The Troubles in Northern Ireland (1920–1922)

From Justapedia, unleashing the power of collective wisdom
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Conflict deaths in Belfast 1920–1922.
  50–100 deaths per km2
  100–150 deaths per km2
  over 150 deaths per km2

The Troubles of the 1920s was a period of conflict in what is now Northern Ireland from June 1920 until June 1922, during and after the Irish War of Independence and the partition of Ireland. It was mainly a communal conflict between Protestant Unionists, who wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom, and Catholic Irish nationalists, who backed Irish independence. More than 500 people were killed and more than 10,000 became refugees, most of them from the Catholic minority.[1]

At the time, Ireland as a whole had a Catholic and Irish nationalist majority, but Protestants and Unionists were a majority in eastern parts of the northern province of Ulster. Following the Home Rule Crisis, the British government proposed to solve the issue by partitioning Ireland, creating two self-governing territories of the UK: Northern Ireland (with Belfast its capital) and Southern Ireland. Irish nationalists opposed partition. In the 1918 general election, Irish republican party Sinn Féin won the overwhelming majority of Irish seats. Its elected members formed an Irish parliament (Dáil Éireann), unilaterally declared the whole island to be an independent Irish Republic and issued the Irish Declaration of Independence (21 January 1919).

A guerrilla conflict developed as the Irish Republican Army (IRA) began attacking British forces, although it was less active in the north. Protestant Loyalists attacked the Catholic community in retaliation. In July 1920, Loyalists drove 8,000 mostly Catholic co-workers out of the Belfast shipyards, sparking sectarian violence in the city. That summer, sectarian violence also erupted in Derry, leaving twenty people dead, while there were mass burnings of Catholic property and expulsions of Catholics from their homes in Dromore, Lisburn and Banbridge[2]

Conflict continued intermittently for two years, mostly in Belfast, which saw "savage and unprecedented" communal violence between Protestants and Catholics.[3] There was rioting, gun battles, and bombings. Almost 1,000 homes and businesses were destroyed and thousands of people were forced out of mixed neighbourhoods. In the Belfast violence, Hibernians were more involved on the Catholic/Nationalist side than the IRA,[4] while groups such as the Ulster Volunteers were involved on the Protestant/Loyalist side. The British Army was deployed and the Ulster Special Constabulary (USC) was formed to help the regular police – the Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC). The USC was almost wholly Protestant and some members carried out reprisal attacks on Catholics.[5] The Irish Republic approved the "Belfast Boycott" of Unionist-owned businesses and banks in the city. It was enforced by the IRA, who halted trains and lorries and destroyed goods.

In May 1921, partition came into force under British law. Unionists won most seats in the Northern Ireland election and formed a devolved government. A ceasefire (truce) began on 11 July 1921, ending the fighting in most of Ireland. It was preceded by Belfast's Bloody Sunday, a day of violence in which twenty people were killed.

In early 1922, there were clashes between the IRA and USC around the new border, notably the Clones, County Monaghan incident. There was a resurgence of sectarian violence in Belfast, including the McMahon killings and the Arnon Street killings; these were allegedly carried out by policemen in revenge for the killing of fellow officers.[6] In May 1922 the IRA launched a Northern Offensive, secretly backed by Michael Collins, head of the Irish Provisional Government.[7] This saw the Battle of Pettigo and Belleek, which ended with British troops shelling IRA positions on the border. The Northern government implemented the Special Powers Act, interning suspected IRA members, and imposing a nighttime curfew. The outbreak of Civil War in the south on 28 June 1922 diverted the IRA from its campaign against the Northern government, and violence in Northern Ireland fell sharply.

Many Irish nationalists saw the violence in and around Belfast as a pogrom against Irish Catholics, referring to it as the "Belfast Pogrom". Catholics were a quarter of the city's population but made up two-thirds of those killed, suffered 80% of the property destruction and made up 80% of refugees. Despite the role played by state forces, particularly the USC, most Unionist historians say the term "pogrom" is misleading, claiming the violence was not all one-sided nor co-ordinated.[8]

Background[edit]

Results of the 1918 UK general election in Ireland, showing seats won by Irish nationalists in green, and seats won by Unionists in blue

In the early 20th century, all of Ireland was part of the United Kingdom. A majority of Ireland's people were Catholics and Irish nationalists who either wanted self-government ("home rule") or independence. However, in the north-east of Ireland, Protestants and Unionists were the majority, largely due to the population engineering carried out as part of the 17th-century British colonization. By displacing the native Irish Catholic population and settling British Protestants on their land, the British government hoped to create a permanent Unionist majority in this long troublesome province. Accordingly, Unionists wanted to maintain ties to Britain and did not want to be part of a self-governing Ireland. During the Home Rule Crisis of 1912–14, they threatened to oppose any Irish government with violence if necessary, forming a paramilitary group: the Ulster Volunteers or Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF). Ulster unionists argued that if Home Rule could not be stopped, then all or part of Ulster should be excluded from it (see Government of Ireland Act 1920).[9] The Act partitioned Ireland along roughly political and religious lines, creating two self-governing territories of the United Kingdom: Northern Ireland (with Belfast as its capital) and Southern Ireland (with Dublin as its capital). Six of the nine counties in the province of Ulster – Antrim, Down, Armagh, Londonderry, Tyrone and Fermanagh comprised the maximum area Unionists believed they could dominate.[10] Generally, Irish nationalists opposed partition, in the 1918 Irish general election five of the nine Counties of Ulster returned Sinn Fein and Irish nationalist (Irish Parliamentary Party) majorities. Although Counties Fermanagh and Tyrone returns showed nationalist majorities they were included into Northern Ireland.[11]

By the end of the First World War (during which the 1916 Easter Rising had taken place), most Irish nationalists now wanted full independence rather than home rule. In the 1918 Irish general election, the Irish republican party Sinn Féin won the overwhelming majority of Irish seats. In line with its manifesto, Sinn Féin's elected members, boycotted the British parliament and founded a separate Irish parliament (Dáil Éireann), declaring the establishment of an independent Irish Republic covering the whole island. However, Unionists won most seats in Ulster and affirmed their continuing loyalty to the United Kingdom.[12] Many Irish republicans blamed the British establishment for the sectarian divisions in Ireland, and believed that Ulster Unionist defiance would fade after British rule was ended.[13] The British authorities outlawed the Dáil in September 1919,[14] and a guerrilla conflict developed as the Irish Republican Army (1919–1922) began to attack British forces. This conflict became known as the Irish War of Independence.[15]

Another contributing factor to the outbreak of communal violence was the severe economic recession that followed the end of World War I. Many workers were made redundant, working hours were reduced and many returning soldiers were unable to find work. Some returning Protestant soldiers felt bitterness against the many Catholics who had remained at home and now held jobs.[16] At the same time, fiery political speeches were made by Unionist leaders and weapons were stockpiled by Ulster loyalists and Irish nationalists.[17][18] Other events which contributed to the outbreak of violence were the assassinations of senior British Army officers, policemen and politicians: RIC Divisional Commissioner Lt Col Gerald Smyth (July 1920), RIC District Inspector Swanzy (August 1920), Belfast City Councilman William J. Twaddell (May 1922), and British Army Field Marshall Sir Henry Wilson (June 1922).[19]

