The
Auxiliary Division of the
Royal Irish Constabulary (ADRIC),
generally known as the
Auxiliaries or
Auxies, was a
paramilitary organization within the RIC during
the
Irish War of
Independence.
Recruitment and organization
In September 1919, the
Commander-in-Chief, Ireland, Sir
Frederick Shaw
suggested that the
police
force in Ireland be expanded via the recruitment of a special
force of volunteer British ex-servicemen. During a Cabinet meeting
on 11 May 1920, the
Secretary
of State for War,
Winston
Churchill, suggested the formation of a "Special Emergency
Gendarmerie, which would become a branch of the Royal Irish
Constabulary." Churchill's proposal was referred to a committee
chaired by General Sir
Nevil
Macready, Commander-in-Chief of the British forces in Ireland.
Macready's committee rejected Churchill's proposal, but it was
revived two months later, in July, by the Police Adviser to the
Dublin Castle
administration in Ireland, Major-General
H H Tudor. In a memo dated 6 July 1920,
Tudor justified the scheme on the grounds that it would take too
long to reinforce the
Royal
Irish Constabulary (RIC) with ordinary recruits. Tudor's new
"Auxiliary Force" would be strictly temporary: its members would
enlist for a year: their pay would be £7 per week (twice what a
constable was paid), plus a sergeant's allowances, and would be
known as "Temporary Cadets".
The ADRIC
was recruited in Britain
from among
ex-officers who had served in World War
I - especially those who had served in the Army including the
Royal Flying Corps.
Most
recruits were from Great
Britain
, though some were from Ireland
, and others
came from the British Empire and Commonwealth. Many had been
highly decorated in the war and three,
James Leach,
James Johnson, and
George Onions, had been awarded the
Victoria Cross. Interestingly, their
decorations make it clear that many had been promoted from the
ranks: some men, for example, had been awarded the common soldier's
Military Medal instead of (or in
addition to) the officer's
Military
Cross. Enlisted men who had been commissioned as officers
during the War often found it difficult to adjust to their loss of
status and pay in civilian life, and historians have concluded that
the Auxiliary Division recruited large numbers of these "temporary
gentlemen".
Recruiting began in July 1920, and by November 1921, the division
was 1,900 strong. The Auxiliaries were nominally part of the RIC,
but actually operated more or less independently in rural areas.
Divided into
companies
(eventually fifteen of them), each about one hundred strong,
heavily armed and highly mobile, they operated in ten counties,
mostly in the south and west, where
Irish Republican Army (IRA) activity
was greatest. They wore either RIC uniforms or their old army
uniforms with appropriate police badges, along with distinctive
Tam-o-shanter caps. They were
commanded by Brigadier-General
F P
Crozier, a former officer of the
Loyalist paramilitary
Ulster Volunteers.
Counterinsurgency
Auxiliary companies were intended as mobile striking and raiding
forces, and they scored some notable successes against the IRA.
On 20
November, the night before Bloody
Sunday, they captured Dick McKee and
Peadar Clancy, the commandant and vice-commandant of the IRA's
Dublin
Brigade. That same night, they caught
William Pilkington, commandant of
the Sligo IRA, in a separate raid.
A month later, in December, they caught
Ernie O'Malley completely by surprise
in County Kilkenny
: the IRA
officer was reading in his room when a Temporary Cadet opened the
door and walked in; "He was as unexpected as death," said
O'Malley. In his memoirs, the commandant of the Clare IRA,
Michael Brennan, describes how the
Auxiliaries nearly captured him three nights in a row.
However, such successes and near-successes were not common: the
Division was hobbled by its lack of reliable intelligence, and most
of its raids brought no result—or sometimes worse. In one case,
they arrested a Castle official, Law Adviser
W
E Wylie, by mistake.
