fbpx
Wikipedia

James Craig, 1st Viscount Craigavon

James Craig, 1st Viscount Craigavon PC PC (NI) DL (8 January 1871 – 24 November 1940), was a leading Irish unionist and a key architect of Northern Ireland as a devolved region within the United Kingdom. During the Home Rule Crisis of 1912–14, he defied the British government in preparing an armed resistance in Ulster to an all-Ireland parliament. He accepted partition as a final settlement, securing the opt out of six Ulster counties from the dominion statehood accorded Ireland under the terms of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty. From then until his death in 1940, he led the Ulster Unionist Party and served Northern Ireland as its first Prime Minister. He publicly characterised his administration as a "Protestant" counterpart to the "Catholic state" nationalists had established in the south. Craig was created a baronet in 1918 and raised to the Peerage in 1927.

The Viscount Craigavon
1st Prime Minister of Northern Ireland
In office
7 June 1921 – 24 November 1940
MonarchsGeorge V
Edward VIII
George VI
GovernorThe Duke of Abercorn
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byJ. M. Andrews
4th Leader of the Ulster Unionist Party
In office
7 June 1921 – 24 November 1940
Preceded bySir Edward Carson
Succeeded byJ. M. Andrews
Ministerial positions
Parliamentary and Financial Secretary to the Admiralty
In office
2 April 1920 – 1 April 1921
Prime MinisterDavid Lloyd George
Preceded byThomas James Macnamara
Succeeded byLeo Amery
Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Pensions
In office
10 January 1919 – 2 April 1920
Prime MinisterDavid Lloyd George
Preceded byArthur Griffith-Boscawen
Succeeded byGeorge Tryon
Treasurer of the Household
In office
14 December 1916 – 22 January 1918
Prime MinisterDavid Lloyd George
Preceded byJames Hope
Succeeded byRobert Sanders
Northern Ireland Parliament
Member of the Northern Ireland Parliament
for North Down
In office
22 May 1929 – 24 November 1940
Preceded byConstituency established
Succeeded byThomas Bailie
Member of the Northern Ireland Parliament
for Down
In office
24 May 1921 – 22 May 1929
Preceded byConstituency established
Succeeded byConstituency abolished
British Parliament
Member of the House of Lords
Lord Temporal
In office
1 January 1927 – 24 November 1940
Hereditary Peerage
Succeeded byThe 2nd Viscount Craigavon
Member of Parliament
for Mid Down
In office
14 December 1918 – 2 July 1921
Preceded byConstituency established
Succeeded byRobert Sharman-Crawford
Member of Parliament
for East Down
In office
8 February 1906 – 14 December 1918
Preceded byJames Wood
Succeeded bySir David Reid
Personal details
Born(1871-01-08)8 January 1871
Belfast, Ireland
Died24 November 1940(1940-11-24) (aged 69)
Glencraig, Northern Ireland
Resting placeStormont Parliament Buildings
Political partyUlster Unionist Party
SpouseCecil Mary Tupper
Children3
EducationMerchiston
Military service
Allegiance United Kingdom
Branch/service British Army
Years of service1899–1901
Rank Captain
Unit3rd (Militia) Royal Irish Rifles
Battles/warsSecond Boer War

Early life

Craig was born at Sydenham, Belfast, the son of James Craig (1828–1900), a wealthy whiskey distiller who had entered the firm of Dunville & Co as a clerk: by age 40 he was a millionaire and a partner in the firm. James Craig Snr. owned a large house called Craigavon, overlooking Belfast Lough. His mother, Eleanor Gilmore Browne, was the daughter of Robert Browne, a prosperous man who owned property in Belfast and a farm outside Lisburn. Craig was the seventh child and sixth son in the family; there were eight sons and one daughter in all.[1]

He was educated at Merchiston Castle School in Edinburgh, Scotland; his father had taken a conscious decision not to send his sons to any of the more fashionable public schools. After school he began work as a stockbroker, eventually opening his own firm in Belfast.

Military career

Craig enlisted in the 3rd (Militia) battalion of the Royal Irish Rifles on 17 January 1900 to serve in the Second Boer War. He was seconded to the Imperial Yeomanry, a cavalry force created for service during the war, as a lieutenant in the 13th battalion on 24 February 1900,[2][3] and left Liverpool for South Africa on the SS Cymric in March 1900.[4] After arrival he was soon sent to the front, and was taken prisoner in May 1900, but released by the Boers because of a perforated colon. On his recovery he became deputy assistant director of the Imperial Military Railways, showing the qualities of organisation that were to mark his involvement in both British and Ulster politics. In June 1901 he was sent home suffering from dysentery, and by the time he was fit for service again the war was over. He was promoted to captain in the 3rd Royal Irish Rifles on 20 September 1902,[5] while still seconded to South Africa.

Service in South Africa is said to have made Craig far more politically aware and "had given him a heightened awareness of the Empire and a pride in Ulster's place in it".[6]

Politics

 
Craig caricatured by WHO for Vanity Fair, 1911

Leader of Ulster opposition to Irish Home Rule

On his return to Ireland, having received a £100,000 legacy from his father's will, he turned to politics. Following his brother Charles who had successfully stood as an Irish Unionist in a by-election in South Antrim the previous month, in March 1903 by-election Craig attempted to secure the unionist seat of North Fermanagh. Unlike his brother, he norrowly failed to defeat his Russellite rival (Edward Mitchell). He had to wait until the 1906 General Election to win his first seat, East Down (the constituency he represented until returned from Mid Down in 1918).[6] Already he was playing a leading organisational role for Irish Unionism in Ulster.

