Lecture 5: Land Agitation Eviction at Derrybeg, Co. Donegal.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Rebellions of 1837.
Advertisements

Chapter 11 Section 2 A Century of Reform in Britain
Irish Land Act 1870 Gladstone concluded that the main problem with the Irish land system was the landlord-tenant relationship, and that more economic security.
SOLVING THE LAND QUESTION. WHAT DID THE FARMERS WANT? Security from eviction. 3Fs=Tenant Rights = Ulster Custom made law. Ultimately Ownership of their.
Renting vs. Buying Housing. Rental Terminology Landlord Owner of property –Expects rent to be paid on time and for tenant to keep the property in reasonable.
Chapter 13 Leasehold Estates 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.
Healing the Wounds of War Lesson 25-2
17 th Century Society AP Euro Chapter 19. Agrarian Based Economy 80% of the population worked in fields Very inefficient system Crops ruined easily =
Daniel O Connell The Liberator © Seomra Ranga
CONTESTING HISTORY OPPOSING VOICES 9: Two Traditions? Parnell and the Fenians.
ROOTS OF AMERICAN DEMOCRACY OUR ENGLISH HERITAGE In feudal times English Noblemen were given land if they pledged to support the King. In return the Nobles.
Peel, Ireland and the Corn laws
Ireland British Rule.
Nationalism in Irish History: History in Irish Nationalism.
Gladstone and the Home Rule. Gladstone, Parnell and Home Rule  After the Kilmainham treaty, Parnell was determined to turn the home rule group in the.
Self-Rule for British Colonies
By W.A. Boyce. We communists are now in power. But China is weak after 20 years of war and civil war. We need to build up China’s strength to protect.
History and Overview of Production Controls and Marketing Quotas Josh Morgan.
 The Pale was a small area around Dublin controlled by the English  Plantations extended English control over Ireland. Irish people were driven from.
IRELAND: 1870 – GOVERNMENT: 1870 Ireland was ruled directly from London. Irish members of parliament (MPs) sat in parliament in Westminster. The.
THE SUFFRAGETTE MOVEMENT
© 2015 OnCourse Learning Chapter 13 Leasehold Estates.
Self-Rule for British Colonies
The agency relationship, landlord-tenant law, leases, lease clauses, evictions, security deposits What is management? Change your thinking, ATTITUDE Management.
Native American Removal from Georgia October 1, 2012.
Experimenting with Confederation
The Political Parties Before The Liberals The Liberals were traditionally the most popular party in Scotland up until the outbreak of the Great.
Kagan Ch Benjamin Disraeli William Gladstone.
The First President Chapter 8, Section 1 Key Terms: PrecedentCabinet National DebtBond SpeculatorUnconstitutional Tariff.
Influences on American Documents of Freedom
The contract of Sale Commercial Law.
Parnell, Gladstone and the First Home Rule Bill..
Unit 3 Legal Studies Law Making AOS 1 – Parliament and the Citizen.
Ireland and the War  Britain declared war on Germany on the 3 rd of August after it invaded Belgium. Most people thought the war would be over by Christmas.
NATIONALISTS AND UNIONISTS
HOME RULE Questions: Why was Home Rule delayed until 1911?Why was Home Rule delayed until 1911? Why was Ireland on the brink of a civil war in 1914?Why.
© HarperCollins Publishers 2010 Significance What was the most important consequence of the Irish Famine in ?
French Revolution. Palace of Versailles Who was King Louis XIV? When did he reign over France? What was the Palace of Versailles? How did Louis XIV.
Conflict in Northern Ireland Religious Conflict
Russia & Gr. Britain: A Study of Opposites. I. Tsar Alexander II (r ) open serfdom rail system.
Chapter 23 Section 1.  Queen Victoria  Victoria Era  Benjamin Disraeli  Suffrage  Emmeline Parkhurst.
KING JAMES PLANTATION 2 ND YR. Ulster By 1590 most of Ireland under Eng rule Except Ulster Ulster was still controlled by Gaelic irish Ruling clans were.
Reconstruction January 20, After the war… When the Civil War ended in _____, many soldiers on both sides went home to drastic changes In the _____,
Jonathan Swift’s “A Modest Proposal” Use this power point to answer the questions about the essay. 1.
Colonial Oligarchy: The Family Compact.
CHAPTER 10: TERMINATING THE TENANT AGREEMENT: NO- FAULT GROUNDS Emond Montgomery Publications 1.
British Response to the Industrial Revolution Pages
How much do you know about Gladstone and Ireland? Well, we’re going to find that out! The winner gets Gladstone’s love.
Prentice Hall © PowerPoint Slides to accompany The Legal Environment of Business and Online Commerce 5E, by Henry R. Cheeseman Chapter 28 Real Property.
PRESENTATION ON NORTH WEST HOUSING CO- OPERATIVES AND THE OLD GOVERNMENT STOCK.
5.1 EXPERIMENTING WITH CONFEDERATION. MAIN IDEA: Americans adopted the Articles of Confederation but found the new government too weak to solve the nations.
Social and Economic Reform in Britain
Potato Famine Known to the Irish as “The Great Hunger”
Reconstruction The period of rebuilding the South and the United States following the Civil War.
Abolition of zamindary system
Liberal Government In Great Britain
See if you can match up the two of a kind
World History Chapter 14 Section 1.
What impact did the 1829 Catholic Emancipation Act have on Britain?
Social and Economic Reform in Britain
Georgia Studies Georgia as a Royal Colony.
Lecture 5: Land Agitation
The French Revolution.
Land Agitation & Land League
Objectives: - To understand the roles played by Michael Davitt, Parnell, Gladstone and the Land League in attempting to solve the land situation in Ireland.
Section 2 The Middle Colonies.
A Century of Reform Chapter 11 Section 2.
Social and Economic Reform in Britain Chapter 8.2
GLADSTONE, PARNELL AND HOME RULE
Section 2 The Middle Colonies.
Presentation transcript:

