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James Craig and Orangeism, 1903–10

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2016

Extract

The importance of the Orange Order to Unionism has long been accepted: J. F. Harbinson referred to ‘the marriage of the Unionist Party and the Orange Institution in the early days of the struggle against Home Rule’, while Alvin Jackson has written: ‘The significance of the Orange Order in terms of the ideological and institutional groundwork for Unionism can hardly be overstated.’ The closeness of this association and its nature can be tested for a crucial period of political mobilisation by examining the relationship of James Craig, a Unionist M.P. from 1906 and effective leader of the Ulster Unionists under Carson from 1910, and the Orange Order. This raises questions such as: What was Craig’s motivation for joining the order? What type of relationship did he have with the order? What role did Craig see the order fulfilling in Unionism?

At the opening of a new Orange hall in September 1906 Craig stated that ‘he was an Orangeman first and a Member of Parliament afterwards’ and called ‘for the Protestant community to rally round the lodges, strengthen and support them’. Craig’s biographers, on the other hand, do not consider his Orangeism significant. Hugh Shearman wrote that Craig, in common with other Ulster leaders, ‘had let himself become an occasional emphatic utterer of Protestant sentiments, and he had made great use of the Orange Order’, implying that the order was a tool for Craig. To St John Ervine it was an incidental part of Craig’s Westminster career. Writing of 1919, Ervine noted that Craig ‘started an Orange Lodge in the House of Commons, a surprising society to appear in that assembly’. Patrick Buckland saw it as more of a background influence, in that Craig was a typical product of his society, and while he might have seemed more broad-minded than many Ulster Protestants he ‘had almost unthinkingly absorbed all their conventional notions and had come to share their fears and prejudices’.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Irish Historical Studies Publications Ltd 2005

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References

1 Harbinson, J. F., The Ulster Unionist Party, 1882–1973 (London, 1973), p. 90Google Scholar.

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7 ‘William Johnston (1829-1902), Conservative/Unionist M.P. Belfast 1868–78, South Belfast 1885–1902. Educated T.C.D., B.A., M.A.; called to the Irish bar 1872; Inspector of Irish Fisheries, 1878–85; dismissed by Earl Spencer, lord lieutenant of Ireland, for a speech in the general synod of the Church of Ireland; Grand Master of Grand Black Chapter of Ireland; a District Grand Master of Grand Orange Lodge of Ireland. See McClelland, Aiken, William Johnston of Ballykilbeg (Lurgan, 1990)Google Scholar.

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16 T. W. Russell (1841-1920), Liberal/Independent Unionist M.P. South Tyrone 1886–1910. He organised a popular campaign to make the Unionist and Conservative élite grant land reform. Held junior ministerial office 1895. In 1900 he stated his belief in the need for compulsory purchase and was dismissed. He continued as an independent 1900–06. His actions were an influence on the 1903 land act and the reorganisation of Ulster Unionism. He held junior office under the Liberal administration in 1907, lost his seat in 1910, but held North Tyrone for the Liberals 1911–18 (see Connolly, S. J. (ed.), The Oxford companion to Irish history (Oxford, 1998), p. 494Google Scholar). The 1903 land act was an arrangement between landlord and tenant whereby an agreement between them would be ratified by the Land Commission. To farmers it gave annual repayments below their current rents, while landlords benefited from a 12 per cent government bonus on the estate’s sale price, cash payment and retention of demesne farms (ibid., p. 295). See also Gailey, Ireland & the death of kindness, pp 189–96.

17 Jackson, Ulster Party, p. 323.

18 Northern Whig, 26 Jan. 1907. Craig spoke at Drumbo Orange Hall and denied that the Orange was mixing with the green’.

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26 Edward Mitchell was from Derryvullen near Enniskillen and was described as a fairly large farmer ‘who has risen in the world’. He was active politically and was formerly a member of Enniskillen District Council and Fermanagh County Council (Belfast News-Letter, 11 Mar. 1903). He was alleged, according to Craig’s election agent, C. F. Falls, to have been an Orangeman, but to gain Nationalist support did not mention this or his other Unionist beliefs (ibid., 19 Mar. 1903).

27 Ibid., 18 Mar. 1903.

28 Ibid., 23 Mar. 1903. Later in the same edition the election report gave the figures: Mitchell had polled 2,407 votes as against Craig’s 2,255.