In 1905, he had co-founded the Ulster Unionist Council to coalesce loyalist opposition to Irish Home Rule in northern province. In this task he regarded the coontribution of the parading Orange Order (that commanded 50 of 200 seats on the council) as key. Opening an Orange Hall in after the 1906 election he declared that he was "an Orangeman first and a Member of Parliament afterwards" and called for "the Protestant community to rally around the [Orange] lodges, strengthen and support them".[7]

In 1912, Craig helped orchestrate "Ulster Day”. In a massed demonstration in Belfast, Edward Carson, the Dublin barrister he had nominated for the leadership of the UUC, led in signing the Ulster Covenant. The signatories pledged "to stand by one another in defending for ourselves and our children our position of equal citizenship in the United Kingdom", and to use "all means which may be found necessary to defeat the present conspiracy to set up a Home Rule Parliament in Ireland".[8][9]

In January 1913, unable to prevent passage of the Liberal government's Home Rule Bill at Westminster, the UUC called the exclusion of Ulster from its provisions, a demand backed with a call for up to 100,000 Covenanters to be drilled and armed as Ulster Volunteers. On 23 September, Craig persuaded Carson to accept Chairmanship of a Provisional Government which he had planned and primed to assume the administration of Ulster should the Government move to enforce the authority of a new Dublin parliament.[10]

In April 1914, Craig supported Major Frederick Crawford in arming the Ulster Volunteers (UVF) with rifles and ammunition purchased, and smuggled, from Imperial Germany.[11] Years later (1934) in a speech in the House of Commons of Northern Ireland the political leader of the Northern Ireland Nationalists Cahir Healy spoke of Craig's support in the arming of Loyalists and opposition to Irish Home Rule:

"Did not the Irish Republican Army march in the footsteps of the gentleman who is now the King's Prime Minister in Northern Ireland? I shall be told your treason was of the conditional type. You knew and Sir Edward Carson knew you would never be obliged to make good in the flesh your promises to the mob. And you were right in that. For you and the ringleaders in rebellion, there was to be the Government Bench and the profitable post of a law lord. For Casement, Pearse, Connolly and the rest there was a bullet at dawn and a grave of quick lime. That is how justice is administered...When treason prospers men do not call it treason. Treason has prospered with you. You have achieved place and power by treason."[12]

On women's suffrage

In 1912, Craig broke with other Irish MPs, both unionist and nationalist, in voting for the Conciliation bill that would have extended the parliamentary vote (albeit on a restrictive property basis) for the first time to women. Consistent with the prominent role in mobilising opposition to home rule played by the Ulster Women's Unionist Council (UWUC), and the invitation to women to sign their own declaration in support of the Ulster Covenant,[8] in September 1913 Craig's UUC informed the Women's Council that the draft articles for the Provisional Government included provisions for female suffrage.[13]

When in the spring of 1914, Carson, seeming to overrule Craig, made it clear that a potentially divisive endorsement of votes for women was not a politic option for unionism, Dorothy Evans, organiser in Belfast for Women's Social and Political Union declared an end to "the truce" that the organisation had "held in Ulster".[14] In the months that followed WSPU militants were implicated in a series of outrages against property that, in addition to arson attacks on Unionist-owned buildings and on male recreational and sports facilities,[15] included forced entry into Craig's home.[16]

On 3 April 1913 police raided the flat in Belfast Evans was sharing with local activist Midge Muir, and found explosives. In court, five days later, the pair created uproar when they demanded to know why the gun-runner Craig was not appearing on the same charges.[14]

Wartime government service

Following the United Kingdom declaration of war upon Germany in August 1914, Craig persuaded Lord Kitchener to remould the UVF into the 36th Ulster Division. He was given the rank of lieutenant-colonel, but unift for front line service he resigned his commission at the end of 1916 and took up a junior post, Treasurer of the Household, in the wartime coalition government of Lloyd George. He spoke in favour of conscripting Irishmen into the army in 1918 as the Government looked to extend the Military Services Act.[6]

After the World War, Craig continued in the service of the coalition government first as Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Pensions (1919-1920) and then Parliamentary Secretary to the Admiralty (1920–21). In February 1921, with the war of independence underway in the south, Craig succeeded Edward Carson as leader of the Ulster Unionist Party.

Proponent of a devolved Belfast administration

Craig persuaded his fellow Unionists and the British Government that if exclusion, and thus partition, was to be the solution to the challenge posed by the Catholic-majority desire for Irish self government, it should apply to only six of the nine Ulster counties. In three, Donegal, Cavan and Monaghan, he argued Sinn Féiners would make government "absolutely impossible for us".[17] He also led Ulster Unionists in accepting that the six counties—Northern Ireland as they were to become—should have their own home-rule parliament in Belfast.

Writing to Prime Minister David Lloyd George, Craig had declared that it was only as a "sacrifice in the interest of peace" that unionists would accept a Northern Ireland parliament they had not asked for.[18] But in debating the Government of Ireland Bill 1920, Craig noted that having "all the paraphernalia of Government" might make it more difficult for future Liberal and/or Labour government to push Northern Ireland against the will of its majority into all-Ireland arrangements[19] Once Unionists had their own parliament, Craig felt able to assure his followers "no power on earth would ever be able to touch them".[20]

To make such assurance against British pressure for Irish unity doubly sure, in November 1921 Craig suggested to Lloyd George that Northern Ireland's status be changed to that of a Crown dominion outside of the United Kingdom. Although in signing the Anglo-Irish Treaty, only weeks later the Pime Minister conceded Southern Ireland precisely this Canada-style form of statehood, to Craig he replied that he was not willing to give "the character of an international boundary" to "a frontier based neither upon natural features nor broad geographical considerations".[21]

Lloyd George was nonetheless persuaded in October 1920 to secure that still unsettled frontier by endorsing Craig's proposal for a new "volunteer constabulary ... raised from the loyal population" and "armed for duty within the six county area only".[22] Into this Ulster Special Constabulary former UVF units were "incorporated en masse".[23]