Ireland was not the only place in Europe where violence erupted in the aftermath of World War I (see Revolutions of 1917–1923). Some Unionists found themselves reforming the UVF to defend themselves from republican attacks, one of the leading men of which was WWI Military Cross awardee and future Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, Basil Brooke. The British Prime Minister, Lloyd George, had around the same time formed the Black and Tans and Auxiliary Division made up of returning soldiers to help bolster the RIC, but they quickly became notorious for their actions against nationalists.[20]

Violence breaks out in Derry[edit]

As the War of Independence spread northwards into Ulster, sectarian clashes took place, which would spark a period of fierce sectarian fighting that overshadowed all the riots and clashes of the preceding century. In January 1920, local elections took place for the first time with the single transferable vote form of proportional representation. The British Prime Minister had hoped that this system would show a lack of support for Sinn Féin, and this view had vindication after Sinn Féin won only 550 seats compared to 1,256 for all the other parties, including the Nationalist Party. However, Unionists became dismayed when an electoral pact saw Sinn Féin and the Nationalist Party gaining control of ten urban councils within the area due to become Northern Ireland. In Derry, Alderman Hugh O'Doherty became the first Catholic mayor of the city. His inaugural speech did little to allay the fears of the unionist population of the city: "Ireland's right to determine her own destiny will come about whether the Protestants of Ulster like it or not".[21] Irish nationalist newspaper the Derry Journal heralded the fall of unionist control over Londonderry Corporation, declaring "No Surrender – Citadel Conquered". In the June elections, thirteen rural councils in Ulster came under joint Nationalist-Sinn Féin control, as did Tyrone and Fermanagh county councils. Unionist representation in Belfast fell from 52 to 29 as a result of the Belfast Labour Party. These events and the nationalist triumphalism that came with them encouraged their hopes that partition would be ditched, whilst compounding the feeling of abandonment amongst unionists, especially in Derry.[22][23]

Sectarian strife began in Derry in April 1920 when an hour-long violent confrontation between Protestants and Catholics erupted at the corner of Long Tower Street, as republican prisoners were being transported to Bishop Street gaol. On the 18th, shots were fired into the Bogside and as Catholics rioted in the city centre, the RIC carried out a bayonet charge. On 14 May more trouble ensued as the RIC and IRA engaged in four-hour gun battle, which resulted in the shooting dead of the local chief of the RIC Special Branch. In response, loyalists reformed the UVF in the city and mounted roadblocks, where Catholics crossing Carlisle Bridge were mistreated, resulting in one who had returned injured from the war being killed. On 13 June, the UVF attacked Catholics at Prehen Wood, which sparked intense rioting in the city, where Long Tower Street and Bishop Street met.[24]

The violence that broke out in the city on 18 June continued for a week.[25] At least nineteen people were killed or fatally wounded during this time: 14 Catholics and five Protestants.[26] On 18 June, rioting had spread into the mainly-Protestant Waterside area of the city, where Catholic homes were burnt. The UVF, with the aid of ex-servicemen, seized control of the Guildhall and Diamond, whilst also repulsing an IRA counter-attack. Protestants living in the mainly-Catholic Bogside would be burnt out of their houses by the IRA, with two shot dead.[27] Loyalists fired from the Fountain neighborhood into adjoining Catholic streets.[28] The IRA, armed with rifles and machine-guns, occupied St Columb's College, which became the scene of intense gunfire.[26][28]

Eventually, on 23 June 1920, 1,500 British troops arrived in Derry to restore order, martial law was declared in the city, and a destroyer was anchored on the Foyle overlooking the Guildhall.[26] The presence of the army did little to stifle the violence as riots, shootings, and assassinations continued. Six people (four Catholics, two Protestants) were killed in the last week of June, after the army's deployment.[26] According to some sources, six Catholics were killed in the Bogside by heavy machine gun fire from soldiers.[29] By the end of the trouble forty people had been killed.[30]

1920 Belfast Shipyard Worker Clearances & "Pogroms"[edit]

Belfast's Harland & Wolff shipyards in 1911

The large-scale shipyard clearances of July 1920 were preceded by a similar action in July, 1912. Both the 1912 and 1920 clearances were of Catholic shipyard workers and Protestant trade unionists, but the 1912 clearances were on a smaller scale. The event that triggered the 1912 workplace expulsions took place far from Belfast in Castledawson, County Londonderry when a member of the Ancient Order of Hibernians snatched a British flag from the hands of a young boy – causing rioting. When the news spread to Belfast 2,400 Catholics and some 600 Protestant trade unionists were driven (often violently) from their places of work.[31][32]

On The Twelfth (12 July) 1920, a yearly Ulster Protestant celebration, Ulster Unionist Party leader Edward Carson made a speech to thousands of Orangemen in Finaghy, near Belfast. He said "I am sick of words without actions" and he warned the British government that if it refused to adequately protect Unionists from the IRA, they would take matters into their own hands.[33] He also linked Irish republicanism with socialism and the Catholic Church.[34] Many Catholics asserted that Carson's rhetoric was partly responsible for what they believed was a "pogrom" being carried out against Belfast's Catholic minority.[35]

On 21 July 1920, when shipyard workers returned after the Twelfth holidays, a meeting of "all Unionist and Protestant workers" was called during lunch hour that day. With about 5,000 workers present, speeches were made, demanding the expulsion of all "non-loyal" workers.[36] Hours of intimidation and violence followed, in which Loyalists drove 8,000 co-workers from Harland and Wolff and other shipyards, all of them either Catholics or Protestant labour activists. Some of them were beaten,[37] or thrown into the water and pelted with rivets as they swam for their lives.[38]

The expulsion of thousands of Catholic workers from the shipyards was followed by retaliation attacks against Protestant shipyard workers while they were returning home, starting a cycle of communal violence which continued for over two years.[39] Three days of rioting followed, in which eleven Catholics and eight Protestants were killed and hundreds of people were wounded.[37]

Around the Falls-Shankill interface, seven Catholics and two Protestants were killed, mostly by soldiers who were attempting to disperse rioters in the area.[40] Several of those killed were ex-servicemen and one was a Redemptorist friar who was shot by a bullet fired from a passing military patrol through a Clonard Monastery window. A Loyalist mob attempted to burn down a Catholic convent on Newtownards Road; soldiers guarding the building responded opened fire, wounding 15 Protestants, three of them fatally.[40]

At other workplaces in Belfast, expulsions continued for several days, and those expelled included several hundred female textile workers. Catholics and Socialists were driven out of other large firms such as Mackies Foundry and Sirocco Engineering Works.[41] According to the Catholic Protection Committee, 11,000 Catholic shipyard, factory and mill workers had been expelled from their jobs, a tenth of Belfast's Catholic population.[42] The leader of the Ulster Unionist Party and the soon to be Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, Sir James Craig, made his feelings on the expulsions clear when he visited the shipyards: "Do I approve of the actions you boys have taken in the past? I say yes".[43]

The unemployed shipyard workers often attacked Protestant workers as they returned home after work. In late November 1921 bombs were thrown into trams carrying shipyard workers in Belfast, killing eight Protestants and wounding nine.[44] Loyalist retaliation resulted in fifteen Nationalists killed in one day alone (22 November 1921).[45] St. Matthew's church in the Catholic enclave of Ballymacarrett came under sustained attack and in March 1922, St. Mathews Primary School was subjected to a bombing attack.[46]

A peace wall in Short Strand dividing it from a Protestant area

In the 1920's temporary Peace lines (walls) were built in the area adjacent to the Harland & Wolff shipyards in Belfast and made permanent in 1969, following the outbreak of the 1969 Northern Ireland riots. Today, the Ballymacarrett/Short Strand areas of Belfast remain basically segregated and violence still occurs. The Battle of St Matthew's or Battle of Short Strand was a gun battle that took place on the night of 27–28 June 1970 resulting in three deaths and at least 26 wounded.[47] Major sectarian clashes were common in the shipyard area into the 21st century – 2002 Short Strand clashes and 2011 Northern Ireland riots.

