Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-vvkck Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-27T01:49:38.663Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Who fears to speak of politics? John Kells Ingram and hypothetical nationalism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2016

G.K. Peatling*
Affiliation:
Oxford University Libraries Automation Service

Extract

John Kells Ingram was born in County Donegal in 1823. His ancestry was Scottish Presbyterian, but his grandparents had converted to Anglicanism. He was educated at Trinity College, Dublin, the most prestigious academic institution in nineteenth-century Ireland. In a brilliant academic career spanning over fifty years he proceeded to occupy a succession of chairs at the college. His published work included an important History of political economy (1888), and he delivered a significant presidential address to the economics and statistics section of the British Association for the Advancement of Science (1878). Ingram influenced, and was respected by, many contemporary social and economic thinkers in the British Isles and elsewhere. In an obituary one of Ingram’s friends exaggerated only slightly in describing him as ‘probably the best educated man in the world’.

Yet contemporary perspectives on Ingram’s career were warped by one act of his youth which was to create a curious disjunction in his life. In 1843, when only nineteen years old, Ingram was a sympathiser with the nationalist Young Ireland movement. One night, stirred by the lack of regard shown for the Irish rebels of 1798 by the contemporary O’Connellite nationalist movement, he wrote a poem entitled ‘The memory of the dead’, eulogising these ‘patriots’. Apparently without much thought, Ingram submitted the poem anonymously to the Nation newspaper. It appeared in print on 1 April 1843 and, better known by its first line, ‘Who fears to speak of ’Ninety-Eight?’, became a popular Irish nationalist anthem.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Irish Historical Studies Publications Ltd 1998

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 R. Y. Tyrrell in Dublin Evening Mail, 1 May 1907; Abrams, Philip, The origins of British sociology, 1834–1914 (Chicago, 1968), pp 8081, 84, 177–95Google Scholar; Ingram, J.K., A history of political economy (Edinburgh, 1888)Google Scholar; Webb, D. A. and McDowell, R. B., Trinity College, Dublin, 1592–1952: an academic history (Cambridge, 1982), pp 292-4, 241–2, 230Google Scholar; D.N.B. entry for Ingram; Falkiner, C.L., Memoir of John Kells Ingram (Dublin, 1907)Google Scholar; miscellaneous correspondence, 1880–1907 (P.R.O.N.I., Ingram papers, D/2808/58-65 passim, esp. D/2808/58/12, 82); Patrick Geddes to Ingram, 1883–1903 (ibid., D/2808/27/1-20); collection of obituaries of Ingram (ibid., D/2808/E/4).

2 Quin, Malcolm, Memoirs of a positivist (London, 1924), pp 169-71Google Scholar; William O’Brien, ‘ “Who fears to speak of ’Ninety-Eight?”’ in Contemporary Review, lxxiii (1898), pp 1434 Google Scholar; Positivist Review (henceforth P.R.), viii (1900), p. 90. On the legacy of 1798, and the political consequences of the 1898 centenary, see Lyons, F.S.L., The Irish Parliamentary Party, 1890–1910 (London, 1950), pp 70, 76Google Scholar; Elliott, Marianne, Partners in revolution: the United Irishmen and France (New Haven, 1982), pp 365-72Google Scholar.

3 Falkiner, Ingram, p. 8; Daily Telegraph, 2 May 1907.

4 P.R., xiii (1905), p. 141; xv (1907), pp 131–4;T.P. [O’Connor], ‘Who fears to speak of ’98?’ in T.P.’s Weekly, 10 May 1907; Irish Independent, 2 May 1907.

5 Ingram, J. K., Outlines of the history of religion (London, 1900), pp 2022 Google Scholar; idem, Sonnets and other poems (London, 1900)Google Scholar; idem, Passages from the letters of Auguste Comte (London, 1901); idem, Human nature and morals, according to Auguste Comte (London, 1901)Google Scholar; idem, Practical morals: a treatise on universal education (London, 1904)Google Scholar; idem, The final transition: a sociological study (London, 1905)Google Scholar; reviews of Ingram’s works (P.R.O.N.I., Ingram papers, D/2808/E/3,5); Ingram to G. J. Allman, 21 June 1899 (ibid., D/2808/36/2); Daily News, 13 June 1901.