Prime Minister of Northern Ireland

 
Craig (third from left) with his first cabinet, in 1921

In the 1921 Northern Ireland general election, the first ever, Craig was elected to the newly created Northern Ireland House of Commons as one of the members for County Down. On 7 June 1921, Craig was appointed the first Prime Minister of Northern Ireland by the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.[24] The House of Commons of Northern Ireland assembled for the first time later that day.[25]

In April 1934, in response to George Leeke's question regarding the Protestant nature of the Unionist dominated parliament, Craig famously replied:

The hon. Member must remember that in the South they boasted of a Catholic State. They still boast of Southern Ireland being a Catholic State. All I boast of is that we are a Protestant Parliament and a Protestant State. It would be rather interesting for historians of the future to compare a Catholic State launched in the South with a Protestant State launched in the North and to see which gets on the better and prospers the more. It is most interesting for me at the moment to watch how they are progressing. I am doing my best always to top the bill and to be ahead of the South.[26]

 
Time cover, 26 May 1924

This speech is often misquoted, intentionally or otherwise, as: "A Protestant Parliament for a Protestant People", and conflated with an incident which occurred respective to the naming of the New City of Craigavon. Knockmena (a corruption of the townland name, Knockmenagh) was the preferred name nationalists hoped would be used, and which might have attracted broad acceptance on both sides. On 6 July 1965, it was announced that the new city would be named Craigavon after Craig. A noted nationalist, Joseph Connellan, interrupted the announcement with the comment, "A Protestant city for a Protestant people".[27]

Later that year, speaking in the House of Commons at Stormont on 21 November 1934 in response to an accusation that all government appointments in Northern Ireland were carried out on a religious basis, he replied: "... it is undoubtedly our duty and our privilege, and always will be, to see that those appointed by us possess the most unimpeachable loyalty to the King and Constitution. That is my whole object in carrying on a Protestant Government for a Protestant people. I repeat it in this House".[28]

He was made a baronet in 1918, and in 1927 was created Viscount Craigavon, of Stormont in the County of Down. He was also the recipient of honorary degrees from The Queen's University of Belfast (1922) and Oxford University (1926).[citation needed]

 
Lord Craigavon's tomb, Stormont Parliament grounds
 
Close-up of the tomb carving

Craig had made his career in British as well as Northern Irish politics; but his premiership showed little sign of his earlier close acquaintance with the British political world. He became intensely parochial, and suffered from his loss of intimacy with British politicians in 1938, when the British government concluded agreements with Dublin to end the Anglo-Irish economic war between the two countries. He never tried to persuade Westminster to protect Northern Ireland's industries, especially the linen industry, which was central to its economy. He was anxious not to provoke Westminster, given the precarious state of Northern Ireland's position. In April 1939, and again in May 1940 in the Second World War, he called for conscription to be introduced in Northern Ireland (which the British government, fearing a backlash from nationalists, refused).[29] He also called for Churchill to invade Ireland, alternatively known as Éire, using Scottish and Welsh troops in order to seize the valuable ports and install a Governor-General at Dublin.[30] Lady Londonderry confided to Sir Samuel Hoare, the Home Secretary until the outbreak of the war, that Craigavon had become "ga-ga"[31] but Craigavon was still prime minister when he died peacefully at his home at Glencraig, County Down, at the age of 69. He was buried on the Stormont Estate on 5 December 1940, and was succeeded as the Prime Minister of Northern Ireland by the Minister of Finance, J. M. Andrews.

Craig had a dual Irish-British self-identity, saying in a 1929 parliamentary debate that "We are Irishmen ... always hold that Ulstermen are Irishmen and the best of Irishmen – much the best".[32]

Personal life

His wife, Cecil Mary Nowell Dering Tupper (Viscountess Craigavon), whom he married on 22 March 1905 after a very brief courtship, was English, the daughter of Sir Daniel Tupper, assistant comptroller of the Lord Chamberlain's department of the king's household, and a fourth cousin of the future Queen Mother, Elizabeth Angela Marguerite Bowes-Lyon. They had twin sons and a daughter. A president of the Ulster Women's Unionist Council, she was created a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1941.[33]

Craigavon was succeeded as second viscount by his elder son, James (1906–1974). His estate was valued at £3,228, 2s., 6d. effects in England: probate, 20 March 1941, CGPLA NIre., £24, 138 9s. 9d.: probate, 3 March 1941, CGPLA NIre.[citation needed]

Craig had a keen interest in Ulster Agriculture and was vice-president of Listooder and District Ploughing Society (the oldest in Ireland) from November 1906 until November 1921 and continued to present the all-Ireland cup class until 1926.[34]

Arms

Coat of arms of James Craig, 1st Viscount Craigavon
 
 
Notes
Coat of arms of the Craig family
Crest
A demi-lion rampant per fess Gules and Sable holding in the dexter paw a mullet Or.
Escutcheon
Gules a fess Ermine between three bridges of as many arches Proper.
Supporters
Dexter a Constable of the Ulster Special Constabulary his hand resting on a rifle Proper sinister a Private of the Royal Ulster Rifles armed and accoutred also Proper.[35]
Motto
Charity Provokes Charity

