, 1 January 1989), 231.
  21. ^ Colin Reid, 'Stephen Gwynn and the Failure of Constitutional Nationalism in Ireland, 1919 – 1921', The Historical Journal, 53, 3 (2010), pp. 723–745
  22. ^ Senate nominations, 6 December 1922 9 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  23. ^ D.George Boyce, Alan O'Day, Defenders of the Union: A Survey of British and Irish Unionism Since 1801 (Routledge, 4 January 2002 ), 123.
  24. ^ "Welcome reform.org - BlueHost.com". www.reform.org.
  25. ^ . Archived from the original on 24 November 2010. Retrieved 8 November 2010.
  26. ^ "Historical detective trail reveals 'ethnic cleansing' by IRA in Cork – Independent.ie". Retrieved 26 August 2016.
  27. ^ 1998 Review of "Crisis and Decline; the fate of the Southern Unionists" 22 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine by Geoffrey Wheatcroft.
  28. ^ B. M. Walker, Parliamentary Election Results in Ireland, 1801–1922 (Royal Irish Academy, 1978)
  29. ^ Alan O'Day, Reactions to Irish Nationalism, 1865–1914 (Bloomsbury Publishing, 1 July 1987), 384.
  30. ^ See Bence-Jones, Mark Twilight of the Ascendancy" Constable, London 1993 ISBN 978-0-09-472350-4
  31. ^ a b Alan O'Day, Reactions to Irish Nationalism, 1865–1914 (Bloomsbury Publishing, 1 July 1987), 370–371.
  32. ^ "L Perry Curtis essay 2005, The Last Gasp of Southern Unionism: Lord Ashtown of Woodlawn Éire-Ireland journal, Volume 40:3&4, Fómhar/Geimhreadh / Fall/Winter 2005, pp. 140–188".
  33. ^ UCC article with numbers in 1921 and 1926 21 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  34. ^ Debate on the Local Government (Ireland) Bill, 24 March 1919
  35. ^ "'A mansion built on rashers' - Former home and lands of rasher baron Abraham Denny on the market for €2.2m". independent. 26 April 2019.
  36. ^ "Findlaters - Chapter 6 - A Southern Unionist Businessman: Adam Findlater (1855‒1911)".
  37. ^ "Land Purchase (Ireland). (Hansard, 11 February 1915)". api.parliament.uk.
  38. ^ a b c Alan O'Day, Reactions to Irish Nationalism, 1865–1914 (Bloomsbury Publishing, 1 July 1987), 369.
  39. ^ Alan O'Day, Reactions to Irish Nationalism, 1865–1914 (Bloomsbury Publishing, 1 July 1987), 376.
  40. ^ "Ireland's lack of civic morality grounded in our history", Irish Times 9 April 2011, p.14

References edit

  • Barberis, Peter, John McHugh and Mike Tyldesley, 2005. Encyclopedia of British and Irish Political Organisations. London: Continuum International Publishing Group. ISBN 0-8264-5814-9, ISBN 978-0-8264-5814-8

External links edit

irish, unionist, alliance, also, known, irish, unionist, party, irish, unionists, simply, unionists, unionist, political, party, founded, ireland, 1891, from, merger, irish, conservative, party, irish, loyal, patriotic, union, ilpu, oppose, plans, home, rule, . The Irish Unionist Alliance IUA also known as the Irish Unionist Party Irish Unionists or simply the Unionists was a unionist political party founded in Ireland in 1891 from a merger of the Irish Conservative Party and the Irish Loyal and Patriotic Union ILPU to oppose plans for home rule for Ireland within the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland The party was led for much of its existence by Colonel Edward James Saunderson and later by St John Brodrick 1st Earl of Midleton In total eighty six members of the House of Lords affiliated themselves with the Irish Unionist Alliance although its broader membership among Irish voters outside Ulster was relatively small Irish Unionist AllianceLeaderColonel Saunderson First The 11th Baron Farnham Last Founded1891 133 years ago 1891 Dissolved1922 102 years ago 1922 Merger ofIrish ConservativesIrish Loyal and Patriotic UnionSucceeded byUlster Unionist PartyIdeologyConservatismIrish unionismAnglo Irish interestsPolitical positionRight wingNational affiliationConservative PartyPolitics of IrelandPolitical partiesElections The party aligned itself closely with the Conservative Party and Liberal Unionists to campaign to prevent the passage of a new Home Rule Bill Its MPs took the Conservative whip at Westminster and its members were often described as Conservatives or Conservative Unionists 1 even though much of its support came from former Liberal voters Among its most prominent members were the Dublin barrister Sir Edward Carson and the founder of Ireland s cooperative movement Sir Horace Plunkett Its electoral strength was largely although not exclusively concentrated in east Ulster and south Dublin The IUA became wracked by internal disagreement during the early twentieth century with the issue of the partition of Ireland proving to be particularly divisive Many unionists outside Ulster became resigned to the political necessity of Home Rule while unionists in Ulster established a separate organisation the Ulster Unionist Party UUP In 1919 the IUA finally split apart with the founding of the break