Lecture 5: Land Agitation Eviction at Derrybeg, Co. Donegal

1. Tenant demands in post-famine Ireland and the Land Act of Causes of the Land War 3. The New Departure 4. The Land War 5. Tactics employed during the Land War 6. The Plan of Campaign 7. Legislative responses to the Land War 8. The impact of the Land War

Group of fourteen people, including 3rd Lord Clonbrock, gathered outside photograph house, 1870

‘Some look upon the wealthy Saxon and prosperous Protestant as an intruder and interloper who, notwithstanding the prescription of three hundred years, ought now to be deprived of his possessions and expelled from the soil of Ireland.’ Steuart Trench quoted in Cullen, L.M., Life in Ireland

The ‘typical’ landlord owned about 2000 acres of land. By 1876 less than 800 landlords owned half of Ireland. 13.3% of landowners who owned 23% of the land resided outside Ireland 36.6% resided in Ireland, but not on their own estates.

EVICTIONS : 90,000 evictions recorded 50,000 of those evictions took place between 1847 and : annual rate of eviction dropped to 1.36 per 1,000 holdings

Family group and dogs outside Mount Congreve, includes Lord Clonbrock, Ambrose Congreve, Augusta Congreve, two Dillon sisters and an unidentified man c. 1865

The Three ‘F’s ‘the alliterative label widely used in post-Famine Ireland to describe long-standing, but in reality ambiguous tenant demands for fair rents, fixity of tenure and free sale (another name for tenant right).’ Oxford Companion to Irish History, p571

Landlord and Tenant (Ireland) Act 1870 Gladstone’s first land act Conceded tenant right in regions where it was customary It created smaller rights in other parts of Ireland It provided for compensation for disturbance of tenants evicted other than for non-payment of rent