Banbridge & Dromore burnings[edit]

On 17 July 1920, the IRA assassinated British colonel Gerald Smyth in Cork. He had told police officers to shoot civilians who did not immediately obey orders.[48] Smyth was from a wealthy Protestant family in the northern town of Banbridge, County Down and his large funeral was held there on 21 July, the same day as the Belfast shipyard expulsions. After Smyth's funeral, about 3,000 Loyalists took to the streets. Many Catholic homes and businesses were attacked, burned and looted, despite police being present.[48] A large mob of Loyalists, some armed, attacked and tried to break into the home of a republican family. The father fired on the crowd, killing a Protestant man.[48][40] Hundreds of Catholic factory workers were also driven from their jobs, and many Catholic families fled Banbridge.[48] Calm was restored after the British Army was deployed in the town.[48]

On 23 July 1920, sectarian motivated riots occurred in Dromore, County Down. An estimated crowd of 500 attacked Catholic homes, businesses and the Catholic parochial house. During the rioting, one member of the Orange Order was shot dead, it was determined that the bullet had been fired by the police trying to disperse the mob.[40][49] At the end of these two days of violence, virtually the entire Catholic population of both Banbridge and Dromore were forced to flee their homes.[50][51]

Lisburn burnings[edit]

Catholic-owned businesses destroyed by loyalists in Lisburn

On 22 August 1920, the IRA assassinated RIC Inspector Oswald Swanzy in the Market Square of Lisburn, County Antrim a town near Belfast, as worshippers left Sunday service.[52] A coroner's inquest in Cork had held Swanzy (among others) responsible for the killing of Tomás Mac Curtain, Cork's republican Lord Mayor.[53]

Over the next three days and nights, in an attack likened to ethnic cleansing,[54][55] Loyalist crowds looted and burned almost every Catholic business in the town, and attacked Catholic homes.[56] There is evidence the UVF helped organise the burnings.[55] Rioters attacked firemen who tried to save Catholic property,[57] and attacked the lorries of British soldiers sent to help the police.[56] A Catholic pub owner later died of gunshot wounds,[56] and a charred body was found in the ruins of a factory.[58]

Lisburn was likened to "a bombarded town in France" during the First World War.[59] A third of the town's Catholics (about 1,000 people) fled Lisburn.[59] The attacks in Lisburn and Banbridge led to a long-term decline of the Catholic populations of those towns.[60]

Damage was estimated at 810,000 pounds (in 1920 currency). Seven men were arrested and charged with rioting – five were convicted but appealed their convictions and were released.[61]

On 28 August 1920, clashes erupted in the Marrowbone district of Belfast when Catholics attacked Protestant homes as retaliation for the burnings in Lisburn. British soldiers fired a Hotchkiss machine gun to disperse rioters. Six Catholics and a Protestant were killed in the violence.[62]

Forming the Ulster Special Constabulary[edit]

In September, Unionist leader James Craig wrote to the British government demanding that a special constabulary be recruited from the ranks of the loyalist, paramilitary organization the UVF. He warned, "Loyalist leaders now feel the situation is so desperate that unless the Government will take immediate action, it may be advisable for them to see what steps can be taken towards a system of organized reprisals against the rebels".[63] The Ulster Special Constabulary was formed in October 1920 and, in the words of historian Michael Hopkinson, "amounted to an officially approved UVF".[63] Irish nationalists saw the founding of this almost wholly Protestant force the – Ulster Special Constabulary as the arming of the majority against the Catholic minority.[64][65] After the Truce between the IRA and the British (11 July 1921), the USC was demobilised by the British and the IRA was given official recognition while peace talks were ongoing.[66]

Belfast Boycott[edit]

A notice from the Belfast Boycott Committee

In response to the expulsion of Catholic workers in Belfast, northern Sinn Féin members called for the boycott of Unionist-owned businesses and banks in the city.[67] Despite some opposition, the Dáil and its cabinet approved the boycott in August 1920, imposing a boycott of goods from Belfast and a withdrawal of funds from Belfast-based banks.[68] In January 1921 the Dáil agreed to support the boycott more fully, providing 35,000 pounds to the campaign.[69] By May 1921 there were 360 Belfast Boycott committees throughout Ireland, but it was enforced intermittently.

The boycott was enforced by the IRA, who halted trains and lorries and destroyed goods from Belfast businesses.[70] The female members of Cumann na mBan played major roles in holding up trains and the seizure/destruction of northern produced goods/Unionist leaning newspapers. Eithne Coyle held up several trains bound from County Tyrone to County Donegal.[71] However, the boycott was effectively enforced only in County Monaghan, primarily due to its location near the newly-proclaimed border and Belfast. The following declaration was signed by all of Monaghan's Catholic commercial traders: "We the undersigned traders of Monaghan town, hereby pledge ourselves not to deal directly or indirectly with Belfast Unionist firms or traders until such time as adequate reparation has been made to the Catholic victims of the recent Belfast pogrom".[72] The boycott had little impact on the north's three main industries—agriculture, shipbuilding and linen—as they were mainly shipped to markets outside Ireland.[68] In March 1922, the Craig-Collins pact had both leaders agree that Craig would try to have Catholic workers regain the jobs lost in the shipyard clearances of 1920. Collins agreed to end IRA actions against the police and military in the six counties and to end the boycott.[73] [74]The Belfast Boycott eventually ended following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty of December 1921 and the onset of the Irish Civil War (June 1922 – May 1923).[75]

Spring and summer 1921[edit]

After a lull, the conflict in the north intensified again in the spring of 1921. On 1 April, the IRA attacked an RIC barracks and a British Army post in Derry city with gunfire and grenades, killing two RIC officers.[76] On 10 April, the IRA ambushed a group of Special Constables outside a church in Creggan, County Armagh, killing one and wounding others. In reprisal, the USC attacked nationalists and burned their houses in Killylea (where the dead Special Constables came from).[76]

The Lord Lieutenant inspecting troops in Belfast at the opening of the Northern Ireland Parliament, June 1921

The Government of Ireland Act came into force on 3 May 1921, thus partitioning Ireland under British law.[77][78] Elections for the Northern and Southern parliaments were held on 24 May. Unionists won most seats in Northern Ireland, while republicans treated it as an election for the Dáil. The Northern Ireland parliament first met on 7 June and formed a devolved government, headed by Unionist Party leader James Craig. Irish nationalist and republican members refused to attend.[77] The following day, the IRA ambushed a USC patrol at Carrogs, near Newry. In reprisal, the Special Constables went to the nearest Catholic home and fatally shot two civilian men. The IRA then fired on the USC men from a nearby hill, killing one.[79]

On 10 June, the IRA shot three RIC officers on Belfast's Falls Road, fatally wounding Constable James Glover. He had been targeted because the IRA suspected him of being part of a group of police involved in the sectarian killings of Catholics.[80] This attack sparked violence by Loyalists. Belfast suffered three days of sectarian rioting and shooting incidents, during which at least 14 people were killed; including three Catholics taken from their homes and killed by uniformed police.[80] About 150 Catholic families were forced out of their homes.[81]