away Unionist Anti Partition League effectively signalling the death of institutional unionism in most of Ireland The UUP continued to operate in Northern Ireland and would go on to dominate domestic politics there for much of the twentieth century Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation 1 2 1891 1914 1 3 Division 1914 1922 1 3 1 Irish Free State 1 3 2 Northern Ireland 2 General election results 3 Support base 3 1 Southern Unionists 3 2 Ulster Unionists 4 Leadership 4 1 Leaders 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksHistory editFoundation edit The Irish Unionist Alliance was founded in 1891 by the members of the Irish Loyal and Patriotic Union ILPU which it replaced 2 The ILPU had been established to prevent electoral competition between Liberals and Conservatives in the three southern provinces on a common platform of maintenance of the union 3 The IUA united this movement with unionists in the northern province of Ulster where unionist sentiment and support was strongest 4 As such the new party sought to represent unionism on an all Ireland basis The party s founders hoped that this would coordinate the electoral and lobbying activities of unionists across Ireland Prior to 1891 unionists had seen considerable electoral losses across southern Ireland at the hands of the pro Home Rule Irish Parliamentary Party founded a decade earlier 5 It was deemed necessary for southern and northern supporters of the Union to more formally unite their efforts At this stage the majority of unionists in all parts of Ireland were opposed to the Irish Home Rule movement especially following the collapse of the Irish wing of the Liberal Party 5 The IUA s first leader was the Orangeman and former Conservative MP Edward James Saunderson 3 1891 1914 edit nbsp A Unionist anti John Redmond poster from the 1910 election In the House of Commons the party closely aligned itself with the Conservatives and Liberal Unionists In the 1892 general election the party won 20 6 of the Irish vote and 21 seats In 1893 the party achieved a major success when it joined the Conservatives to defeat the Home Rule Bill In the House of Lords eighty six peers affiliated themselves with the Irish Unionist Alliance This high level of support reflected the strong unionist sentiment within Ireland s landed class Unionists in the Lords proved to be instrumental in defeating attempts by the Liberals to introduce Home Rule legislation In the 1900 general election the party won 32 2 of the vote in Ireland most of its votes coming from Ulster Throughout the period members of the IUA campaigned not only in Ireland but also in Great Britain alongside the Conservative Party This was especially the case in the two general elections of 1910 In December 1910 the IUA sent 278 workers to British constituencies to assist the Conservative candidates distributing almost three million leaflets across England 6 It was during that this time that a large number of Conservative MPs married into Irish Southern Unionist families Despite early hopes among some unionists that the IUA would expand the unionist presence across Ireland the party failed to make any major electoral gains in the six subsequent general elections In the south of Ireland the IUA consistently won only the double seat representing the graduates of Dublin University and a couple of the Dublin seats would occasionally fall to them The party also won a surprise victory in Galway City in 1900 In local elections the party maintained a geographically broader representation although failed to win many new voters Unlike in Ulster the anti Home Rulers were a scattered minority In Ulster the IUA built upon solid unionist electoral foundations and became the dominant political force in much of the province In the north and east of Ulster unionists consistently won seats often unopposed 3 In the three counties of Ulster which would later become part of the Irish Free State the unionists failed to come close to winning in Monaghan North their strongest constituency of the eight in question and never even contested West Donegal Despite the prominence of many influential Southern Unionists in the party Ulster remained the core of the IUA s support base Ulster unionism was linked strongly to the former Conservatives with their strong Orange Order links rather than to the former Liberals who had made some effort to encourage cross denominational support for their unionist stance The strength of the northern unionist wing played a vital role in the shift of power in the pro union movement to Conservative and Orange elements While the link between the Orange lodges and the new Unionist associations did introduce a populist democratic element into unionist politics it also served to reinforce the sectarian nature of unionism in the north In 1905 this particular brand of unionism within