6 Wright, T.R., The religion of humanity: the impact of Comtean positivism on Victorian Britain (Cambridge, 1986)Google Scholar; Kent, Christopher, Brains and numbers: élitism, Comtism and democracy in mid-Victorian England (Toronto, 1978)Google Scholar; Vogeler, M.S., Frederic Harrison: the vocations of a positivist (Oxford, 1984)Google Scholar; Harrison, Royden, Before the socialists: studies in labour and politics, 1861–1881 (Aldershot, 1994 ed.)Google Scholar; Adelman, Paul, ‘The social and political ideas of Frederic Harrison, in relation to English thought and politics, 1855–1886’ (unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of London, 1967)Google Scholar; Murphy, J. M., ‘Positivism in England: the reception of Comte’s doctrines, 1840–70’ (unpublished Ph.D. thesis, Columbia University, 1968)Google Scholar.

7 On Comte see Thompson, Kenneth, Auguste Comte (London, 1976)Google Scholar; Evans-Pritchard, E. E., The sociology of Comte: an appreciation (Manchester, 1982)Google Scholar; Marvin, F. S., Comte: the founder of sociology (New York, 1965 ed.)Google Scholar; Wright, , Religion of humanity, ch. 1; Martineau, Harriet (ed.), The positive philosophy of Auguste Comte (3rd ed., 2 vols, London, 1896 Google Scholar). This last was a condensation and translation of Comte’s own Cours de philosophie positive (Paris, 1830-42)Google Scholar and was originally published in 1853; it was expanded into three volumes when republished by Frederic Harrison in 1896. It was recognised by Comte as an appropriate popularisation for English readers of his major work: see vol. i, pp v-xix.

8 Martineau, (ed.), Philosophy of Comte, i, 16; ii, 139, 182, 311, 316–20,324Google Scholar; Comte, Auguste, System of positive polity: a treatise in sociology, instituting the religion of humanity, trans. Congreve, Richard et al. (4 vols, London, 1874-7)Google Scholar, iii, 8; iv, 498, 546–51; idem, A discourse on the positive spirit, trans. Beesly, E.S. (London, 1903), pp 278 Google Scholar.

9 Comte, , Positive polity, ii, 4358, 74–112, 294–5; iv, 32, 348Google Scholar; idem, A general view of positivism, trans. Bridges, J.H. (London, 1865), pp 350, 371, 12–38Google Scholar; Harrison, Frederic, Swinny, S.H. and Marvin, F. S. (eds), The new calendar of great men (London, 1920 ed.)Google Scholar; PR., i (1893), pp 133–42; Comte, Auguste, Appeal to conservatives, trans. Congreve, Richard and Donikin, T.C. (London, 1889), pp 167-73Google Scholar.

10 Comte, , Positive polity, iii, 174 Google Scholar; ii, 262–5; iv, 333–4; idem, General view, pp 121–30.

11 McGee, Joseph, A crusade for humanity: the history of organised positivism in England (London, 1931)Google Scholar.

12 Congreve, Richard et al., International policy (London, 1866)Google Scholar, preface and passim; Martineau, (ed.). Philosophy of Comte, ii, 238-9, 330–32Google Scholar: Comte, Positive polity, ii, 140–43,378-82,250-51; iii, 306–7, iv, 500; idem, A catechism of the positive religion, trans. Congreve, Richard (3rd ed., London, 1891), pp 169-70Google Scholar.

13 Congreve, Richard, Essays, political, social and religious (3 vols, London, 1874-1900), i, 206 Google Scholar.

14 Comte, Catechism, pp 233–4,169-70.

15 Peatling, G. K., ‘British ideological movements and Irish politics, 1865–1921’ (unpublished D.Phil, thesis, University of Oxford, 1997), ch. 1Google Scholar.

16 Harrison, Royden, ‘Beesly, E. S. and Marx, Karl’ in International Review of Social History, iv (1959), p. 37 Google Scholar; The Commonwealth, 24 Nov., 1 Dec. 1866; Revue Occidentale, vii (1881), pp 78–9, 285–7; The Bee-Hive, 10 Nov 1866; Harrison, Frederic, Autobiographic memoirs (2 vols, London, 1911), i, 323-4; ii, 219–34Google Scholar; Bridges, J. H., Irish disaffection: four letters addressed to the editor of the ‘Bradford Review’ (Bradford, 1868)Google Scholar; Congreve, Essays, i, 179–218, esp. p. 186; Bridges to Beesly, 10 Feb. 1886, quoted in Bridges, M.A., Recollections of John Henry Bridges (London, 1908), pp 140-45Google Scholar; Harrison, Frederic, Mr Gladstone — or anarchy! (London, 1886)Google Scholar.

