Independence
The principal beneficiary of the 1916 rising was Sinn
Fein (Ourselves Alone), a political movement founded in 1905 by Arthur
Griffith. Griffith, who opposed the use of force, argued that the Irish MPs
should quit Westminster, set up their own assembly in Dublin, and make British
government unworkable. As public opinion turned against the Irish parliamentary
party, Sinn Fein won several by-elections in 1917. Among its successful
candidates was Eamon de Valera, who had fought in 1916, and he soon succeeded
Griffith as president of Sinn Fein. When a general election was held in
December 1918, Sinn Fein won seventy-three of the 105 Irish seats, most of the
rest going to the Unionists.
Many of the successful Sinn Fein candidates were in
prison in England. However, on 21 January 1919 twenty-five members met in
Dublin as Dail Eireann (Assembly of Ireland) and adopted a declaration of Irish
independence committing themselves to the republic which had been declared in
1916. On the same day, the War of Independence began when two policemen were
killed by Volunteers in County Tipperary as they guarded a consignment of
gelignite. The Volunteers, who now became known as the Irish Republican Army,
continued to arm themselves through attacks on police barracks and army depots.
The principal figure in the IRA was Michael Collins,
who had fought in the GPO in 1916. Collins built up a formidable intelligence
network, together with a special squad which assassinated British intelligence
officers and key Irish detectives. Elsewhere, men like Ernie O'Malley and Tom
Barry perfected gerilla tactics, with mobile "flying columns" that carried out
surprise raids. In 1920 the British government reinforced the Irish police with
ex soldiers known as Black and Tans, wearing a mixture of police and army
uniforms, and later with ex-officers known as Auxiliaries. Atrocities were
committed by both sides and much property was destroyed, including many country
houses owned by Anglo-lrish gentry.
By 1920 the British government, led by David Lloyd
George, was prepared to seek a compromise which would keep Ireland within the
British Empire but make concessions to Irish nationalism. A new Government of
Ireland Act provided for a measure of home rule to be exercised by two
parliaments in Ireland, and in a general election unopposed Sinn Fein
candidates took all but four seats in "Southern Ireland". Since Sinn Fein was
unwilling to enter the new Dublin parliament, Lloyd George offered de Valera
negotiations on the future of Ireland. The two sides agreed on a truce, and on
11 July 1921 the War of Independence ended.
Later in the month, when de Valera met Lloyd George
in London, he refused to accept the terms offered by the British prime
minister. When the second Dail met in August it elected de Valera president,
and thereafter negotiations with the British government were conducted by a
delegation led by Arthur Griffith. On 6 December 1921, after protracted
discussions and faced with Lloyd George's threat to resume hostilities in
Ireland, the weary delegates agreed to a treaty providing for an "Irish Free
State" with dominion status, and allowing the six counties of Northern Ireland
to remain within the United Kingdom.