the IUA led to the establishment of the Ulster Unionist Council UUC 7 Although Ulster Unionists were still within the broader framework of the Irish Unionist Alliance the Ulster party began to develop its own distinct organisational structures and political goals From 1907 the IUA s political activity was organised by the Joint Committee of the Unionist Associations of Ireland JCUAI 8 9 This body sought to coordinate the IUA s election and lobbying activity whilst recognising the distinct differences between the northern and southern parties The prominence of the Ulster Unionist Council quickly grew thanks to the strong unionist sentiment in Ulster From 1910 it became the dominant force and focus of resistance in the Irish unionist community 10 The JCUAI was effectively controlled by Ulstermen while the IUA s leadership remained largely in the hands of Southern Unionists This led to the unionist movement gradually becoming Ulsterised from 1910 which marginalised many more moderate unionists in the south 10 Even so in 1913 as the Third Home Rule Bill passed through Parliament the Alliance appears to have become increasingly popular in the south and records show an increase in membership 11 Division 1914 1922 edit nbsp The 1918 general election result in Ireland showing the clear dominance of the IUA in Ulster relative to its weakness in the rest of Ireland By 1914 the conflict of interest between the unionists in southern Ireland and those in Ulster was wracking the IUA 12 It was known that the passage of a Home Rule Bill for Ireland was becoming increasingly likely and as a result many Southern Unionists began to seek a political compromise which would see their interests protected Many unionists in the south became strongly opposed to any plan to partition the island as they knew that it would leave them isolated from the unionist majority areas Several prominent Southern Unionists such as Sir Horace Plunkett and Lord Monteagle became convinced that a degree of home rule was going to be necessary if Ireland was to avoid partition and remain in the Union 13 Others such as the anti partition party leader the 9th Viscount Midleton later created the 1st Earl of Midleton in 1920 resented the growing dominance of Ulstermen in the party 14 self published source Lord Midleton and his supporters feared that the Ulster wing of the party now more formally organised as the Ulster Unionist Party would abandon the south in order to gain a favourable settlement for the north from the British government 15 In October 1913 the vice chairman of the IUA G F Stewart had written to its leader Sir Edward Carson to complain that southern concerns were being ignored 16 Several large unionist demonstrations took place in Dublin in early 1914 in which protesters complained as much about the Ulster Unionists as the Irish nationalists 16 Despite these internal difficulties between September 1911 and July 1914 the Joint Committee of the Unionist Associations of Ireland continued its campaign across the British Isles In this period the IUA distributed an estimated six million pamphlets and booklets throughout Britain canvassed 1 5 million voters and arranged 8 800 meetings 17 The internal divisions simmered during the First World War Southern Unionist members sided with Irish Nationalists against the Ulster Unionists during the 1917 18 Irish Convention in an attempt to bring about an understanding on the implementation of the suspended Home Rule Act 1914 18 The Alliance s official opposition to partition led to it being marginalised in the 1918 general election which showed the rising influence of the republican Sinn Fein party on the one hand and the strength of Ulster Unionist Council on the other Despite this the Alliance won its largest number of seats with the IUA candidate managing to win a surprise victory in Rathmines Against the backdrop of the subsequent Irish War of Independence unionists began to openly disagree At a meeting of the party on Molesworth Street Dublin on 24 January 1919 Lord Midleton proposed a motion to the party which would have denied Ulster Unionists a say on government proposals affecting the south of Ireland 12 The motion was defeated with a majority of both southern and northern unionists rejecting the plan Ulster Unionists believed that the motion would have the effect of dividing the unionist cause The party split anyway with Lord Midleton and senior southern leaders forming the break away Unionist Anti Partition League that same day 19 Many ordinary members of the southern IUA Protestant farmers shopkeepers and clergymen initially stayed with the remaining rump of the IUA in the south led by the 11th Baron Farnham a County Cavan landowner 12 Although the IUA hoped to play a part in the Parliament of Southern Ireland envisaged under the 1920 Home Rule Act the parliament never functioned The Irish