1912
"3rd Irish Home Rule Bill - Irish National Volunteers"
1912 AD
January:
In the Ulster Province the
"Ulster Unionist
Council" who were "against"
Irish Home Rule
were now training their "military arm" known as the
"Ulster Volunteer
Force / U.V.F,"
after receiving
sanction from their local magistrates, which kept them within the
British Law, and they
were
April 9th: Andrew Bonar - Law the new British Conservative leader, met with Edward Carson the day before the British Westminster Parliament assembled during a semi - military demonstration in Belfast in Co. Antrim in the north - east of the Ulster Province and recalled the, "Battle of the Boyne," and he informed him that the "Conservative Party" regarded their cause as the cause of the "Empire."
April
11th: Herbert Asquith
the British
Liberal Prime Minister
introduced the 3rd
Irish Home Bill into the
Westminster House of Commons,
which offered only a "narrow" autonomy in
Ireland
with an "All Ireland
Parliament" only responsible for "domestic
affairs," who would have to wait 6 years before they could have control over the
R.I.C. police, and the
Irish Nationalist
Constitutionalists were willing to accept it,
while the "political" Sinn
Fein Party under the advise of
Arthur Griffith
was to "condemn" it, but popular opinion
in Ireland
was for it, as they
were all expecting
Irish Home Rule to "cure all"
of their
problems in Ireland and they gave
John Redmond the leader of the
Irish Parliamentary Party their support. Meanwhile
the
Ulster
Unionists and
the
Conservatives" who were now under the direction of Andrew Bonar - Law attacked the
"3rd Irish Home
Bill"
at every opportunity, and it
was "rejected" once again by the
Conservative "unelected" British House of Lords, and
Herbert Asquith the leader of the
British Liberal Government
proposed to bring it forward once again at a later
date. If it was "passed"
3
times in the
British House of
Commons it would then "automatically" become law
within another 2
years, regardless of the "veto" by the Conservative
controlled and unelected
House of Lords, and a
June 11th:
A
Government of Ireland Bill
was passed to nominate the
Irish Senate
for
8 years, and
for the Irish House of Commons
to have
164 elected members for
5 years,
with
42 members to go to the
Westminster House of Commons in
England, but it
was
never to come into operation.
July: Andrew Bonar - Law, the British Conservative Opposition leader, addressed a "Conservative" political rally at Blenheim and told them that he, "Could not imagine the length of resistance to which the Ulster Unionists would go in which he would not support them," and "sectarian violence" once again "broke out" in Belfast in Co. Antrim in the north - east of the Ulster Province as the emotions of the non - Catholics was once again vented on the Irish Catholics there.
September 28th:
On this day, the
"Ulster Unionist Council" under
their leader,
Edward Carson,
declared a public holiday to carry out a demonstration against
Irish Home Rule,
where a
"Solemn League
and
Covenant" was signed by
218,000
people in
the Belfast City Hall in
Co. Antrim in the north - east of the
Ulster Province that
was also supported by the
non - Catholic
religious ministers there, including both the
Ascendancy Church of England -
Ireland and the
Presbyterian, in which it gave "loyalty" to the
Crown of
England, although they were intending to create "rebellion"
against the same Crown to maintain the
Ascendancy there.
The Catholic clergy by now had gained much more confidence as to their position and their respect overall among the population in Ireland and also amongst the politicians, so they began to speak up louder on behalf of the "majority" of the people, and along with the Irish League and the Labour organizations the momentum of the Irish Gaelic revival was also increasing in strength lifting the Irish Spirit further.
Thomas James / Tom Clarke the Old Republican ever ready to push the Irish Independence barrow organized a "pilgrimage" to the gravesite of Theobold Wolfe - Tone the original founder of Irish Republicanism, to counter the visit of the English Royals to Ireland.