17 Kent, , Brains and numbers; D. A. Hamer, John Morley: liberal intellectual in politics (Oxford, 1968), esp. pp 18-31, 210–12, 281Google Scholar; Morley, John, Recollections (2 vols, London, 1917)Google Scholar; Von Arx, J. P., Progress and pessimism: religion, politics and history in late nineteenth-century Britain (New Haven, 1985), pp 125-33Google Scholar; Florence Arnold-Forster’s Irish journal, ed. Moody, T.W. and Hawkins, R.A.J. (Oxford, 1988), pp 160, 201, 445–9,460,473Google Scholar.

18 Vogeler, Harrison, pp 153–9; Wright, Religion of humanity, pp 81–2, 88–101; Simon, W. M., ‘Comte’s English disciples’ in Victorian Studies, viii (1966), pp 161-72Google Scholar.

19 Comte, Appeal to conservatives, esp. pp 137–8, 130–32; Comte, General view, p. 83; Hutton, H.D., Comte, the man and the founder: personal recollections (London, 1891), p. 16 Google Scholar.

20 Congreve, Essays, ii, 56, 387–8,870; Congreve to Henry Crompton, 27 May 1886 (B.L., Positivist papers, MS 45231, ff 18–19); Congreve to Ingram, 1 Oct. 1891, 30 Aug. 1897 (ibid., Positivist papers, MS 45233, ff 95–6, 161–4); Congreve to Henry Cotton, 9 June, 3 Aug. 1886 (Bodl., Richard Congreve papers, MS eng. lett. c. 182, ff 38–41).

21 Letters from Allman to Ingram, 1899–1904 (P.R.O.N.I., Ingram papers, D/2808/3/1-23). On Hutton see Albert Crompton, ‘In memoriam: Henry Dix Hutton’ (N.L.I., MS 9769); McDowell, R. B., ‘Henry Dix Hutton — positivist and cataloguer’ in Friends of the Library of Trinity College Dublin: Annual Bulletin (1952), pp 67 Google Scholar; P.R., xii (1904), pp 149–51; xv (1907), pp 128–34; xvi (1908), p. 21; D.N.B., entries for Allman and Hutton.

22 Jones, Greta, ‘Catholicism, nationalism and science’ in Irish Review, xx (1996), pp 4951 Google Scholar; Lysaght, Seán, ‘Themes in the Irish history of science’ in Irish Review, xix (1996), pp 8797 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

23 Ingram, Outlines, pp 20–21.

24 Letters from Hutton to Congreve (B.L., Positivist papers, MS 45229); Ingram to Allman, 11 July, 14 Aug. 1899, 17 June 1901 (P.R.O.N.I., Ingram papers, D/2808/36/4-5,35); Swinny to Ingram, 1904–5 (ibid., D/2808/54/8,11,25,32); Beesly to Ingram,24 July 1901, 5 Mar. 1907 (ibid., D/2808/7/25,41);draft letters from Ingram to Bridges, 14 Aug. 1902, to A. H. Haggard, 1901–3, to Swinny, 25 Oct. 1905 (ibid., D/2808/D/3); Albert Crompton’s address in commemoration of Ingram at the Liverpool Church of Humanity, 26 May 1907, pp 23–1 (ibid., D/2808/K/6J); P.R., xv (1907), pp 128–32; Hutton, Comte, the man and the founder, pp 8, 15–19.

25 Whyte, Nicholas, ‘“Lords of ether and light”: the astronomical tradition of the nineteenth century’ in Irish Review, xvii-xviii (1995), pp 127-41CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Royle, Edward, Radicals, secularists and republicans: popular freethought in Britain, 1866–1915 (Manchester, 1980), p. 71 Google Scholar; Simon, W.M., European positivism in the nineteenth century: an essay in intellectual history (Ithaca, 1963), pp 153-62Google Scholar.

26 Comte to Ingram and Allman, 16 Oct. 1852 (P.R.O.N.I., Ingram papers, D/2808/14/3); Lettres d’Auguste Comte à Henry Dix Hutton (Dublin, 1890), esp. pp 47, 34Google Scholar.

27 Carlyle, Thomas, Reminiscences of my Irish journey in 1849 (London, 1882), pp 52-3Google Scholar; Crompton, ‘Hutton’, pp 13–14,17; Ingram to Allman, 6 Oct. 1899 (P.R.O.N.I., Ingram papers, D/2808/36/8); Benjamin Fosset Lock to Ingram, 31 Jan. 1886 (ibid., D/2808/59/25).