Times said to be the voice of Southern Unionists realised that the 1920 Act would not work and argued from late 1920 for Dominion Home Rule the compromise that was eventually agreed upon in the 1921 22 Anglo Irish Treaty Under the Treaty Northern Ireland became a part of the Irish Free State from its creation on 6 December 1922 the Parliament of Northern Ireland voted to leave the Free State two days later Irish Free State edit The split effectively ended the realistic electoral chances of the Irish Unionist Alliance in what became the Irish Free State 14 The results of the 1920 Irish local elections show that outside of Ulster unionist support was strongest in urban areas As the partition of Ireland became more likely Southern Unionists those unionists outside of nine county Ulster formed numerous political movements in an attempt to find a solution to the Irish Question Among these were the Irish Dominion League 20 and the Irish Centre Party 21 As such the southern rump of the IUA became increasingly fractured and in 1922 it lost its reason to exist with the establishment of the Irish Free State Leading unionist figures such as the 1st Earl of Midleton as he had become in 1920 the 4th Earl of Dunraven and Mount Earl the 1st Baron Glenavy and Sir Horace Plunkett were appointed in December 1922 by W T Cosgrave to the Free State s first Senate 22 23 Amongst others Sir Horace Plunkett s home in County Dublin was then burnt down during the Irish Civil War 1922 23 because of his involvement in the Irish Senate The IUA helped form the Southern Irish Loyalist Relief Association to assist war refugees and claim compensation for damage to property 24 25 26 From 1921 IUA voters began to support the mainstream Cumann na nGaedheal party In the 1923 election three formerly loyalist businessmen were elected as the Business and Professional Group From 1921 to 1991 the proportion of Southern Irish Protestants declined from 10 to 3 of the population these had provided the bulk of the IUA s support base 27 Unionists continued to have a majority on Rathmines Council until 1929 when the IUA s successors lost their last elected representatives in the Irish Free State Northern Ireland edit In Northern Ireland unionists of the Ulster Unionist Party UUP previously known as the Ulster Unionist Council continued to dominate domestic politics The party would hold its powerful position in the unionist community for much of the rest of the twentieth century until the rise of the Democratic Unionist Party DUP in the late 1980s General election results edit nbsp Graph of Irish UK MPs 1885 1918 in numbers Election House of Commons Seats Government Votes 1892 25th Parliament 19 103 Liberal victory 12 5 1895 26th Parliament 17 103 Conservative and Liberal Unionist victory 1900 27th Parliament 17 103 Conservative and Liberal Unionist victory 32 2 1906 28th Parliament 16 103 Liberal victory 42 7 1910 Jan 29th Parliament 18 103 Liberal government in hung Parliament 32 7 1910 Dec 30th Parliament 16 103 Liberal government in hung Parliament 28 6 1918 31st Parliament 25 105 Coalition victory 25 3 Note Results from Ireland for the UK general elections contested by the Irish Unionist Alliance 28 These figures do not include MPs elected for the Liberal Unionists who were officially a separate party IUA MPs sat with the Liberal Unionists and Conservatives at Westminster and were often simply called Conservatives or Unionists Support base editSouthern Unionists edit nbsp Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland after partition The leadership of southern unionism was dominated by wealthy well educated men who wanted to live in Ireland felt British and Irish and who had Irish roots Many were members of the privileged Anglo Irish class who valued their cultural affiliations with the British Empire and had close personal connections to the aristocracy in Britain 29 This led to their pejorative description by some opponents as West Brits 30 They were generally members of the Anglican Church of Ireland although there were several notable Catholic unionists such as The 5th Earl of Kenmare and Sir Antony MacDonnell Many of the IUA s leading figures were associated with the Kildare Street Club a gentleman s club in Dublin The electoral support base of the IUA in southern Ireland was largely drawn from its Protestant population many of whom were farmers small business owners or Church of Ireland clergymen In 1913 the IUA had a southern core of 683 members with approximately 300 000 supporters spread across the three southern provinces 31 32 33 In March 1919 Sir Maurice Dockrell told the House of Commons that the supporting population was about 350 000 34 The IUA never achieved mass party status in the south Its local branches varied in strength and generally followed geographic patterns of Protestant population density As a result the