1915 AD
1915
Augustine
Birrell,
the British
Liberal
Imperial Government's Chief Secretary in
Ireland, repressed all types of
Irish activity in
Ireland with
British Military forces and their
R.I.C. police at his disposal, by carrying out arrests,
coercion or imprisonment on the general Irish population.
March 10th:
The high command of the
Irish Volunteers were now re - organized, and
Patrick Pearse, Michael O Rahilly / The O Rahilly,
Joseph Plunkett and
Bulwer Hobson were to be
their
Commandants at their headquarters,
and
Edward Daly,
Thomas Mac Donagh, Eammon
Ceannt
/ Kent
and
Eamonn de Valera
were
also the commandants of their 4
individual
Irish Dublin Brigade
Battalions.
March 11th:
Patrick Pearse
asked
Eamonn de Valera
to attend
a meeting with the other
3
Irish
Volunteer Dublin Brigade
commandants.
March 13th:
Patrick Pearse
then held a meeting with the whole
4 of the Irish Volunteer Dublin Brigade
commandants, to
discuss the possibility of conducting an Irish Uprising in
September, using
"Howth"
as
their code word for their signal that they would be ready to go.
May:
Edward Carson,
the leader of the
"Official Unionists" in the
Ulster Province, now joined
in with
the
British
Imperial Coalition Cabinet in England, which would last until
1916 AD under
Herbert Asquith who had been the previous British
Liberal Prime
Minister, while
John Redmond the leader of the
Irish Parliamentary Party
declined and
Andrew Bonar - Law, who was now the Conservative
leader in England, was to be the
British Colonial Secretary in the
Coalition Government until
1916,
who would eventually become the Conservative British Prime Minister from 1922 - 1923
AD.
In the meantime,
Tom Clarke
the Old
Republican, set up
the
I.R.B
Military Council
with the younger
John Mac Dermot
/ Sean Mac Diarmaid,
and
Patrick Pearse the barrister and poet,
who also had an
English father and an
Irish mother,
who
would become the overall leader of the Irish Republican
Brotherhood / I.R.B.
in Ireland.
May: John Mac Dermot / Sean Mac Diarmada advised P. S. O Hegarty / Ua hEigceartaigh that the Irish Republican Brotherhood / I.R.B. were planning an Irish Uprising in Dublin, and that they knew that they would have to sacrifice their lives for their principles, to try and gain Irish Independence / Freedom from British Imperialism.
James Connolly, the socialist Labour leader, was now the editor of the Worker's Republic newspaper.
The Gaelic League by now had 600 branches throughout Ireland, and they held their Ard Fheis / Convention at Dundalk in Co. Louth in the north - east of Northern Leinster, where a motion was passed under the pressure of the I.R.B. members who were involved in it, which stated that, "The previous Gaelic League rule, that it be non - political, be abolished, and a clause inserted stating that a Free Ireland be included in the aims of the League." Douglas Hyde, who would become the 1st President of Ireland, resigned the next day as the Chairman of the Gaelic League, due to it now being a political association, and Eoin Mac Neill was elected as the new Chairman in his place, and the Gaelic League was by now well and truly under the control of the Irish Nationalists, as a movement for a Free and Independent Gaelic Ireland.
Michael Collins' older brother, Patrick, seeing which way the wind was now blowing and realising his younger brother's ongoing commitment to the cause of Irish Independence, decided to try to have him emigrate to America, to get him out of the way of it all.
July:
John Redmond,
the leader of the
Irish
Parliamentary Party, who was still not really grasping the reality
of it all, scoffed at the suggestion that any Irish Insurrection
would occur in
Ireland at this time.
Thomas Ceannt / Kent was also a member of the Supreme Council of the I.R.B. / Irish Republic Brotherhood and Sean Mac Diarmada / John Mac Dermot, who had been imprisoned by the British Imperial Government was also co - opted to the I.R.B. Military Council, while Thomas Mac Donagh the poet and overall Irish Volunteer commander joined in with them also and the young, Sean Thomas Lemass from Dublin, who would become the future Prime Minister of Ireland in 1957, and Tomas Derrig from Co. Mayo in the mid - west of Connacht Province, who had been educated by the Christian Brothers, also now joined in with the Irish Volunteers.
Dennis Mac Cullough, Liam Mellowes and Ernest Blythe, were told by the British Imperial Coalition Government's Dublin Castle authorities to leave Ireland altogether and when they refused they were arrested and imprisoned, which also upset many in Ireland, while Austin Stack, who was to be a commandant in the Irish 1916 Easter Rising to come, was also arrested at this time and put in prison. Sean O Hegarty from Co. Cork in Southern Munster and Alec Mac Cabe from Co. Sligo in the north - east of the Connacht Province, were also arrested and tried by a jury, but were acquitted, so no more political jury trials were held again by the British Imperial Coalition Government, who were then to use paid Magistrates and British Imperial Court Martials in the future to sentence the Irish.
Helena Molony,
who was the secretary
of the Irish
Women's Workers Union,
would be a very strong advocate also for Irish
independence.
August 15th:
Jeremiah O Donavon
of Rossa,
who had been one of the original
Fenians,
died in
America, and
Patrick Pearse and the
Fenians
there in America, from
the
Clann na Gael
/ The Organization
decided to
send his body back to
Ireland
to
revive
the
Fenian tradition and
spirit, and when his casket arrived back into Ireland
they held a
grand parade along the way to
Glasnevin Cemetery where he was to be
interred near
Dublin.
Patrick Pearse who was now
the leader of the Irish Republican Brotherhood / I.R.B.
was to read
his eulogy, in which he
expressed the opinion, "That
Ireland
would never know
peace, until she was
Free and
Independent, and
that all of the
Fenian graves would always
remind the Irish
people of this
fact."
Michael
Collins,
who was now 24 years
of age,
and who was to be a future outstanding Irish leader, was
still at this time in England, where he
also joined the Irish
Volunteers, and was among
those who were now impatient for something to occur to change the overall situation for the
general Irish population
in Ireland as he had no intention of fighting
the British Imperial Government's War against
Germany, and in desperation was even looking at
the other alternative proposed by his brother, of going off to America.
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