King George V addressed the ceremonial opening of the Northern parliament on 22 June, in which he called for "all Irishmen to pause, to stretch out the hand of forbearance and conciliation".[77] The next day, a train carrying the king's military escort, the 10th Royal Hussars, was derailed by an IRA bomb at Adavoyle, County Armagh. Five soldiers and a train guard were killed in the derailment, as were fifty horses. Patrick McAteer, a local farm worker, was fatally wounded on the same day roughly half a mile from the ambush site by soldiers when he failed to halt when challenged.[82] On 6 July, disguised Special Constables raided homes at Altnaveigh, County Armagh, and summarily killed four Catholic civilian men.[83]

Belfast's Bloody Sunday[edit]

On 9 July 1921, a ceasefire (or truce) was agreed between representatives of the Irish Republic and the British government, to begin at noon on 11 July. Many Loyalists condemned the truce as a 'sell-out' to Republicans.[84] While violence may have ceased in the south of Ireland, the birth of Northern Ireland in 1921 saw another wave of intense sectarian violence in Belfast. This period of time saw the highest number of casualties since the Shipyard Clearances of the pervious summer.[85]Hours before the ceasefire was to begin, police launched a raid against Republicans in west Belfast. The IRA ambushed them on Raglan Street, killing an officer and wounding others. This sparked a day of violence known as Belfast's Bloody Sunday. Protestant loyalists attacked Catholic neighbourhoods in west Belfast, burning over 150 Catholic homes and businesses.[86] This led to sectarian clashes, and gun battles between police and Catholic nationalists. While the IRA was involved in some of the fighting, a rival Irish nationalist group, the Hibernians, were mainly involved on the Catholic side.[87] The USC were alleged to have driven through Catholic enclaves firing indiscriminately.[88] Twenty people were killed or fatally wounded (including twelve Catholics and six Protestants) before a truce began at noon on 11 July 1921.[89] Almost 200 houses were badly damaged or destroyed,[88] most of them Catholic homes.[90]

A strict curfew was enforced in Belfast after the violence. As soon as the ceasefire began, the Commandant of the IRA's 2nd Northern Division, Eoin O'Duffy, was sent to Belfast to liaise with the authorities and try to maintain the truce.[91] With the tacit consent of the RIC, he organized IRA patrols in Catholic neighbourhoods to restore order, and announced that IRA offensive actions would end. Both Protestants and Catholics saw the truce as a victory for Republicans. Loyalists "were particularly appalled by the sight of policemen and soldiers meeting IRA officers on a semi-official basis".[91]

The Troubles in Ulster[edit]

During this time period violence occurred in all nine counties of Ulster. Outside of the major cities/towns many attacks occurred in smaller/rural communities but were mostly limited to attacks on RIC barracks, ambushes, sniping and raids for weapons. Some large-scale attacks did occur often involving up to 200 IRA members. On 9 May 1920 approximately 200 IRA volunteers under Frank Aiken attacked the RIC barracks in Newtownhamilton, County Armagh. After a two-hour firefight, the IRA breached the barracks wall with explosives and stormed the building.[92] Another large scale battle took place on 1 June 1920 when at least 200 IRA volunteers led by Roger McCorley attacked the RIC barracks in Crossgar, County Down. They opened fire on the building, wounding two officers, and attempted to breach the walls with explosives before withdrawing. [93] In early 1921 western Donegal had seasoned Volunteers under the command of Peadar O'Donnell. During this time the west Donegal Flying Column was responsible for numerous successful attacks on RIC barracks and troop train ambushes. On 12 January 1921 the column attacked a train carrying troops with multiple military deaths reported.[94]

Attacks and reprisals were common – on 25 October 1920 (after a successful raid for arms/ammunition took place at the RIC barracks in Tempo, County Fermanagh) a RIC officer was seriously wounded. Several hours later members of the UVF fired into a group of civilians in Tempo, killing one and wounding another.[95] On 22 February 1921 in the small town of Mountcharles, County Donegal, the IRA attacked a mixed patrol of military and police, one RIC officer was killed and a soldier was wounded during a 30 minute exchange of gunfire. Later that day police and Black and Tans in Donegal town fired shots into buildings, destroyed shops and licensed premises. After midnight a mixed force of RIC, Black and Tans, USC and military returned to Mountcharles destroying businesses and setting fire to homes. That night one woman was shot and killed in Mountcharles.[96] On March 22 1921, in retaliation for the burning of Catholic owned homes in Rosslea, County Fermanagh (21 February 1921) two members of the USC were shot dead. The IRA also conducted widespread attacks on Protestant owned homes in Rosslea, burning at least two to the ground and damaging many others.[97] The following month, the IRA attacked the homes of up to sixteen Special Constables in the Rosslea district, killing three and wounding several others.[98] Some areas of Ulster saw little violence – only three IRA volunteers were killed in County Cavan during the war.[99] For a more complete listing of the troubles in Ulster during this time period see Timeline of the Irish War of Independence.

Anglo-Irish Treaty[edit]

The post-ceasefire talks led to the Anglo-Irish Treaty, signed on 6 December 1921 by representatives of the British government and Irish Republic.[100] Under the Treaty, 'Southern Ireland' would leave the UK and become a self-governing dominion: the Irish Free State. Northern Ireland's parliament could vote it in or out of the Free State, and a commission could then redraw or confirm the provisional border. The Dáil narrowly approved the Treaty on 7 January 1922 (by a vote of 64 to 57), but it caused a serious split in the Irish nationalist movement (eventually leading the Irish Civil War). The anti-Treaty side argued that the Treaty copper-fastened partition; the pro-Treaty side argued that the proposed Boundary Commission would give large swathes of Northern Ireland to the Free State, leaving the remaining territory too small to be viable.[101] The pro-Treatyites formed a Provisional Government, headed by Michael Collins, to administer Southern Ireland until the Free State was established (6 December 1922).

Early 1922[edit]

The first half of 1922 saw clashes between the IRA and USC along the new border, an IRA offensive inside Northern Ireland, sectarian violence and killings in Belfast, and tensions between the two new governments.[102]

On 14 January, Northern Ireland police arrested members of the Monaghan Gaelic football team on their way to a match in Derry. Among them were IRA volunteers with plans to free IRA prisoners from Derry Gaol.[103] In response, on the night of 7–8 February, IRA units crossed into Northern Ireland and captured almost fifty Special Constables and prominent Loyalists in counties Fermanagh and Tyrone. They were to be held as hostages for the Monaghan prisoners. Several IRA volunteers were also captured during the raids.[103] The Northern Ireland authorities responded by sealing-off many cross-border roads.[104]

On 11 February, the IRA stopped a group of armed Special Constables at Clones railway station, County Monaghan. The USC unit was travelling by train from Belfast to Enniskillen (both in Northern Ireland), but the Irish Provisional Government was unaware British forces would be crossing through its territory. The IRA called on the Special Constables to surrender for questioning, but one of them shot dead an IRA sergeant. This sparked a firefight in which four Special Constables were killed and several wounded. Five others were captured.[105] The incident threatened to set off a major confrontation between North and South, and the British government temporarily suspended the withdrawal of British troops from the South. A Border Commission was set up to mediate in any future cross-border disputes, but achieved very little.[106]