IUA s support base was severely limited to certain sections of the population described as usually being Protestant anglicised propertied and aristocratic 31 Although their numbers were small a considerable amount of industry in Southern Ireland had been developed indigenously by Southern Unionist supporters These included Jacob s Biscuits Bewley s Beamish and Crawford Brown Thomas Cantrell amp Cochrane Denny s Sausages 35 Findlaters 36 Jameson s Whiskey W P amp R Odlum Cleeve s R amp H Hall Dockrell s Arnott s Elverys Goulding Chemicals Smithwick s The Irish Times and the Guinness brewery then southern Ireland s largest company They controlled financial entities such as the Bank of Ireland and Goodbody Stockbrokers They were concerned that a new home rule state might create new taxes between them and their markets in Britain and the Empire that would add to their costs and probably reduce sales and therefore employment Many Southern Unionist landowners had inherited large estates From 1903 many of these were persuaded to sell land to their tenant farmers under the Land Purchase Ireland Act 1903 As a group Southern Unionist landowners were richer than their fellow Irishmen by about 90 million by 1914 which would either stay in the Irish economy given a favourable political arrangement or leave if the outcome appeared too uncertain or too radical 37 This temporarily gave them a voice far beyond their number in the Irish electorate Some of the more progressive supporters of the IUA attempted to introduce a moderate form of devolution through the Irish Reform Association Many Southern Unionists were members of the landed gentry and these were prominent in horse breeding and racing and as British Army officers Southern Unionists are regarded as having been considerably less confrontational than their Ulster neighbours 38 They were always in the minority in southern Ireland and many had close personal connections with figures in nationalist politics As a group they never threatened or organised violence in order to resist Home Rule or partition and were generally placid in their politics 39 Lord Midleton described Southern Unionists as lacking political insight and cohesion and restricting themselves to the easy task of attending meetings in Dublin 38 In discussing problems of civic morality in 2011 in the Republic of Ireland former Taoiseach Garret FitzGerald remarked that before 1922 In Ireland a strong civic sense did exist but mainly amongst Protestants and especially Anglicans 40 Ulster Unionists edit Ulster Unionists were largely Protestant Presbyterians rather than Anglicans The Ulster support base was considerably more working class than in the south Although often led by aristocrats the IUA attracted high levels of support in some of the poorer areas of Belfast Many Ulster Unionists were also drawn from the province s prosperous middle class who had benefited greatly from heavy industrialisation in the region As such many in Northern Ireland supported unionism due to the industrial growth of Belfast after 1850 which depended on the economic integrity of the Union The Protestant religious composition and concentration motivation and ethos of the Ulster Unionists made its wing of the IUA distinct from unionists in the south and a fear of Rome Rule the worry about a Catholic controlled Irish parliament dominated the political discourse These factors made Ulster Unionists noticeably more confrontational and violent in their political rhetoric and action 38 In the tense period between the Parliament Act 1911 and the Home Rule Act 1914 the Ulster unionists created their own paramilitary group the Ulster Volunteers raising the spectre of civil war The volunteer force was created by the then leader of the Irish Unionist Alliance Edward Carson This tradition of resistance to Irish nationalism would later manifest itself in groups such as the Ulster Defence Association and the Ulster Volunteer Force during The Troubles Leadership editThe Irish Unionist Alliance had no formal method of electing and deposing of its leadership and leaders of the IUA were more informally acknowledged by other prominent figures The party s first leader was Colonel Edward James Saunderson a former Conservative Member of Parliament who was most active in attempting to create an all Ireland unionist movement Towards the end of the party s existence leadership became fractured between the northern and southern unionist movements within the alliance Leaders edit Name Tenure The Right Honourable Edward James SaundersonMP for North Armagh 1891 1906 The Right Honourable Walter LongMP for South Dublin 1906 1910 The Right Honourable Sir Edward CarsonMP for Dublin University 1910 1921 The 9th Viscount Midleton 1910 1919 created 1st Earl of Midleton in 1920 as leader of the Southern Unionists The 11th Baron Farnham 1919 1922 as leader of the