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Patrick Buckland (1980). James Craig: Lord Craigavon. Gill and Macmillan. p. 3. ISBN 9780717110780.
  2. ^ "No. 27168". The London Gazette. 23 February 1900. p. 1256.
  3. ^ "No. 27171". The London Gazette. 6 March 1900. p. 1528.
  4. ^ "The War – Embarcation of Troops". The Times. No. 36078. London. 1 March 1900. p. 7.
  5. ^ "No. 27475". The London Gazette. 19 September 1902. p. 6024.
  6. ^ a b c UK Parliament (2022). "James Craig (1871-1940)". UK Parliament. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
  7. ^ Daly, T. P. (2005). "James Craig and Orangeism, 1903-10". Irish Historical Studies. 34 (136): (431–448), 431. doi:10.1017/S0021121400006416. ISSN 0021-1214. JSTOR 30008191. S2CID 155598026.
  8. ^ a b Gordon, Lucy (1989). The Ulster Covenant. Belfast: Ulster society.
  9. ^ PRONI. "The Ulster Covenant: Ulster Day". from the original on 29 August 2012. Retrieved 29 September 2012.
  10. ^ Biggs-Davidson (1973). p. 79.
  11. ^ Stewart, A.T.Q. (1967). The Ulster Crisis. London: Faber and Faber. pp. 119, 177.
  12. ^ Reid, Gerard (1999), Great Irish Voices, Irish Academic Press, Dublin, pp. 260, ISBN 0-7165-2674-3
  13. ^ Ward, Margaret (1982). "'Suffrage First, Above All Else!' An Account of the Irish Suffrage Movement". Feminist Review (10): (21–36), 30. doi:10.2307/1394778. ISSN 0141-7789. JSTOR 1394778.
  14. ^ a b Kelly, Vivien (1996). "Irish Suffragettes at the time of the Home Rule Crisis". 20th Century, Contemporary History. 4:1. from the original on 18 February 2020. Retrieved 8 March 2020 – via History Ireland.
  15. ^ Courtney, Roger (2013). Dissenting Voices: Rediscovering the Irish Progressive Presbyterian Tradition. Ulster Historical Foundation. pp. 273–274, 276–278. ISBN 9781909556065.
  16. ^ Urquhart, Diane (1 June 2002). "'An articulate and definite cry for political freedom': the ulster suffrage movement". Women's History Review. 11 (2): (273–292) 284. doi:10.1080/09612020200200321. ISSN 0961-2025. S2CID 145344160.
  17. ^ Hansard (Vol 127, cc 925-1036 925), House of Commons, 29 March 1920
  18. ^ Sir James Craig in a letter to Lloyd George, quoted in F.S.L Lyons (1971), Ireland since the Famine. Weidenfeld and Nicolson, London. p. 696
  19. ^ Hansard, 29 March 1920, Government of Ireland Bill, p. 980
  20. ^ "Despair in Ireland", The Times, 7 October 1920
  21. ^ Follis, Bryan A. (1995), A State Under Siege: The Establishment of Northern Ireland 1920- 1925, Oxford: Clarendon Press, pp65-66.
  22. ^ Parkinson, Alan F. (2004). Belfast's Unholy War. Dublin: Four Courts Press. p. 84. ISBN 1-85182-792-7.
  23. ^ Hopkinson, Michael. Green against Green, the Irish Civil War. Dublin: Gill & Macmillan. p. 263. ISBN 978-0-7171-1202-9.
  24. ^ "Belfast Gazette" (1). 7 June 1921. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  25. ^ "NI Hansard HC vol.1 cc.1–10". Stormont Papers. 7 June 1921. from the original on 21 August 2017. Retrieved 23 April 2019.
  26. ^ Northern Ireland House of Commons Official Report, Vol 34 col 1095. Sir James Craig, Unionist Party, then Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, 24 April 1934. This speech is often misquoted as: "A Protestant Parliament for a Protestant People", or "A Protestant State for a Protestant People".
  27. ^ Mulholland, Marc. "Why Did Unionists Discriminate?, academia.edu; accessed 4 September 2017.
  28. ^ Northern Ireland Parliamentary Debates; Vol. 17, columns 73 & 74 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine; accessed 4 September 2017.
  29. ^ Fisk, Robert (1983). In time of war: Ireland, Ulster, and the price of neutrality, 1939–45. London: André Deutsch. p. 158. ISBN 978-0-233-97514-6.
  30. ^ "Churchill was asked to invade 'Nazi' Ireland during Second World War". 21 March 2010. from the original on 30 August 2017. Retrieved 8 July 2017.
  31. ^ Jonathan Bardon. "Extracts from an article, "The Belfast Blitz, 1941"". BELFAST BLITZ. from the original on 3 February 2015. Retrieved 19 January 2015.
  32. ^ Walker, Brian (2012). A Political History of Two Islands: From Partition to Peace. Palgrave MacMillan. p. 26.
  33. ^ "Clarence 10". william1.co.uk. from the original on 8 April 2017. Retrieved 2 February 2017.
  34. ^ Callum Bowsie (31 January 2021). "History of the oldest ploughing society in Ireland – Listooder & Dist". No. Farming Life. Newsletter. pp. 47–49.
  35. ^ "Grants and Confirmations of Arms Volume M". National Library of Ireland. p. 202. Retrieved 24 August 2022.

References

External links

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for East Down
19061918
Succeeded by
New constituency Member of Parliament for Mid Down
1918–1921
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Treasurer of the Household
1916–1918
Vacant
Title next held by
Robert Sanders
Preceded by Parliamentary and Financial Secretary to the Admiralty
1920–1921
Succeeded by
New office Prime Minister of Northern Ireland
1921–1940
Succeeded by
Parliament of Northern Ireland
New constituency Member of Parliament for Down
1921–1929
With: J. M. Andrews
Éamon de Valera
Thomas Lavery
Robert McBride
Thomas McMullan
Harry Mulholland
Patrick O'Neill
Constituency abolished
New constituency Member of Parliament for North Down
1929–1940
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Leader of the Ulster Unionist Party
1921–1940
Succeeded by
Peerage of the United Kingdom
New creation Viscount Craigavon
1927–1940
Succeeded by
Baronetage of the United Kingdom
New creation Baronet
(of Craigavon)
1918–1940
Succeeded by
Awards and achievements
Preceded by Cover of Time Magazine
26 May 1924
Succeeded by