These incidents provoked retaliatory attacks by Loyalists against Catholics in Belfast, sparking further sectarian clashes. In the three days after the Clones incident, more than 30 people were killed in Belfast.[106] On 14 February, when Loyalists threw a bomb into a group of Catholic children. Six people were killed and 22 injured.[107] On 18 March 1922, Northern Ireland police raided IRA headquarters in Belfast, seizing weapons and lists of IRA volunteers. The Irish Provisional Government condemned this as a breach of the truce.[108][109] Over the next week, the IRA attacked several police barracks in the North.[108] On 28 March, a column of fifty IRA volunteers crossed into the North and seized the RIC barracks in Belcoo, County Fermanagh, after a three-hour battle. Fifteen RIC officers were captured, marched across the border into the South and held captive until 18 July.[108]

One of the most infamous sectarian attacks in Belfast during this period were the McMahon killings (24 March 1922), in which five Catholic family members and an employee were shot dead by gunmen who broke into their home.[110] The gunmen were allegedly Special Constables, and it was apparently revenge for the IRA's killing of two policemen hours earlier.[111] A week later, six more Catholics were killed by Special Constables who went on a rampage in the Arnon Street killings (1 April 1922).[112] This was also believed to have been revenge for the IRA's killing of a policeman.[113][114]

IRA Northern Offensive[edit]

Michael Collins (left) inspects a National Army soldier in 1922

In spring 1922, Michael Collins, head of the Irish Provisional Government, was behind secret plans for an IRA offensive in Northern Ireland.[115][116][117] He formed an 'Ulster Council' within the IRA, which included the commanders of its five northern divisions, to co-ordinate IRA activity in the north.[117] Collins hoped the offensive would undermine the Northern Ireland government and unite the pro-treaty and anti-treaty IRA in a shared goal.[115] The new Irish National Army secretly supplied weaponry and equipment for the offensive.[115][116]

The offensive was to begin on 2 May 1922, but most of the IRA divisions had to postpone until later in the month.[117] The 2nd Northern Division was unable to postpone and was allowed to begin operations on 2 May with attacks on police barracks in Bellaghy, Draperstown and Coalisland.[117] An RIC officer and an IRA volunteer were killed.[118] The following day, three Specials were shot dead in Ballyronan, and another was killed in an ambush of a mobile patrol at Corvanaghan.[119] These were followed by reprisal killings: on 6 May two Catholic men were shot dead at a house near Dungiven,[120] and on 10 May, Specials shot three Catholic brothers in their home in Ballyronan, killing one.[121]

The 3rd Northern Division (under the command of Seamus Woods) began operations on 18 May by raiding Musgrave Street RIC barracks in the centre of Belfast. It planned to capture armoured cars and weaponry. A unit infiltrated the barracks but had to fight their way out when guards were alerted.[117] One RIC Constable was killed and another wounded during the attack on Musgrave barracks.[122] Woods was quoted on this attack: "The whole Loyalist population is at a loss to know how such a raid could be attempted during curfew hours on the headquarters in Belfast and the largest barrack in Ireland. They are in a state of panic."[123] The IRA also carried out numerous firebomb attacks and dozens of fires blazed across Belfast.[117] After a Unionist-owned mill was burned in Desertmartin, a mob of Loyalists and police attacked and burned many Catholic homes and businesses in the village. Special Constables arrested four Catholic men at their homes outside the village and summarily executed them by the roadside.[124] The IRA also attacked Martinstown RIC barracks in County Antrim with gunfire and grenades. They ambushed a group of USC reinforcements, killing one.[125]

The campaign saw further reprisal/sectarian violence in Belfast. On 19 May 1922 when 71 Catholic families were driven out of their homes and on 31 May, when 78 Catholic families were driven out.[126] Sectarian attacks were not limited to one side: on 19 May workmen at a cooperage in Little Patrick Street, Belfast were lined up and asked their religion. Four Protestant workers were separated from their Catholic workmates and shot dead.[127]

On 22 May 1922, the IRA assassinated William J. Twaddell, a Unionist Member of Parliament in Belfast. This spurred the Northern Ireland government to introduce internment (imprisonment without trial).[128] Over 500 men from Tyrone, Derry, Fermanagh, Armagh and Belfast were arrested (all of the internees were all republicans).[129] A raid on a house in Belfast uncovered a list of IRA officers in the city, and documents proving the involvement of Southern IRA leaders.[128] The USC were mobilized in huge numbers to carry out patrols and raids, and a nighttime curfew was imposed across Northern Ireland.[128] This security crackdown, underpinned by the new Special Powers Act (7 April 1922), would cripple the IRA in Northern Ireland.[128] The Special Powers Act has been described as " the most draconian pieces of legislation ever passed in a liberal democracy." Joe Devlin, MP stated the predicament the nationalist community was facing: "If Catholics have no revolvers they are murdered. If they have revolvers they are flogged and sentenced to death." (the Act allowed for flogging in some cases).[130][131] The Act was renewed several times before being made permanent in 1933. The staggered start to the northern offensive also made it easier for the Northern authorities to tackle.[117]

In early June, there were increasing attacks on the USC in south County Armagh. On 13 June, the Specials took two Catholic men from their homes in the area and killed them, dumping their bodies on the roadside at Lislea.[132] On 17 June, IRA volunteers under Frank Aiken retaliated for the killings and for the sexual assault of a Catholic woman. A unit of fifty IRA volunteers ambushed a USC patrol at Drumintee, killing two. Meanwhile, in one of the most notorious incidents of the period, another IRA unit attacked nine Protestant homes at Altnaveigh, shooting dead six Protestant civilians.[133]

One of the last mass killings of the periods occurred in the predominantly-Catholic village of Cushendall, Country Antrim. On the night of 23 June 1922, a party of A-Specials, accompanied by British soldiers, arrived in the village to enforce the nightly curfew. The A-Specials subsequently opened fire on a crowd of onlookers, killing three Catholic men: James McAllister, John Gore and John Hill. After the killings, the A-Specials claimed they were attacked by the IRA and returned fire, but a British government inquiry, which was declassified almost a century later, concluded that the constabulary's version of events was false.[134]

Battle of Pettigo and Belleek[edit]

Belleek Fort in 2008

During the Northern Offensive, there were clashes between the IRA and British forces in an area known as the 'Belleek-Pettigo salient'.[135] This was a triangular area of land in County Fermanagh, part of Northern Ireland but mostly cut-off from it by Lough Erne and the border.[136][137] The villages of Belleek and Pettigo both straddled the border. The IRA garrisoned these villages and also occupied the triangular strip of Northern territory.[136][137] On 27 May, a USC group was sent into the area by boat and garrisoned Magherameena Castle, near Belleek. The IRA attacked the USC, forcing them to abandon their position and withdraw to a nearby island. The IRA also ambushed a convoy of USC reinforcements, killing the lead driver and forcing the Specials to retreat.[136][138]

James Craig, Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, telegrammed Winston Churchill, Secretary of State for the Colonies, to request that British troops be sent to drive out the IRA.[135] Over the next week, a large number of Specials and British troops attempted to capture Pettigo from a force of about 100 IRA volunteers, by both land and water.[136][138] British forces eventually captured Pettigo on 4 June, after a fierce battle in which they bombarded the IRA positions with artillery.[136][138] Three IRA volunteers manning machine-gun posts were killed by British shelling and gunfire; most of the other IRA volunteers retreated.[139] Belleek was captured by British troops on 8 June after a brief battle. They bombarded the old Belleek Fort, forcing its IRA garrison to retreat.[140] Although in Southern territory, British troops continued to occupy Pettigo until January 1923, and Belleek Fort until August 1924.[141][137]

The fighting heightened tensions between the Irish and British governments.[138] It was the first clash between the IRA and British troops since the truce,[135] and was the nearest the Northern IRA came to a pitched battle with the British Army.[138] It was also the last major conflict between the IRA and British forces during this period.[137]