Landlord and Tenant (Ireland) Act 1870 It made provision for compensation for improvements in the case of a departing tenant The ‘Bright Clauses’ allowed tenants to purchase their holdings but it applied to very few

Eviction Scene, Castlebar, Co.Mayo

The New Departure A compact made between Parnell, Davitt, and the Fenian leader John Devoy in June 1879 Fenians, parliamentarians and ‘advanced’ nationalists agreed to work together The New Departure provided the basis for the effective prosecution of the Land War

‘Show following to Kickham, and if approved present to Charles Parnell and friends: Nationalists here will support you on following conditions: (1) abandonment of federal demand [and] substitution [of] general declaration in favour of self-government; (2) vigorous agitation of land question on basis of peasant proprietary, while accepting conditions tending to abolish arbitrary eviction; (3) exclusion of all sectarian issues from platform; (4) [Irish] members to vote together on all imperial and home questions, adopt aggressive policy, and energetically resist all coercive legislation; (5) advocacy of all struggling nationalities in British empire and elsewhere. Text of the ‘New Departure’ telegram

Founded in Dublin in October 1879 The key organization in the main phase of the Land War Widely representative committee of 54 No mechanism for controlling the executive Executive dominated by men of ‘advanced’ nationalist views More than 500 branches established Irish National Land League

Land League Poster from the 1880s

Characteristics of the Land War A farmers’ movement Townsmen played a prominent role Leadership provided by nationalist politicians A Catholic movement

Open-air meetings, platform oratory, marching bands Delayed evictions by legal means Physically impeded evictions Prevented the replacement of evicted tenants Boycotting Tactics employed by the Land League

‘They tried cases of people being evicted and grabbers. If a person was put in an evicted farm, he would get a notice to attend the meeting. If he didn’t turn up for three meetings, he would be declared boycotted. His name would be written down in papers and put on walls and trees telling the people not to work for him or buy any of his cattle, etc. This notice would be signed ‘by the order of Captain Moonlight’. Then if the boycotted person went to a fair selling his cattle, pigs or horses, one of the moonlighters would be around the fair and if nay buyer would come to the man and be buying his animals, the moonlighter would say ‘there is a smell from that animal.’ The buyer would then walk away…The boycotted people were called‘roasters.’ Recollections of a Co. Kerry farmer, Irish Folklore Commission

The mean number of agrarian murders a year from 1852 to 1878 was 5. Between 1879 and 1882 it rose to 17. In the last quarter of 1880 the number of lesser agrarian crimes reported stood at more than 25 times the level in the same period of It did not return to pre-1879 levels until 1883.

The Land Law (Ireland) Act Gladstone’s second land act) - granted the three Fs. It also instituted the Land Commission. The Ashbourne Act of 1885, advanced 5 million pounds for loans to facilitate land purchase. A further 5 million was made available in The Purchase of Land (Ireland) Act 1891 (the Balfour Act) introduced land bonds as an alternative form of payment of landlords selling land to tenants. It also set up the Congested Districts Board. The Irish Land Act 1903, known as Wyndham’s Act, was the product of agreement between representatives of landlords and tenants. It laid down financial parameters within which an agreement between a landlord and tenant would be automatically approved by the Land Commission.

The Irish Land Act 1909 (the Birrell Act) was designed to limit the cost to the exchequer of the success of the Wyndham Act. The terms were disimproved and payment of land bonds was reintroduced. In the Irish Free State, the Land Act of 1923 (the Hogan Act) converted rents into payments to the Land Commission, pending compulsory transfer of ownership of remaining tenanted land, abolished the CDB, and gave the Land Commission responsibility for redistribution. The Northern Ireland Land Act (1925) provided for compulsory completion of tenant purchase of land in that jurisdiction.

Eviction scene, Woodford, Co. Galway c

Eviction scene (Battering ram)

‘The battering ram has done its work’

Michael Connell, Moyasta, Co.Clare after eviction ca

Illustrated London News, Nov