28 Journal of the Social and Statistical Inquiry Society of Ireland, iv (1864-8), p. 26 Google Scholar.

29 Ibid., pp 23,35,57.

30 Hutton, D., History, principle and fact in relation to the Irish question (London, 1870), p. 37 Google Scholar.

31 Ingram, Practical morals, p. 114.

32 Quin to Ingram, 9 Mar. 1904 (P.R.O.N.I., Ingram papers, D/2808/47/55); Crompton, ‘Hutton’, p. 18.

33 Ingram to Allman, 6 Oct. 1899 (P.R.O.N.I., Ingram papers, D/2808/36/8); Ingram, Sonnets, pp 79–82.

34 D.N.B. entry for T. D. Ingram; Ingram, T.D., A history of the legislative union of Great Britain and Ireland (London, 1887)Google Scholar; Ingram, J.[recte T.] D., ‘Two centuries of Irish history: a review’ in Fortnightly Review, li (1889), pp 229-AAGoogle Scholar; Gladstone, W. E., ‘Ingram’s history of the union’ in Nineteenth Century, xxii (1887), pp 445-69Google Scholar; T. D. Ingram, ‘Mr Gladstone and the Irish union: a reply’, ibid., pp 768–90; material relating to T. D. Ingram (P.R.O.N.I., Ingram papers, D/2808/C/2, D/2808/38/1-20).

35 T. D. Ingram to J. K. Ingram, 6 Apr. 1898 (P.R.O.N.I., Ingram papers, D/2808/C/2E).

36 Ingram, Outlines, p. 20.

37 Ingram, Sonnets, p. 67.

38 Ibid., p.6.

39 Ibid., pp 104–6.

40 Ibid., p. 6. See also Quin to Ingram, 7 June 1900 (P.R.O.N.I., Ingram papers, D/2808/47/19). According to Quin, Ingram included the poem in this collection on his suggestion: see Quin, Memoirs, pp 169–71.

41 Ingram, The final transition, p. 59n.

42 Ibid., pp 57–9; Ingram to Swinny, 13 Apr. 1905, quoted in P.R., xv (1907), pp 132–3.

43 Irish Independent, 17 Apr. 1905.

44 P.R., xxvii (1905), p. 141; xxvii (1919), pp 226–7; xxviii (1920), p. 167;xvi (1908), pp 274–6; Sociological Review, i (1908), pp 280–90; Swinny, S.H., The history of Ireland: three lectures, given in Newton Hall (London, 1890)Google Scholar; Swinny to Ingram, 4 May 1905 (P.R.O.N.I., Ingram papers, D/2808/54/27).

45 Ingram, Sonnets, p. 76.

46 Harrison, Mr Gladstoneor anarchy!, pp 14–15; Maria Congreve to Ingram, 21 Apr. 1904 (P.R.O.N.I., Ingram papers, D/2808/12/7); Ingram to Henry Crompton, 7 Mar. 1881 (ibid., D/2808/D/3); draft letter by Ingram in reply to J. H. Galheath, Nov. 1887 (ibid., D/2808/59/40-41); Quin to Ingram, 23 Oct. 1896 (ibid., D/2808/47/4).

47 Harrison, , Autobiographic memoirs, ii, 238-9Google Scholar; Harrison to William O’Brien, 21 May, 13 July 1917 (N.L.I., William O’Brien papers, MS 8557/6); Morning Post, 1, 12, 15, 18 May 1917; Harrison to Rosebery, 16 Dec. 1919, quoted in Vogeler, Harrison, p. 378.

48 For a review of recent historical literature on the 1798 rebellion, see Dickinson, H. T., ‘Irish radicalism in the late eighteenth century’ in History, lxxxii (1997), pp 266-84CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

49 Swinny, History of Ireland, pp 18–19,28-31; P. R., xx ( 1912), pp 234–5; xvi (1908), pp 44–5; xv (1907), pp 57–8; Bridges, Irish disaffection, p. 18. Significantly, Harrison believed that his maternal grandfather had been a United Irishman: Swinny to Ingram, 22 Feb. 1907 (P.R.O.N.I., Ingram papers, D/2808/54/52).

50 Anderson, Benedict, Imagined communities: reflections on the rise and spread of nationalism (London, 1991 ed.), p. 6 Google Scholar.

51 Spence, Joseph, ‘The philosophy of Irish Toryism, 1833–1852’ (unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of London, 1991), pp 10, 21–2,57, ch. 2Google Scholar; Thornley, David, Isaac Butt and home rule (London, 1964)Google Scholar.