james, craig, viscount, craigavon, other, uses, james, craig, disambiguation, january, 1871, november, 1940, leading, irish, unionist, architect, northern, ireland, devolved, region, within, united, kingdom, during, home, rule, crisis, 1912, defied, british, g. For other uses see James Craig disambiguation James Craig 1st Viscount Craigavon PC PC NI DL 8 January 1871 24 November 1940 was a leading Irish unionist and a key architect of Northern Ireland as a devolved region within the United Kingdom During the Home Rule Crisis of 1912 14 he defied the British government in preparing an armed resistance in Ulster to an all Ireland parliament He accepted partition as a final settlement securing the opt out of six Ulster counties from the dominion statehood accorded Ireland under the terms of the 1921 Anglo Irish Treaty From then until his death in 1940 he led the Ulster Unionist Party and served Northern Ireland as its first Prime Minister He publicly characterised his administration as a Protestant counterpart to the Catholic state nationalists had established in the south Craig was created a baronet in 1918 and raised to the Peerage in 1927 The Right HonourableThe Viscount CraigavonPC PC NI DL1st Prime Minister of Northern IrelandIn office 7 June 1921 24 November 1940MonarchsGeorge V Edward VIII George VIGovernorThe Duke of AbercornPreceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byJ M Andrews4th Leader of the Ulster Unionist PartyIn office 7 June 1921 24 November 1940Preceded bySir Edward CarsonSucceeded byJ M AndrewsMinisterial positionsParliamentary and Financial Secretary to the AdmiraltyIn office 2 April 1920 1 April 1921Prime MinisterDavid Lloyd GeorgePreceded byThomas James MacnamaraSucceeded byLeo AmeryParliamentary Secretary to the Minister for PensionsIn office 10 January 1919 2 April 1920Prime MinisterDavid Lloyd GeorgePreceded byArthur Griffith BoscawenSucceeded byGeorge TryonTreasurer of the HouseholdIn office 14 December 1916 22 January 1918Prime MinisterDavid Lloyd GeorgePreceded byJames HopeSucceeded byRobert SandersNorthern Ireland ParliamentMember of the Northern Ireland Parliament for North DownIn office 22 May 1929 24 November 1940Preceded byConstituency establishedSucceeded byThomas BailieMember of the Northern Ireland Parliament for DownIn office 24 May 1921 22 May 1929Preceded byConstituency establishedSucceeded byConstituency abolishedBritish ParliamentMember of the House of Lords Lord TemporalIn office 1 January 1927 24 November 1940 Hereditary PeerageSucceeded byThe 2nd Viscount CraigavonMember of Parliament for Mid DownIn office 14 December 1918 2 July 1921Preceded byConstituency establishedSucceeded byRobert Sharman CrawfordMember of Parliament for East DownIn office 8 February 1906 14 December 1918Preceded byJames WoodSucceeded bySir David ReidPersonal detailsBorn 1871 01 08 8 January 1871Belfast IrelandDied24 November 1940 1940 11 24 aged 69 Glencraig Northern IrelandResting placeStormont Parliament BuildingsPolitical partyUlster Unionist PartySpouseCecil Mary TupperChildren3EducationMerchistonMilitary serviceAllegianceUnited KingdomBranch serviceBritish ArmyYears of service1899 1901RankCaptainUnit3rd Militia Royal Irish RiflesBattles warsSecond Boer War Contents 1 Early life 2 Military career 3 Politics 3 1 Leader of Ulster opposition to Irish Home Rule 3 2 On women s suffrage 3 3 Wartime government service 3 4 Proponent of a devolved Belfast administration 3 5 Prime Minister of Northern Ireland 4 Personal life 5 Arms 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksEarly life EditCraig was born at Sydenham Belfast the son of James Craig 1828 1900 a wealthy whiskey distiller who had entered the firm of Dunville amp Co as a clerk by age 40 he was a millionaire and a partner in the firm James Craig Snr owned a large house called Craigavon overlooking Belfast Lough His mother Eleanor Gilmore Browne was the daughter of Robert Browne a prosperous man who owned property in Belfast and a farm outside Lisburn Craig was the seventh child and sixth son in the family there were eight sons and one daughter in all 1 He was educated at Merchiston Castle School in Edinburgh Scotland his father had taken a conscious decision not to send his sons to any of the more fashionable public schools After school he began work as a stockbroker eventually opening his own firm in Belfast Military career EditCraig enlisted in the 3rd Militia battalion of the Royal Irish Rifles on 17 January 1900 to serve in the Second Boer War He was seconded to the Imperial Yeomanry a cavalry force created for service during the war as a lieutenant in the 13th battalion on 24 February 1900 2 3 and left Liverpool for South Africa on the SS Cymric in March 1900 4 After arrival he was soon sent to the front and was taken prisoner in May 1900 but released by the Boers because of a perforated colon On his recovery he became deputy assistant director of the Imperial Military Railways showing the qualities of organisation that were to mark his involvement in both British and Ulster politics In June 1901 he was sent home suffering from dysentery and by the time he was fit for service again the war was over He was promoted to captain in the 3rd Royal Irish Rifles on 20 September 1902 5 while still seconded to South Africa Service in South Africa is said to have made Craig far more politically aware and had given him a heightened awareness of the Empire and a pride in Ulster s place in it 6 Politics Edit Craig caricatured by WHO for Vanity Fair 1911 Leader of Ulster opposition to Irish Home Rule Edit On his return to Ireland having received a 100 000 legacy from his father s will he turned to politics Following his brother Charles who had successfully stood as an Irish Unionist in a by election in South Antrim the previous month in March 1903 by election Craig attempted to secure the unionist seat of North Fermanagh Unlike his brother he norrowly failed to defeat his Russellite rival Edward Mitchell He had to wait until the 1906 General Election to win his first seat East Down the constituency he represented until returned from Mid Down in 1918 6 Already he was playing a leading organisational role for Irish Unionism in Ulster In 1905 he