Hanna
Sheehy - Skeffington
joined the "Socialist Party" and
was "imprisoned"
by the British
Liberal Government authorities in the
Dublin Castle (The Devill's 1/2 Acre) for her
opposition to the "voting rights for women"
being "left out" of the
3rd
Irish Home Rule Bill, and the
Irish Nationalist Constitutionalists in the Westminster Parliament finally had the
Irish
Home Rule Bill passed, but were well aware that it was under threat, and so they decided to form their own
"military" organization in co - operation with
the I.R.B. /
Irish Republican Brotherhood
and the "political"
Sinn Fein Party,
which further strengthened
the
Irish Republican
Brotherhood / I.R.B. when
they were to organize their own group the
Irish National Volunteers
after a suggestion was put
forward by
Eoin Mac Neill, the
Vice - President of the
Gaelic
League, whose intention was to set up the
Irish Volunteers for
"defensive" purposes only.
The Conservative "Unionist" propaganda in England began to effect the Liberal Party's outlook there, and one of their members in the British House of Commons proposed that the whole of the Ulster Province be "left out" of the 3rd Irish Home Bill altogether, a proposal that was "rejected" by both the British Liberal Government and John Redmond the Irish Parliamentary Party leader who was by now really desperate for Irish Home Rule, and he advised Herbert Asquith the British Liberal Prime Minister that in his opinion the "Unionists" were bluffing. At the same time the "political" Sinn Fein Party was by now also getting their message through to the Irish population generally that the 3rd Irish Home Rule Bill that was being offered to Ireland was just "no good" overall.
Andrew Bonar - Law the British Conservative Party leader in England began having "secretive talks" with Herbert Asquith the British Liberal Prime Minister and between them they pledged "unconditional support" for the Ulster Unionist's resistance to Irish Home Rule, and the previous breakaway "Liberal Unionists" who had left the Liberal Party in England, now also joined in with the "Unionist" Conservative Party, while Rudyard Kipling donated 30,000 pounds toward a 1,000,000 pound "fighting fund" against the introduction of Irish Home Rule, and among their supporters in England were Lord Beresford, Lord Salisbury, Lord Cecil, Lord de Broke and James Campbell.
Arthur Griffith
who would become known as the
Father of the
Nation, was the co - founder of the
Gaelic League, and the
"political"
Sinn Fein
Party in Ireland
and he was trying to condition the
population in Ireland to bring about self - reliance /
Sinn Fein /
We Ourselves in
Ireland, and
was also totally "against" the British Liberal
Government's
"3rd Irish
Home Rule Bill."
Michael Rahilly
/ The O Rahilly
from
Co. Kerry
in the south - west of the Munster Province who was to be eventually
"killed" at the Post Office
in
Dublin
by British Coalitionj Government forces
in the future during the 1916
Irish
Easter
Rising, now joined the
Gaelic League"
Liam Mellowes who had also been born in Lancashire in England in 1892 AD. and reared in Co. Wexford in the south - east of Southern Leinster now also joined the Irish Republican Brotherhood / I.R.B. along with the physically handicapped John Mac Dermott / Sean Mac Diarmata who were both to play a "major role" in the 1916 Irish Easter Rising that lay ahead.
David Lloyd
- George
a Welshman who was a Minister
in the British
Liberal
Government
produced a
"British
Military Service Bill /
Conscription Bill," and
the
3rd Irish Home Rule
Bill
that had been previously "passed," was now
to be
"withheld" by the British Liberal Government, and both of these acts were a
"great blow" to the long time
political aspirations and expectations of John Redwood and the
Irish Parliamentary Party
that he led and t
1912 - 1913 AD The "British Government of Ireland Bill" was to be passed in 1914 AD, but it was "never" to be put into operation under the provisions of the British Parliament Act 1911, where it was supposed to be comprised of a Senate and a House of Commons, with the Senate to be "nominated" by the British Governments Lord Lieutenant in Ireland for 8 years, with a quarter retiring every year, 'ánd with the first batch of Senators to the King and the House of Commons was to be comprised of 164 MP's to be elected for 5 years, 42 Irish MP's were to go to the British Westminster Parliament House of Commons Parliament, and they also "reserved control" over the R.I.C.police in Ireland.