End of the violence[edit]

By the end of June 1922, the level of violence in Belfast had fallen and the IRA's Northern Offensive had petered out.[116] There were several reasons for this. The Northern government's security crackdown and introduction of internment in late May soon crippled the IRA in Northern Ireland.[128] Within four months, 446 Irish republicans/nationalists had been interned and by December 1924, 700 had been interned.[142][143] The numerical superiority of the USC (19,400 members in the A and B Specials) also proved an insurmountable obstacle for the northern IRA.[144] Irish nationalists in the South became distracted by the deepening split between pro-treaty and anti-treaty factions. In early June, the Irish Provisional Government adopted "a policy of peaceful obstruction" towards the Northern government, and Michael Collins suspended attempts to use force.[116]

The outbreak of the Irish Civil War on 28 June 1922 diverted the IRA from its campaign against the Northern government.[137] The killing of Michael Collins on 22 August dealt another blow to the northern IRA. Collins had secretly been arming and supporting the northern IRA, and with his death many northern IRA men felt their cause was unwinnable. IRA Belfast Brigade leader Roger McCorley stated, "When Collins was killed the northern element (of the IRA) gave up all hope".[145] Nationalist hopes for a large transfer of Northern territory to the newly-formed Irish Free State (via the Irish Boundary Commission) may have also led to a decrease in violence.[146]

By the end of 1922 Northern Ireland was relatively peaceful, which continued through 1924 when internment was ended and the Belfast curfew lifted.[147]

Statistics[edit]

File:Sept 1920 Checking casualty lists at Belfast Telegraph Office.jpg
People reading casualty lists at the Belfast Telegraph office, September 1920

Between 1920–1922, within Northern Ireland, 557 people were killed: 303 Catholics, 172 Protestants and 82 police and British Army personnel.[148] A number of IRA volunteers were also killed. Belfast suffered the most casualties, as 455 people there were killed: 267 Catholics, 151 Protestants and 37 members of the security forces.[149] The city had a higher per-capita death rate than any other part of Ireland during the Irish revolutionary period, with 40% of all conflict-related deaths.[150]

Almost 1,000 homes and businesses in Belfast were destroyed, about 80% of them Catholic and 20% Protestant.[150] More than 10,000 people became refugees, most of them Catholics who generally fled to other parts of Ireland.[150] About 8,000 Catholics and 2,000 Protestants were forced to move within Belfast alone.[150] An estimated 8,000–10,000 workers, mostly Catholics, were expelled from their jobs.[150]

Catholic relief organizations estimated that 8,700 to 11,000 Catholics had lost their jobs, that up to 23,000 Catholics had been forced from their homes and about 500 Catholic-owned businesses had been destroyed between July 1920 and July 1922.[151]

Outside Belfast, at least 104 people were killed: 61 civilians (45 Catholics and 15 Protestants) and 45 policemen and soldiers.

While both communities suffered sectarian and politically-motivated violence during this time, Catholics were disproportionately affected. Catholics made up less than one-quarter of Belfast's population but almost two-thirds of the victims.[150][152]

Defining the violence[edit]

At the time, many Irish Catholics in Belfast felt that the Loyalist violence, and the violent expulsion of thousands of Catholics from mixed neighborhoods and workplaces, was akin to a pogrom or ethnic cleansing against them.[153] Catholics were a minority in Belfast; they were about a quarter of the population but made up about two-thirds of those killed, suffered 80% of the property destruction and made up 80% of refugees.[150][152] Irish nationalists at the time generally referred to the violence as a "pogrom".[154] The American Commission on Conditions in Ireland's Interim Report 1921 stated "These riots between Protestants and Catholics in which Protestants were the aggressors partook of the character of Russian pogroms against the Jews".[155] In one author's opinion, "The Catholic population had been beaten into submission".[156]

Characterizing the violence as "pogroms" and "ethnic cleansing" has been fiercely debated by historians.[59] Historians have argued that the term "pogrom" is not appropriate given the reciprocity of violence between the communities.[157] In the context of the Belfast shipyard clearances, the use of the word "pogrom" does not strictly conform to dictionary definitions, which typically refers to pogroms against Jews in eastern Europe. Intimidation and retaliation attacks were carried out by both communities, with about third of those killed and over 20% of refugees being Protestant.[150][152]

Later 'Troubles'[edit]

There would be no major outbreaks of violence until May 1935 when there were arson attacks on Catholic homes in Upper Library Street, Belfast. In June 1935 a crowd attacked the small Catholic enclave off Great Georges Street, Belfast. By the end of the 1935 riots, thirteen people had been killed, hundreds had been wounded, mass expulsions of Catholics from shipyard jobs again occurred and 500 Catholic families had been driven from their homes.[158][159] Catholics referred to these incidents as pogroms against them.[160]