had co founded the Ulster Unionist Council to coalesce loyalist opposition to Irish Home Rule in northern province In this task he regarded the coontribution of the parading Orange Order that commanded 50 of 200 seats on the council as key Opening an Orange Hall in after the 1906 election he declared that he was an Orangeman first and a Member of Parliament afterwards and called for the Protestant community to rally around the Orange lodges strengthen and support them 7 In 1912 Craig helped orchestrate Ulster Day In a massed demonstration in Belfast Edward Carson the Dublin barrister he had nominated for the leadership of the UUC led in signing the Ulster Covenant The signatories pledged to stand by one another in defending for ourselves and our children our position of equal citizenship in the United Kingdom and to use all means which may be found necessary to defeat the present conspiracy to set up a Home Rule Parliament in Ireland 8 9 In January 1913 unable to prevent passage of the Liberal government s Home Rule Bill at Westminster the UUC called the exclusion of Ulster from its provisions a demand backed with a call for up to 100 000 Covenanters to be drilled and armed as Ulster Volunteers On 23 September Craig persuaded Carson to accept Chairmanship of a Provisional Government which he had planned and primed to assume the administration of Ulster should the Government move to enforce the authority of a new Dublin parliament 10 In April 1914 Craig supported Major Frederick Crawford in arming the Ulster Volunteers UVF with rifles and ammunition purchased and smuggled from Imperial Germany 11 Years later 1934 in a speech in the House of Commons of Northern Ireland the political leader of the Northern Ireland Nationalists Cahir Healy spoke of Craig s support in the arming of Loyalists and opposition to Irish Home Rule Did not the Irish Republican Army march in the footsteps of the gentleman who is now the King s Prime Minister in Northern Ireland I shall be told your treason was of the conditional type You knew and Sir Edward Carson knew you would never be obliged to make good in the flesh your promises to the mob And you were right in that For you and the ringleaders in rebellion there was to be the Government Bench and the profitable post of a law lord For Casement Pearse Connolly and the rest there was a bullet at dawn and a grave of quick lime That is how justice is administered When treason prospers men do not call it treason Treason has prospered with you You have achieved place and power by treason 12 On women s suffrage Edit In 1912 Craig broke with other Irish MPs both unionist and nationalist in voting for the Conciliation bill that would have extended the parliamentary vote albeit on a restrictive property basis for the first time to women Consistent with the prominent role in mobilising opposition to home rule played by the Ulster Women s Unionist Council UWUC and the invitation to women to sign their own declaration in support of the Ulster Covenant 8 in September 1913 Craig s UUC informed the Women s Council that the draft articles for the Provisional Government included provisions for female suffrage 13 When in the spring of 1914 Carson seeming to overrule Craig made it clear that a potentially divisive endorsement of votes for women was not a politic option for unionism Dorothy Evans organiser in Belfast for Women s Social and Political Union declared an end to the truce that the organisation had held in Ulster 14 In the months that followed WSPU militants were implicated in a series of outrages against property that in addition to arson attacks on Unionist owned buildings and on male recreational and sports facilities 15 included forced entry into Craig s home 16 On 3 April 1913 police raided the flat in Belfast Evans was sharing with local activist Midge Muir and found explosives In court five days later the pair created uproar when they demanded to know why the gun runner Craig was not appearing on the same charges 14 Wartime government service Edit Following the United Kingdom declaration of war upon Germany in August 1914 Craig persuaded Lord Kitchener to remould the UVF into the 36th Ulster Division He was given the rank of lieutenant colonel but unift for front line service he resigned his commission at the end of 1916 and took up a junior post Treasurer of the Household in the wartime coalition government of Lloyd George He spoke in favour of conscripting Irishmen into the army in 1918 as the Government looked to extend the Military Services Act 6 After the World War Craig continued in the service of the coalition government first as Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Pensions 1919 1920 and then Parliamentary Secretary to the Admiralty 1920 21 In February 1921 with the war of independence underway in the south Craig succeeded Edward Carson as leader of the Ulster Unionist Party Proponent of a devolved Belfast administration Edit Craig persuaded his fellow Unionists and the British Government that if exclusion and thus partition was to be the solution to the challenge posed by the Catholic majority desire for Irish self government it should apply to only six of the nine Ulster counties In three Donegal Cavan and Monaghan he argued Sinn Feiners would make government absolutely impossible for us 17 He also led Ulster Unionists in accepting that the six counties Northern Ireland as they were to become should have their own home rule parliament in Belfast Writing to Prime Minister David Lloyd George Craig had declared that it was only as a sacrifice in the interest of peace that unionists would accept a Northern Ireland parliament they had not asked for 18 But in debating the Government of Ireland Bill 1920 Craig noted that having all the paraphernalia of Government might make it more difficult for future Liberal and or Labour government to push Northern Ireland against the will of its majority into all Ireland arrangements 19 Once Unionists had their own parliament Craig felt able to assure his followers no power on earth would ever be able to touch them 20 To make such assurance against British pressure for Irish unity doubly sure in November 1921 Craig suggested to Lloyd George that Northern