52 McCartney, Donal, Lecky, W. E. H.: historian and politician (Dublin, 1994), ch. 1, esp. pp 912 Google Scholar; Lecky, W. E. H., Leaders of public opinion in Ireland (2 vols, London, 1903 ed.), ii, 295 Google Scholar.

53 McCartney, Donal, ‘Lecky’s Leaders of public opinion in Ireland’ in I.H.S., xiv, (Sept. 1964), pp 119-41Google Scholar; idem, Lecky, chs 6–7.

54 Lecky, W. E. H., A history of Ireland in the eighteenth century (5 vols, London, 1892), i, 371-95,170-71,396-7Google Scholar; Macmillan’s Magazine, xxvii (1873), pp 246–64; xxx (1874), pp 166–84; Froude, J. A., The English in Ireland in the eighteenth century (2nd ed.,3 vols, London, 1881)Google Scholar.

55 Ingram, T. D., History of the legislative union; McCartney, Lecky, pp 148-50Google Scholar.

56 Von Arx, Progress and pessimism, pp 102–3; Lecky, Leaders, i, 12–31.

57 Lecky, Ireland, iv, 140–41; iii, 324; ii, 97; v, 198, 419, 483–4; idem, Leaders, ii, 105–6.

58 North American Review, clii (1891), pp 356–7; Contemporary Review, lxiii (1893), pp 626–33; Von Arx, Progress and pessimism, pp 83–4; Lecky, W. E. H., Democracy and liberty (2 vols, London, 1898-9), ii, 92-6Google Scholar.

59 Lecky, Ireland, i, 402; idem, History of the rise and influence of the spirit of rationalism in Europe (2 vols, London, 1910 ed.), ii, 375 Google Scholar; Harrison, Frederic, The positive evolution of religion (London, 1913), chs 6–10Google Scholar; Comte, Discourse, pp 18, 44.

60 Lecky, Ireland, v, 80; idem, Leaders, ii, 288; idem, Historical and political essays (London, 1908), pp 4367 Google Scholar; idem, A history of European morals: from Augustus to Charlemagne (London, 1913), pp 142-7Google Scholar, 113; idem, Clerical influences: an essay in Irish sectarianism and English government, ed. Lloyd, W.E. and O’Brien, F. C. (Dublin, 1911), pp 51-2Google Scholar; North American Review, clii (1891), p. 358; Contemporary Review, lxiii (1893), p. 635; Nineteenth Century, xix (1886), p. 639.

61 McCartney, Lecky, pp 117–22: Lecky, Elisabeth, A memoir of the Rt Hon. William Edward Hartpole Lecky (London, 1909), pp 190-91Google Scholar,203-5,213.

62 Lecky, W. E. H., ‘Why I am not a home ruler’ in Powell, G. B. (ed.), The truth about home rule: papers on the Irish question (2nd ed., London, 1888), p. 178 Google Scholarn.

63 West, Trevor, Horace Plunkett: cooperation and politics: an Irish biography (Gerrards Cross, 1986)Google Scholar; Digby, Margaret, Horace Plunkett: an Anglo-American Irishman (Oxford, 1949)Google Scholar; Clune, Michael, ‘Horace Plunkett’s resignation from the Irish Department of Agriculture and Technical Instruction, 1906–1907’ in Éire-Ireland, xvii, no. 1 (1982), pp 5773 Google Scholar.

64 Plunkett to Ingram, 12 Mar. 1894 (P.R.O.N.I., Ingram papers, D/2808/62/9); Ingram to Allman, 7 Nov. 1901 (ibid., D/2808/36/36). Lecky was also an admirer of Plunkett: see McCartney, Lecky, pp 166–7.

65 Garvin, Katharine, J. L. Garvin: a memoir (London, 1948), pp 13, 32–3Google Scholar; Ayerst, David, Garvin of ‘The Observer’ (Beckenham, 1985), pp 1028 Google Scholar; [Garvin, J. L.], ‘The future of Irish politics’ in Fortnightly Review, lxiii (1895), pp 685702 Google Scholar.

66 Loughlin, J.L., Ulster unionism and British national identity since 1886 (London, 1995), p. 56 Google Scholar; Ayerst, Garvin, chs. 8, 33; Garvin, J. L., The life of Joseph Chamberlain, i-iii (London, 1932-4)Google Scholar.