In The Troubles that began in 1969, some Belfast Catholics whose homes had been attacked when they were children found themselves being attacked again in what seemed a re-run of the earlier Troubles.[161] The Belfast shipyards had a long-standing reputation as Protestant "closed shops" – in 1970, 500 Catholic workers were expelled from their jobs.[162]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Lynch, Robert (2019). The Partition of Ireland: 1918–1925. Cambridge University Press. pp. 90–92.
  2. ^ Lynch, (2019) pgs 90–92
  3. ^ Lynch (2019). pp.11, 100–101
  4. ^ Wilson, Tim. Frontiers of Violence: Conflict and Identity in Ulster and Upper Silesia 1918-1922. Oxford University Press, 2010. pp.128–129
  5. ^ Farrell, Michael. Arming the Protestants: The Formation of the Ulster Special Constabulary and the Royal Ulster Constabulary. Pluto Press, 1983. p.166
  6. ^ McEldowney, Eugene (3 September 2001). "An Irishman's Diary". The Irish Times. Retrieved 12 August 2022.
  7. ^ Lawlor, Pearse. The Outrages: The IRA and the Ulster Special Constabulary in the Border Campaign. Mercier Press, 2011. pp.265–266
  8. ^ Parkinson, Alan F. (2004). Belfast's Unholy War. Four Courts Press, p.314
  9. ^ O'Day, Alan (1998). Irish Home Rule, 1867–1921. Manchester University Press, p. 252
  10. ^ Morland, Paul (2016). Demographic Engineering: Population Strategies in Ethnic Conflict. Routledge, pp.96–98
  11. ^ The Irish Election of 1918 (Report). Northern Ireland Elections. Retrieved 31 August 2022.
  12. ^ Lynch, Robert (2019). The Partition of Ireland: 1918–1925. Cambridge University Press. p. 48.
  13. ^ Lynch (2019), pp. 51–52
  14. ^ Mitchell, Arthur (1995). Revolutionary Government in Ireland. Gill & MacMillan, p. 245
  15. ^ Coleman, Marie (2013). The Irish Revolution, 1916–1923. Routledge. p. 67. ISBN 978-1317801474.
  16. ^ Lawlor, Pearse (2009). The Burnings. Mercier Press. pp. 14–15. ISBN 978-1-85635-612-1.
  17. ^ Parkinson, p.41
  18. ^ Lynch, Robert (2006). The Northern IRA and the Early Years of Partition. Irish Academic Press, p.28. ISBN 978-0716533771.
  19. ^ Parkinson, Alan F. (2004). Belfast's Unholy War. Four Courts Press, p.276. ISBN 1-85182-792-7.
  20. ^ Bardon, Johnathan (2005), A History of Ulster, The Blackstaff Press, pgs 466–9, isbn 0-85640-764-X
  21. ^ Bardon, pgs 466-9
  22. ^ Lynch, Robert (2015). Revolutionary Ireland: 1912–25. Bloomsbury Publishing, pp.97–98
  23. ^ "1920 local government elections recalled in new publication" Archived 31 January 2021 at the Wayback Machine. The Irish News, 19 October 2020.
  24. ^ Bardon, pgs 466-9
  25. ^ "Londonderry's forgotten week of bloodshed' in 1920". BBC News, 30 December 2020.
  26. ^ a b c d Eunan O'Halpin & Daithí Ó Corráin (2020). The Dead of the Irish Revolution. Yale University Press, pp.141–145
  27. ^ Bardon, pgs 466-9
  28. ^ a b Lawlor, The Outrages, pp.16–18
  29. ^ Bardon, pgs 466-9
  30. ^ Bardon, pgs 466-9
  31. ^ McCluskey, Fergal, (2013), The Irish Revolution 1912-23: Tyrone, Four Courts Press, Dublin, pgs 21-22, ISBN 9781846822995
  32. ^ McDermott, Jim (25 May 2012). "1912: A Year to Remember". An Phoblacht. Retrieved 25 October 2022.
  33. ^ Magill, p.42
  34. ^ Lawlor, The Burnings, pp.90–92
  35. ^ Magill, p.42
  36. ^ Glennon, Kieran (27 October 2020). "The Dead of the Belfast Pogrom". The Irish Story. Retrieved 21 March 2022.
  37. ^ a b Lynch (2019), pp.92–93
  38. ^ Lawlor, The Burnings, p.92
  39. ^ Magill, Christopher (2020). Political Conflict in East Ulster, 1920-22. Boydell Press, pp.43-44. ISBN 978-1-78327-511-3.
  40. ^ a b c d O'Halpin & Ó Corráin, pp. 151–153
  41. ^ Parkinson, pp.33-34
  42. ^ Moore, Cormac (15 July 2020). "The eruption of sectarian violence in Belfast's shipyards during July 1920 would define Belfast's future". The Irish News. Retrieved 5 May 2022.
  43. ^ Macardle, Dorothy (1951). The Irish Republic. Ambassador Books, p.387
  44. ^ Lynch, (2006), pgs 88-89.
  45. ^ Moore, Cormac, (2019), Birth of the Border, Merrion Press, Newbridge, pg 49, ISBN 9781785372933
  46. ^ McDermott, Jim (2001), Northern Divisions: The Old IRA and the Belfast Pogroms 1920-22, BTP Publications, pg 186, ISBN 1-900960-11-7.
  47. ^ Barry McCaffrey (25 June 2010). "Battle of Short Strand". The Irish News. pp. 14–17.
  48. ^ a b c d e Lawlor, Pearse. The Burnings, 1920. Mercier Press, 2009. pp.67–77
  49. ^ Lawlor, The Burnings, pp.82–83
  50. ^ Bardon, pg 471,
  51. ^ Lawlor, pg. 82
  52. ^ Lawlor, The Burnings, p.111
  53. ^ McCarthy, Kieran (22 August 2020). "A Gun and its Story: The Assassination of Oswald Swanzy". Irish Examiner. Archived from the original on 10 May 2021. Retrieved 10 May 2021.
  54. ^ "Reprisals against Catholics in Lisburn and environs, July–August 1920". History Ireland. 5 March 2013. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 14 January 2015.
  55. ^ a b Lawlor, Pearse (2009). The Burnings 1920. Mercier Press. p. 153. ISBN 978-1-85635-612-1.
  56. ^ a b c Lawlor, The Burnings, pp.115–121
  57. ^ Lawlor, The Burnings, p.137
  58. ^ Lawlor, The Burnings, p.126
  59. ^ a b c "The Swanzy Riots, 1920". Irish Linen Centre & Lisburn Museum. 2018. Retrieved 26 December 2021.
  60. ^ Magill, p.168
  61. ^ Lawlor, The Burnings, pp.152-153
  62. ^ O'Halpin, Eunan (2020). The Dead of the Irish Revolution. Yale University Press. p. 168. ISBN 978-0-300-12382-1.
  63. ^ a b Hopkinson, Irish War of Independence, p. 158
  64. ^ Hopkinson, Michael (2004). The Irish War of Independence. Gill & Macmillan. p.263. ISBN 0-7171-3741-4.
  65. ^ McDermott, p.33
  66. ^ Lynch, (2006), pg 80.
  67. ^ Lawlor, The Burnings, p.184
  68. ^ a b Moore, Cormac (2 September 2020). "Partition, 100 years on: How Sinn Féin's Belfast Boycott helped thwart Irish unity". The Irish News.
  69. ^ McDermott, p.49,
  70. ^ Lawlor, The Burnings, p.184
  71. ^ O'Duibhir, pg 90
  72. ^ Dooley, Terence A. M. "From the Belfast Boycott to the Boundary Commission: Fears and Hopes in County Monaghan, 1920-26". Clogher Record, vol. 15, no. 1, Clogher Historical Society, 1994, p. 90, . Accessed 7 January 2022.
  73. ^ O'Duibhir, pgs 90-91
  74. ^ "The Collins – Craig agreement from Michael Collins & James Craig – 23 January 1922 – Documents on IRISH FOREIGN POLICY". www.difp.ie. Archived from the original on 4 December 2018. Retrieved 3 December 2018.
  75. ^ Lawlor, The Burnings, p.188
  76. ^ a b Lawlor, The Outrages, pp.146–148
  77. ^ a b c O'Day, Alan (1998). Irish Home Rule, 1867–1921. Manchester University Press, p. 299
  78. ^ Jackson, Alvin (2004). Home Rule – An Irish History. Oxford University Press, pp.368–370
  79. ^ Lawlor, The Outrages, pp.175–176
  80. ^ a b Parkinson, pp.137–138.
  81. ^ Mcardle, p.455
  82. ^ Lawlor, The Outrages, pp.180–183
  83. ^ Lawson, The Outrages, pp.186–188