Ireland s status be changed to that of a Crown dominion outside of the United Kingdom Although in signing the Anglo Irish Treaty only weeks later the Pime Minister conceded Southern Ireland precisely this Canada style form of statehood to Craig he replied that he was not willing to give the character of an international boundary to a frontier based neither upon natural features nor broad geographical considerations 21 Lloyd George was nonetheless persuaded in October 1920 to secure that still unsettled frontier by endorsing Craig s proposal for a new volunteer constabulary raised from the loyal population and armed for duty within the six county area only 22 Into this Ulster Special Constabulary former UVF units were incorporated en masse 23 Prime Minister of Northern Ireland Edit Craig third from left with his first cabinet in 1921 In the 1921 Northern Ireland general election the first ever Craig was elected to the newly created Northern Ireland House of Commons as one of the members for County Down On 7 June 1921 Craig was appointed the first Prime Minister of Northern Ireland by the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland 24 The House of Commons of Northern Ireland assembled for the first time later that day 25 In April 1934 in response to George Leeke s question regarding the Protestant nature of the Unionist dominated parliament Craig famously replied The hon Member must remember that in the South they boasted of a Catholic State They still boast of Southern Ireland being a Catholic State All I boast of is that we are a Protestant Parliament and a Protestant State It would be rather interesting for historians of the future to compare a Catholic State launched in the South with a Protestant State launched in the North and to see which gets on the better and prospers the more It is most interesting for me at the moment to watch how they are progressing I am doing my best always to top the bill and to be ahead of the South 26 Time cover 26 May 1924 This speech is often misquoted intentionally or otherwise as A Protestant Parliament for a Protestant People and conflated with an incident which occurred respective to the naming of the New City of Craigavon Knockmena a corruption of the townland name Knockmenagh was the preferred name nationalists hoped would be used and which might have attracted broad acceptance on both sides On 6 July 1965 it was announced that the new city would be named Craigavon after Craig A noted nationalist Joseph Connellan interrupted the announcement with the comment A Protestant city for a Protestant people 27 Later that year speaking in the House of Commons at Stormont on 21 November 1934 in response to an accusation that all government appointments in Northern Ireland were carried out on a religious basis he replied it is undoubtedly our duty and our privilege and always will be to see that those appointed by us possess the most unimpeachable loyalty to the King and Constitution That is my whole object in carrying on a Protestant Government for a Protestant people I repeat it in this House 28 He was made a baronet in 1918 and in 1927 was created Viscount Craigavon of Stormont in the County of Down He was also the recipient of honorary degrees from The Queen s University of Belfast 1922 and Oxford University 1926 citation needed Lord Craigavon s tomb Stormont Parliament grounds Close up of the tomb carving Craig had made his career in British as well as Northern Irish politics but his premiership showed little sign of his earlier close acquaintance with the British political world He became intensely parochial and suffered from his loss of intimacy with British politicians in 1938 when the British government concluded agreements with Dublin to end the Anglo Irish economic war between the two countries He never tried to persuade Westminster to protect Northern Ireland s industries especially the linen industry which was central to its economy He was anxious not to provoke Westminster given the precarious state of Northern Ireland s position In April 1939 and again in May 1940 in the Second World War he called for conscription to be introduced in Northern Ireland which the British government fearing a backlash from nationalists refused 29 He also called for Churchill to invade Ireland alternatively known as Eire using Scottish and Welsh troops in order to seize the valuable ports and install a Governor General at Dublin 30 Lady Londonderry confided to Sir Samuel Hoare the Home Secretary until the outbreak of the war that Craigavon had become ga ga 31 but Craigavon was still prime minister when he died peacefully at his home at Glencraig County Down at the age of 69 He was buried on the Stormont Estate on 5 December 1940 and was succeeded as the Prime Minister of Northern Ireland by the Minister of Finance J M Andrews Craig had a dual Irish British self identity saying in a 1929 parliamentary debate that We are Irishmen always hold that Ulstermen are Irishmen and the best of Irishmen much the best 32 Personal life EditHis wife Cecil Mary Nowell Dering Tupper Viscountess Craigavon whom he married on 22 March 1905 after a very brief courtship was English the daughter of Sir Daniel Tupper assistant comptroller of the Lord Chamberlain s department of the king s household and a fourth cousin of the future Queen Mother Elizabeth Angela Marguerite Bowes Lyon They had twin sons and a daughter A president of the Ulster Women s Unionist Council she was created a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1941 33 Craigavon was succeeded as second viscount by his elder son James 1906 1974 His estate was valued at 3 228 2s 6d effects in England probate 20 March 1941 CGPLA NIre 24 138 9s 9d probate 3 March 1941 CGPLA NIre citation needed Craig had a keen interest in Ulster Agriculture and was vice president of Listooder and District Ploughing Society the oldest in Ireland from November 1906 until November 1921 and continued to present the all Ireland cup class until 1926 34 Arms EditCoat of arms of James Craig 1st Viscount Craigavon Notes Coat of arms of the Craig family Crest A demi lion rampant per fess Gules and Sable holding in the dexter paw a mullet Or Escutcheon Gules a fess Ermine