67 The Observer,21 Sept. 1913.

68 Pall Mall Gazette, 9 Apr., 4 July 1912; Garvin to Milner, 30 Mar. 1914 (Bodl, Alfred Lord Milner papers, MS Milner dep. 41, f. 75).

69 The Observer, 10 Aug. 1924.

70 Ibid., 23 Jan. 1938, 25 June 1916; Garvin to Sandars, 29 Jan. 1910 (Bodl., Robert Sandars papers, MS eng. hist. c. 761, ff 29–30); Garvin to Plunkett, 1 Aug. 1910 (Plunkett Foundation Library, Long Hanborough, Oxfordshire, Sir Horace Plunkett papers, box 4, Gar 1).

71 Kendle, J.E., Ireland and the federal solution: the debate over the United Kingdom constitution, 1870–1921 (Kingston, Ont., 1989), pp 110-12Google Scholar; Ward, A. J., ‘Frewen’s Anglo-American campaign for federalism, 1910–21‘ in I.H.S., xv, no. 59 (Mar. 1967), pp 256-75Google Scholar; The Observer, 16, 23, 30 Oct. 1910; Fortnightly Review, xciv (1910), pp 766–70; Gollin, A.M., ‘The Observer’ and J. L. Garvín, 1908–1914: a study in great editorship (London, 1960), pp 209-27Google Scholar.

72 The Observer, 17 Dec. 1916, 20 Jan. 1918, 13, 27 Nov., 4 Dec. 1921; Garvin to L. S. Amery, n.d. (Harry Ransom Humanities Research Centre, Austin, Texas, Garvin papers).

73 The Observer, 26 Mar., 14 May 1922, 12 June 1932; Garvin to Scott, 24 Apr. 1918 (Bodl., microfilm copies, C. P. Scott papers, reel 21, 335/26).

74 The Observer, 16 May 1921.

75 Garvín to Redmond, 1 Aug. 1916 (N.L.I., Redmond papers, MS 15262).

76 On Gwynn see Gwynn, S.L., Experiences of a literary man (London, 1926)Google Scholar; Peatling, ‘British ideological movements’, pp 208–9,249-52.

77 The Observer, 16 Nov. 1924. Recent historians have echoed this sentiment: Bew, Paul, Ideology and the Irish question: Ulster unionism and Irish nationalism, 1912–1916 (Oxford, 1994)Google Scholar; idem, Conflict and conciliation in Ireland, 1890–1910: Parnellites and radical agrarians (Oxford, 1987), pp 203-5Google Scholar; Bull, Philip, Land, politics and nationalism: a study of the Irish land question (Dublin, 1996), esp. pp 170-71,175Google Scholar; idem, The significance of the nationalist response to the Irish land act of 1903’ in I.H.S., xxviii, no. 111 (May 1993), pp 283-305Google Scholar.

78 The Observer, 10 Aug. 1924; Pall Mall Gazette, 24 Apr. 1912.

79 Ingram to Swinny, 17 Apr. 1905, quoted in P.R., xv (1907), pp 132–3.

80 The Observer, 28 Sept. 1924.

81 Hart, Peter, ‘The Protestant experience of revolution’ in Walker, Graham and English, Richard (eds), Unionism in modern Ireland: new perspectives on politics and culture (Basingstoke, 1996), pp 8198 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

82 Buckland, Patrick, ‘Irish unionism and the new Ireland’ in Boyce, D. G. (ed.), The revolution in Ireland, 1879–1923 (Basingstoke, 1988), pp 7190 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

83 Bull, Land, politics and nationalism, chs 5–6, pp 171–92.

84 Curtis, L. P. jr, Anglo-Saxons and Celts: a study of anti-Irish prejudice in Victorian England (New York & Bridgeport, Conn., 1968)Google Scholar.

85 Jones, ‘Catholicism, nationalism and science’, pp 57, 51–4.

86 Bew, Ideology and the Irish question, p. 158; Bull, Land, politics and nationalism, pp 176–82.

87 This article is largely based upon the John Kells Ingram papers in the Public Record Office of Northern Ireland. I am obliged to the following for permission to cite and quote copyrighted materials: the Deputy Keeper of the Records, Public Record Office of Northern Ireland; Martin, King, French & Ingram, solrs, Limavady, County Londonderry; the Council of Trustees, National Library of Ireland; Professor John Leadingham; Mrs Patricia Wildblood; Dr J. A. F. Spence; and Dr Paul Adelman. I would also like to thank Professor Roy Foster for his advice and encouragement.