29 Ibid.

30 Ibid., 18 Apr. 1903.

31 Jackson, ‘Irish Unionism & the Russellite threat’.

32 Belfast News-Letter, 11 Oct. 1905 (speech at Listooder Orange Hall). This type of procedure was not unusual. For example, at the 1905 Twelfth demonstration at Saintfield Craig had remarked on the Orangemen’s strength and help in securing the West Down seat for the Unionist candidate, Harry Liddell. Craig said ‘it would please them to know that his [Liddell’s] first act at the conclusion of that great contest had been to join the Order’ (ibid., 13 July 1905). Harry Liddell (d. 1931), Unionist M.P. West Down, 1905–7.

33 Belfast News-Letter, 12 Nov. 1903.

34 Press cuttings (P.R.O.N.I., Craigavon papers, D/1415/A/3). The article was by ‘The Chief’. This was Sir James H. Haslett (1832-1905), Unionist M.P. North Belfast 1896–1905. He had been M.P. West Belfast 1885–6 and mayor of Belfast 1887–8.

35 Game book (P.R.O.N.I., D/1415/D/11), p. 294.

36 Jackson, ‘Irish Unionism & the Russellite threat’.

37 Northern Whig, 5 Feb. 1902.

38 James Wood (d. 1936), Independent Unionist M.P. East Down 1902–6. According to McClelland, ‘Like Woods [sic] Wallace was also a solicitor, but there the resemblance ended. Woods was well known in the land courts as a champion of the tenants, while Wallace was equally well-known there as the solicitor for the landlords.’He also noted that Johnston, who ran Wallace’s campaign, was blamed for the Unionist defeat (see McClelland, Johnston, pp 103—4).

39 R. H. Wallace (1860-1929), P.C. Ireland 1921; C.B. 1902; C.B.E. 1920. Educated at Harrow and Oxford; called to the bar 1886; joined Royal South Down Militia 1879; lieutenant-colonel 1898; commanded 5th Royal Irish Rifles in South Africa 1901–2; D.L. County Down; high sheriff 1908; owned property in Down and Antrim and was land agent for several estates.

40 Northern Whig, 7 Feb. 1902.

41 In November 1907, as the M.P. for East Down, Craig stated that he was an Orangeman ‘representing a very Orange constituency’ (Northern Whig, 6 Nov. 1907).

42 Belfast News-Letter, 21 Dec. 1903.

43 Irish News, 17 Jan. 1910. For good measure Wood alleged that Craig’s election literature was printed in purple ink, similar to the monthly communications of a masonic lodge, to dupe the East Down masonic brethren.

44 Northern Whig, 4 Jan. 1906.

45 Belfast News-Letter, 4 July 1904.

46 L. A. Pooler was a classical scholar with an interest in modern poetry, ‘with a fine presence, a magnificent voice, and with these gifts he ought to have reached the highest positions in the Church. He became, somewhat late in life, rector of Downpatrick, archdeacon of Down and hon. secretary to the general synod’ (D’Arcy, C.F., The adventures of a bishop (London, 1934), p. 183)Google Scholar.

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48 Northern Whig, 10 Jan. 1907.

49 Ibid., 20 Dec. 1907.

50 Belfast News-Letter, 23 Jan. 1904.

51 Northern Whig, 23 Jan. 1906.

52 Irish News, 23 Jan. 1906.

53 Northern Whig, 9 Jan. 1910.

54 McClelland, Johnston, pp v-vi.

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57 Ibid., 4 Dec. 1904.

58 Northern Whig, 11 June 1908 (Grand Lodge of Ireland half-yearly meeting in Downpatrick).

59 Amendments to the coronation oath which removed contentious references to Catholicism. See also Loughlin, James, Ulster Unionism and British national identity since 1885 (London, 1995), pp 5760Google Scholar.

60 Northern Whig, 29 Aug. 1910.

61 Belfast News-Letter, 23 Jan. 1904.

62 Ibid., 4 July 1904.

63 Northern Whig, 13 July 1907.

64 Ibid., 6 Nov. 1907.

65 Megahey, Irish Protestant churches, p. 64.

66 The Catholic Association was organised by Bishop Henry of Down and Connor as a middle-class Catholic group presided over by the clergy and intended to further Catholic interests within the existing system by toning down nationalism. It came into conflict with the United Irish League and Devlin. See Maume, Patrick, The long gestation: Irish nationalist life, 1891–1918 (Dublin, 1999), p. 45Google Scholar. See also Royal Cornwall Gazette, 10 Jan. 1910, for an article on the association.