between three bridges of as many arches Proper Supporters Dexter a Constable of the Ulster Special Constabulary his hand resting on a rifle Proper sinister a Private of the Royal Ulster Rifles armed and accoutred also Proper 35 Motto Charity Provokes CharitySee also EditBelfast Blitz The Emergency List of Northern Ireland Members of the House of Lords Craigavon The New Town named after CraigNotes Edit Patrick Buckland 1980 James Craig Lord Craigavon Gill and Macmillan p 3 ISBN 9780717110780 No 27168 The London Gazette 23 February 1900 p 1256 No 27171 The London Gazette 6 March 1900 p 1528 The War Embarcation of Troops The Times No 36078 London 1 March 1900 p 7 No 27475 The London Gazette 19 September 1902 p 6024 a b c UK Parliament 2022 James Craig 1871 1940 UK Parliament Retrieved 13 September 2022 Daly T P 2005 James Craig and Orangeism 1903 10 Irish Historical Studies 34 136 431 448 431 doi 10 1017 S0021121400006416 ISSN 0021 1214 JSTOR 30008191 S2CID 155598026 a b Gordon Lucy 1989 The Ulster Covenant Belfast Ulster society PRONI The Ulster Covenant Ulster Day Archived from the original on 29 August 2012 Retrieved 29 September 2012 Biggs Davidson 1973 p 79 Stewart A T Q 1967 The Ulster Crisis London Faber and Faber pp 119 177 Reid Gerard 1999 Great Irish Voices Irish Academic Press Dublin pp 260 ISBN 0 7165 2674 3 Ward Margaret 1982 Suffrage First Above All Else An Account of the Irish Suffrage Movement Feminist Review 10 21 36 30 doi 10 2307 1394778 ISSN 0141 7789 JSTOR 1394778 a b Kelly Vivien 1996 Irish Suffragettes at the time of the Home Rule Crisis 20th Century Contemporary History 4 1 Archived from the original on 18 February 2020 Retrieved 8 March 2020 via History Ireland Courtney Roger 2013 Dissenting Voices Rediscovering the Irish Progressive Presbyterian Tradition Ulster Historical Foundation pp 273 274 276 278 ISBN 9781909556065 Urquhart Diane 1 June 2002 An articulate and definite cry for political freedom the ulster suffrage movement Women s History Review 11 2 273 292 284 doi 10 1080 09612020200200321 ISSN 0961 2025 S2CID 145344160 Hansard Vol 127 cc 925 1036 925 House of Commons 29 March 1920 Sir James Craig in a letter to Lloyd George quoted in F S L Lyons 1971 Ireland since the Famine Weidenfeld and Nicolson London p 696 Hansard 29 March 1920 Government of Ireland Bill p 980 Despair in Ireland The Times 7 October 1920 Follis Bryan A 1995 A State Under Siege The Establishment of Northern Ireland 1920 1925 Oxford Clarendon Press pp65 66 Parkinson Alan F 2004 Belfast s Unholy War Dublin Four Courts Press p 84 ISBN 1 85182 792 7 Hopkinson Michael Green against Green the Irish Civil War Dublin Gill amp Macmillan p 263 ISBN 978 0 7171 1202 9 Belfast Gazette 1 7 June 1921 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help NI Hansard HC vol 1 cc 1 10 Stormont Papers 7 June 1921 Archived from the original on 21 August 2017 Retrieved 23 April 2019 Northern Ireland House of Commons Official Report Vol 34 col 1095 Sir James Craig Unionist Party then Prime Minister of Northern Ireland 24 April 1934 This speech is often misquoted as A Protestant Parliament for a Protestant People or A Protestant State for a Protestant People Mulholland Marc Why Did Unionists Discriminate academia edu accessed 4 September 2017 Northern Ireland Parliamentary Debates Vol 17 columns 73 amp 74 Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine accessed 4 September 2017 Fisk Robert 1983 In time of war Ireland Ulster and the price of neutrality 1939 45 London Andre Deutsch p 158 ISBN 978 0 233 97514 6 Churchill was asked to invade Nazi Ireland during Second World War 21 March 2010 Archived from the original on 30 August 2017 Retrieved 8 July 2017 Jonathan Bardon Extracts from an article The Belfast Blitz 1941 BELFAST BLITZ Archived from the original on 3 February 2015 Retrieved 19 January 2015 Walker Brian 2012 A Political History of Two Islands From Partition to Peace Palgrave MacMillan p 26 Clarence 10 william1 co uk Archived from the original on 8 April 2017 Retrieved 2 February 2017 Callum Bowsie 31 January 2021 History of the oldest ploughing society in Ireland Listooder amp Dist No Farming Life Newsletter pp 47 49 Grants and Confirmations of Arms Volume M National Library of Ireland p 202 Retrieved 24 August 2022 References EditJames Craig profile in the Oxford Dictionary of National BiographyExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to James Craig 1st Viscount Craigavon Wikiquote has quotations related to James Craig 1st Viscount Craigavon Hansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by the Viscount Craigavon Archival material relating to James Craig 1st Viscount Craigavon UK National Archives Craig Lieut Col The Right Hon Sir James Thom s Irish Who s Who Dublin Alexander Thom and Son Ltd 1923 p 49 via Wikisource Parliament of the United KingdomPreceded byJames Wood Member of Parliament for East Down1906 1918 Succeeded byDavid ReidNew constituency Member of Parliament for Mid Down1918 1921 Succeeded byRobert Sharman CrawfordPolitical officesPreceded byJames Hope Treasurer of the Household1916 1918 VacantTitle next held byRobert SandersPreceded byThomas Macnamara Parliamentary and Financial Secretary to the Admiralty1920 1921 Succeeded byLeo AmeryNew office Prime Minister of Northern Ireland1921 1940 Succeeded byJ M AndrewsParliament of Northern IrelandNew constituency Member of Parliament for Down1921 1929 With J M AndrewsEamon de ValeraThomas LaveryRobert McBrideThomas McMullanHarry MulhollandPatrick O Neill Constituency abolishedNew constituency Member of Parliament for North Down1929 1940 Succeeded byThomas BailieParty political officesPreceded byEdward Carson Leader of the Ulster Unionist Party1921 1940 Succeeded byJ M AndrewsPeerage of the United KingdomNew creation Viscount Craigavon1927 1940 Succeeded byJames CraigBaronetage of the United KingdomNew creation Baronet of Craigavon 1918 1940 Succeeded byJames CraigAwards and achievementsPreceded byHenry Seidel Canby Cover of Time Magazine26 May 1924 Succeeded byAlfred von Tirpitz Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title James Craig 1st Viscount Craigavon amp oldid 1148061561, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.