Southern UnionistsNotes edit B M Walker Political affiliations in Parliamentary Election Results in Ireland 1801 1922 Royal Irish Academy 1978 xiv Alvin Jackson The Oxford Handbook of Modern Irish History Oxford University Press 19 March 2014 52 a b c Graham Walker A History of the Ulster Unionist Party Protest Pragmastism and Pessimism Manchester University Press 4 September 2004 Grenfell Morton Home Rule and the Irish Question Routledge 15 July 2014 32 a b Travis L Crosby Joseph Chamberlain A Most Radical Imperialist I B Tauris 30 March 2011 102 Alan O Day Reactions to Irish Nationalism 1865 1914 Reactions to Irish Nationalism 1865 1914 385 Graham Walker A History of the Ulster Unionist Party Protest Pragmastism and Pessimism Manchester University Press 4 September 2004 22 Alan O Day Reactions to Irish Nationalism 1865 1914 Reactions to Irish Nationalism 1865 1914 374 John Ranelagh A Short History of Ireland Cambridge University Press 11 October 2012 180 a b Jeremy Smith Britain and Ireland From Home Rule to Independence Routledge 12 May 2014 61 IUA Annual Reports 1906 13 reported in the party AGM 25 April 1913 a b c Padraig Yeates Dublin A City in Turmoil Dublin 1919 1921 Gill amp Macmillan Ltd 28 September 2012 Thomas Hennessey Dividing Ireland World War One and Partition Routledge 20 June 2005 186 a b Desmond Keenan Ireland Within The Union 1800 1921 Xlibris Corporation p 228 G K Peatling The last defence of the Union The Round Table and Ireland 1910 1925 in Andrea Bosco and Alex May eds The Round Table the empire commonwealth and British foreign policy London 1997 p 291 a b Alan O Day Reactions to Irish Nationalism 1865 1914 Bloomsbury Publishing 1 July 1987 378 Alan O Day Reactions to Irish Nationalism 1865 1914 Bloomsbury Publishing 1 July 1987 386 Jackson Alvin Home Rule An Irish History 1800 2000 Phoenix Press 2003 ISBN 0 7538 1767 5 Alvin Jackson The Two Unions Ireland Scotland and the Survival of the United Kingdom 1707 2007 Oxford University Press 2012 309 John Kendle Ireland and the Federal Solution The Debate over the United Kingdom Constitution 1870 1920 McGill Queen s Press MQUP 1 January 1989 231 Colin Reid Stephen Gwynn and the Failure of Constitutional Nationalism in Ireland 1919 1921 The Historical Journal 53 3 2010 pp 723 745 Senate nominations 6 December 1922 Archived 9 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine D George Boyce Alan O Day Defenders of the Union A Survey of British and Irish Unionism Since 1801 Routledge 4 January 2002 123 Welcome reform org BlueHost com www reform org Gill amp Macmillan History the Year of Disappearances Archived from the original on 24 November 2010 Retrieved 8 November 2010 Historical detective trail reveals ethnic cleansing by IRA in Cork Independent ie Retrieved 26 August 2016 1998 Review of Crisis and Decline the fate of the Southern Unionists Archived 22 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine by Geoffrey Wheatcroft B M Walker Parliamentary Election Results in Ireland 1801 1922 Royal Irish Academy 1978 Alan O Day Reactions to Irish Nationalism 1865 1914 Bloomsbury Publishing 1 July 1987 384 See Bence Jones Mark Twilight of the Ascendancy Constable London 1993 ISBN 978 0 09 472350 4 a b Alan O Day Reactions to Irish Nationalism 1865 1914 Bloomsbury Publishing 1 July 1987 370 371 L Perry Curtis essay 2005 The Last Gasp of Southern Unionism Lord Ashtown of Woodlawn Eire Ireland journal Volume 40 3 amp 4 Fomhar Geimhreadh Fall Winter 2005 pp 140 188 UCC article with numbers in 1921 and 1926 Archived 21 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine Debate on the Local Government Ireland Bill 24 March 1919 A mansion built on rashers Former home and lands of rasher baron Abraham Denny on the market for 2 2m independent 26 April 2019 Findlaters Chapter 6 A Southern Unionist Businessman Adam Findlater 1855 1911 Land Purchase Ireland Hansard 11 February 1915 api parliament uk a b c Alan O Day Reactions to Irish Nationalism 1865 1914 Bloomsbury Publishing 1 July 1987 369 Alan O Day Reactions to Irish Nationalism 1865 1914 Bloomsbury Publishing 1 July 1987 376 Ireland s lack of civic morality grounded in our history Irish Times 9 April 2011 p 14References editBarberis Peter John McHugh and Mike Tyldesley 2005 Encyclopedia of British and Irish Political Organisations London Continuum International Publishing Group ISBN 0 8264 5814 9 ISBN 978 0 8264 5814 8External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Irish Unionist Party The Home rule bill in committee session 1893 from Internet Archive 60 Years on the Southern Unionists the Crown and the Irish Republic essay by Mary Kenny in Studies Dublin 2009 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Irish Unionist Alliance amp oldid 1216950511, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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