67 The United Irish League was founded by William O’Brien in 1898 to agitate for grazing land to be turned over to small farmers. By 1900 it had helped reunite the Nationalist Party with John Redmond as president and had become a fund-raising and constituency organisation. Later years saw it dependent on the A.O.H. Hampered by being a one-issue organisation, it could still be militant, as in the west of Ireland 1906–9 (see Connolly, Oxford companion, p. 567).

68 Belfast News-Letter, 5 Apr. 1904.

69 Ibid., 4 July 1904.

70 Joseph Devlin (1871-1934), senior Ulster Nationalist Party politician; M.P. North Kilkenny 1902–6 and West Belfast 1906–22; one-time official of the U.I.L., and later president of the A.O.H.

71 Phoenix, Eamon, Northern nationalism (Belfast, 1994), p. 4Google Scholar.

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73 Northern Whig, 16 Mar. 1912.

74 James, Simon, The Atlantic Celts: ancient people or modern invention (Ixmdon, 1999), ch. 4.Google Scholar James drew on the work of Jones, Sian, The archaeology of ethnicity: constructing identities in the past and present (London, 1997)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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77 Northern Whig, 8 Feb. 1909.

78 The Local Government Act (1898) removed the grand juries and replaced them with a system of elected county and district councils to be supervised by the Local Government Board. One effect was the replacement of the Unionist-dominated grand juries by Nationalist-dominated councils.

79 Capt. Rt Hon. C. C. Craig (1869–1960), P.C. Ireland 1922; served with Royal Irish Rifles 1914–18; wounded and captured 1916; Unionist M.P. South Antrim 1903–22; parliamentary secretary to the Ministry of Pensions 1923—4.

80 Burnett, ‘Modernisation of Unionism’, p. 55.

81 Belfast News-Utter, 19 Mar. 1903.

82 Northern Whig, 4 Jan. 1906.

83 Belfast News-Letter, 4 July 1904.

84 Northern Whig, 1 Dec. 1906.

85 Orange Standard, Sept. 1918.

86 Jackson, Ireland 1798–1998, p. 222. Col. Rt Hon. Edward Saunderson (1837-1906), Unionist M.P. North Armagh 1885–1906; formerly M.P. County Cavan 1865–74; P.C. 1899; J.P., D.L., H.M. Lieutenant for County Cavan from 1900; Grand Master of Belfast from 1901. See Jackson, Alvin, Colonel Edward Saunderson: land and loyalty in Victorian Ireland (Oxford, 1995)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

87 J. B. Lonsdale, 1st Baron Armaghdale (1850-1924), Unionist M.P. Mid-Armagh 1900–18; hon. secretary and whip of Irish Unionist Party 1901–16; chairman to 1918.

88 Godfrey Fetherstonhaugh (1858-1928), K.C., Unionist M.P. North Fermanagh 1906–16; educated T.C.D.

89 James Craig to Col. R. H. Wallace, 5 Dec. 1906 (P.R.O.N.I., Wallace papers, D/l 889/6/6). He listed the Ulster Orangemen: Col. J. M. McCalmont, Hon. Robert O’Neill, T. L. Corbett, Harry Liddell, Hugh Barrie, Charles and James Craig; also the English M.P. Col. Sandys, and the Scottish M.P. George Younger.

90 Northern Whig, 6 Nov. 1907.

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94 Northern Whig, 13 July 1906.

95 Ibid., 14 July 1909.

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97 Western Morning News, 12 Mar. 1912.

98 See Bew, Ideology & the Irish question, ch. 5.

99 Burnett, ‘Modernisation of Unionism’, p. 48.

100 Buckland, Craig, p. 93.

101 Walker, Ulster Unionist Party, p. 67.

102 Ibid., p. 71.

103 Hansard N.I. (Commons), xvi, 1091–5 (24 Apr. 1934).

104 I should like to acknowledge with gratitude the assistance of Professor Keith Jeffery in the preparation of this article.