  84. ^ Bell, J Bowyer. The Secret Army: The IRA. Transaction Publishers, 1997. pp. 29–30; ISBN 978-1560009016/ISBN 1560009012
  85. ^ Lynch, Robert (2006), The Northern IRA and the Early Days of Partition, 1920-1922, Irish Academic Press, Dublin, pg 80.
  86. ^ Moore, pg 49,
  87. ^ Wilson, Tim. Frontiers of Violence: Conflict and Identity in Ulster and Upper Silesia 1918–1922. Oxford University Press, 2010. pp.128–129
  88. ^ a b Parkinson, Alan F. Belfast's Unholy War. Four Courts Press, 2004. pp.151–155
  89. ^ O'Halpin & Ó Corráin. pp.518–520, 522
  90. ^ Farrell, Michael (1982). Northern Ireland the Orange State. Pluto Press, p.41. ISBN 0 86104 300 6.
  91. ^ a b McGarry, Fearghal (2005). Eoin O'Duffy, a Self-Made Hero. Oxford University Press, pp.78–79.
  92. ^ Lawlor, pgs 22-24
  93. ^ Lawlor pgs 24-25
  94. ^ O'Duibhir, Liam (2011). Donegal & The Civil War. Mercier Press. p. 25. ISBN 978-185635-720-3.
  95. ^ O'Halpin, pgs 201-202.
  96. ^ O'Duibhir, Liam (2009). The Donegal Awakening. Mercier Press. p. 223-224. ISBN 978-185635-632-9.
  97. ^ O'Halpin, pg 310.
  98. ^ Lawlor, The Outrages, pp.117–119
  99. ^ "'We must forgive but we won't forget' – The Treaty debates in the border counties". The Irish Story. 12 December 2014.
  100. ^ McCluskey, pg 96
  101. ^ Knirck, Jason. Imagining Ireland's Independence: The Debates Over the Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1921. Rowman & Littlefield, 2006. p.104
  102. ^ Dwyer, Ryle (2 July 2012). "Sectarian violence and murder spreads across the North". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  103. ^ a b Lawlor, The Outrages, pp. 204–209
  104. ^ Lawlor, The Outrages, p. 211
  105. ^ Lawlor, The Outrages, pp. 212–246
  106. ^ a b "The Clones affray, 1922 – massacre or invasion?". History Ireland, Volume 12, Issue 3 (Autumn 2004).
  107. ^ Lawlor, Pearse (2012). "Tit-For-Tat: The War of Independence in the Northern Counties". History Ireland, vol. 20, no. 1
  108. ^ a b c McKenna, Joseph (2011). Guerrilla Warfare in the Irish War of Independence. McFarland, pp.266–267
  109. ^ Glennon, Kieran (2020). "Facts and Fallacies of the Belfast Pogrom". History Ireland, vol. 28, no. 5. Wordwell, pp.28–31
  110. ^ Magill, p.182
  111. ^ Parkinson, Unholy War, p. 237.
  112. ^ Parkinson, Unholy War, p. 316.
  113. ^ English, Richard (2003). Armed Struggle: the History of the IRA. Oxford University Press, p.40. ISBN 0-19-516605-1.
  114. ^ Parkinson, p.245
  115. ^ a b c Coleman, The Irish Revolution, pp.110–111
  116. ^ a b c d McMahon, Paul (2008). British Spies and Irish Rebels: British Intelligence and Ireland, 1916-1945. Boydell & Brewer, p.143
  117. ^ a b c d e f g Moore, Cormac. "Partition at 100: IRA's Northern Offensive of May 1922 was doomed to disastrous failure". The Irish News, 25 May 2022.
  118. ^ Lawlor, The Outrages, pp. 268–269
  119. ^ Lawlor, The Outrages, pp.269–270
  120. ^ Lawlor, The Outrages, p.270
  121. ^ Lawlor, The Outrages, p.272
  122. ^ Parkinson pg 270.
  123. ^ Glenon pg 121
  124. ^ Lawlor, The Outrages, pp.275–280
  125. ^ Lawlor, The Outrages, pp.273–274
  126. ^ Kenna, G.B. (1922). Facts & Figures of the Belfast Pogrom. The O'Connell Publishing Company, pp.144-145
  127. ^ Lawlor, Pearse (2012). "Tit-For-Tat: The War of Independence in the Northern Counties". History Ireland, vol. 20, no. 1
  128. ^ a b c d e McMahon, British Spies and Irish Rebels, p.151
  129. ^ "Remembering the Past: Internment 1922". An Phoblacht. 22 May 1997. Retrieved 28 October 2022.
  130. ^ Moore, pg 97
  131. ^ McKenna, Fionnuala. "Civil Authorities (Special Powers) Act (Northern Ireland), 1922". CAIN Web Service. Retrieved 6 October 2022.
  132. ^ Lawlor, The Outrages, p.298
  133. ^ Lawlor, The Outrages, pp.299–300
  134. ^ Lawlor, The Outrages, pp.302–309
  135. ^ a b c Barton, Brian (1976). "Northern Ireland, 1920–25", in A New History of Ireland Volume VII. Oxford University Press, pp.180
  136. ^ a b c d e Lawlor, The Outrages, pp.285–290
  137. ^ a b c d e Jackson, Alvin (2010). Ireland 1798-1998: War, Peace and Beyond. Wiley-Blackwell, p.335
  138. ^ a b c d e Lynch, The Northern IRA and the Early Years of Partition, pp.155–156
  139. ^ Ó Duibhir, Liam (2011). Donegal & the Civil War: The Untold Story. Mercier Press, p.127
  140. ^ Ó Duibhir, p.131
  141. ^ Ó Duibhir, p.216
  142. ^ Donohue, L (1 December 1998). "Regulating Northern Ireland: The Special Powers Acts, 1922–1972". The Historical Journal. 41 (4): 1089–1120. doi:10.1017/S0018246X98008188. S2CID 159502014. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  143. ^ Parkinson, p.298
  144. ^ Magill, p.128
  145. ^ McDermott, p.266
  146. ^ Magill, p.167
  147. ^ Farrell, p.65
  148. ^ English, pp.39–40
  149. ^ McMahon, p.139
  150. ^ a b c d e f g h Lynch (2019), The Partition of Ireland, pp.99–100
  151. ^ Bardon, Jonathon (1982). Belfast, An Illustrated History. Blackstaff Press, p.202
  152. ^ a b c Lynch, Robert (2017). "Belfast". In Crowley, John (ed.). Atlas of the Irish Revolution. New York University Press. pp. 630–631. ISBN 9781479834280.
  153. ^ McDermott, pp.28-29.
  154. ^ Glennon, Kieran (2013). From Pogrom to Civil War. Mercier Press, p.38. ISBN 9781781171462.
  155. ^ Meehan, Niall. "American Commission on Conditions in Ireland Interim Report 1921". Retrieved 22 January 2022.
  156. ^ Farrell, p.62
  157. ^ Hart, Peter (2003). The I.R.A. at war, 1916–1923. Oxford University Press, pp. 247, 251. ISBN 978-0-19-925258-9.
  158. ^ Munck, R., & Rolston, B. (1984). "Belfast in the 1930s: An Oral History Project". Oral History, 12(1). p.16
  159. ^ Munck, Ronnie; Rolston, Bill (Spring 1984). "Belfast in the 1930's: An Oral History Project". Oral History. 12 (1): 18. Retrieved 16 October 2022.
  160. ^ MacEoin, Uinseann (1997). The IRA in the Twilight Years. Argenta Publications. p. 333, 339. ISBN 9780951117248.
  161. ^ Johnston, Kevin (29 November 2008). "Sectarianism and the shipyard". The Irish Times. Retrieved 31 January 2020.
  162. ^ Coogan, Tim (2015). The Troubles: Ireland's Ordeal 1966–1995 and the Search for Peace, Head of Zeus, p.607. ISBN 9781784975388.

Further reading[edit]

  • Bruce, Steve (1994) The Edge of the Union: the Ulster Loyalist Political Vision, Oxford: Oxford University Press
  • Cottrell, Peter, (2008), The Irish Civil War 1922–23, Osprey Pub, Oxford
  • Lawlor, Pearse (2009), The Burnings 1920, Mercier Press
  • MacEoin, Uinseann, (1981), Survivors, Argenta Publications
  • McCarthy, Pat, (2015),The Irish Revolution, 1912–23, Four Courts Press, Dublin, ISBN 978-1-84682-410-4
  • McNally Jack, (1987), Morally Good, Politically Bad, Andersontown News Publications
  • Phoenix, Eamon, (1994), Northern Nationalism Ulster Historical Foundation, Belfast
  • Thorne, Kathleen, (2014), Echoes of Their Footsteps, The Irish Civil War 1922–1924, Generation Organization, Newberg, OR, ISBN 978-0-692-245-13-2