In another, more notorious case, on 19 April
1921 they raided the Shannon Hotel in Castleconnell
, County Limerick
on a tip
that there were suspicious characters drinking therein. The
"suspicious characters" turned out to be three off-duty members of
the RIC: both sides mistook each other for insurgents and opened
fire; three people, an RIC man, an Auxiliary Cadet and a civilian,
were killed in the shootout that followed.
Some of the IRA's most celebrated victories in the
Irish War of Independence were won
over the Auxiliaries.
On 28 November 1920, for example, a platoon
of Auxiliaries was ambushed and wiped out in the Kilmichael Ambush by Tom Barry and the West Cork
IRA.
A little
more than two months later, on 2 February 1921, another platoon of
Auxiliaries was ambushed by Seán
MacEoin and the Longford
IRA in the
Clonfin Ambush. On 19 March
1921 the
3rd Cork Brigade of the
IRA defeated a large scale attempt by the British Army &
Auxiliary Division to encircle and trap them at the
Crossbarry Ambush. Later still, on 15
April 1921, Captain
Roy L. Mackinnon DCM MM, commanding officer of H
Company, ADRIC, was assassinated by the Kerry
IRA.
Controversy
Many of the Division's Temporary Cadets did not cope well with the
frustrations of counterinsurgency: hurriedly recruited, poorly
trained, and with an ill-defined role, they soon gained a
reputation for drunkenness, lack of discipline, and
brutality worse than that of the
Black and Tans. They were disliked by members
of the Royal Irish Constabulary, who considered them "rough." They
seem to have been unpopular with the British Army as well. One
British officer, who served as adjutant for the 2nd Battalion,
Cameron Highlanders, wrote in
his memoirs that the Auxiliaries "were totally undisciplined by our
regimental standards." Macready wrote in his own memoirs that
"those companies that had the good fortune to have good commanders,
generally ex-Regular officers, who could control their men,
performed useful work, but the exploits of certain other companies
under weak or inefficient commanders went a long way to discredit
the whole force."
Like the ordinary police, the Auxiliaries sometimes took reprisals
in the wake of attacks by the IRA. On the evening of
Bloody Sunday, for example, Dick McKee
and Peadar Clancy were killed by their Auxiliary captors under very
suspicious circumstances: the official explanation, that the two
insurgents tried to escape, is widely disbelieved. But perhaps the
most notorious reprisal involving the Auxiliary Division was the
burning of Cork on 11 December
1920. At 7:30 p.m. that evening, a truckload of Auxiliaries from
newly-formed K Company was ambushed at Dillons Cross: a grenade was
thrown onto their truck, wounding ten Auxiliaries and killing one,
Temporary Cadet Chapman. Later that night, police and Auxiliaries
took revenge by setting fire to the city's commercial centre,
preventing the fire service from attending the blaze, and shooting
seven people.
Two IRA men, Cornelius and Jerimiah Delaney, were killed in their
beds at home in Dublin Hill (though Con Delaney survived to
December 18). Five civilians were shot on the streets. Damage
amounting to $20 million was inflicted. The Cork Fire Brigade did
not have the resources to deal with the fires: law and order, it
seemed, had completely broken down. The British Government at first
claimed the citizens were responsible for the arson, but a military
court of inquiry known as the
Strickland Report later found that the
fires had been started by the Auxiliaries. Its findings were
suppressed by the government, but K Company was disbanded.
Allegedly, some Auxiliaries took to wearing pieces of burnt
cork on their caps afterwards, to
celebrate the occasion.
A few days
later, near Dunmanway
, there was an ugly postscript to the Cork fires: an
Auxiliary called Hart went berserk and killed a young man and a
seventy-year old priest, whom the Auxiliary patrol met on the road
near Dunmanway. A third civilian, a local magistrate,
escaped by taking refuge with the other Auxiliaries. Hart was
arrested and court-martialled: at his trial, it was revealed that
he had been a "particular friend" of TC Chapman, and had been
drinking heavily since 11 December. A number of expert medical
witness testified that Hart was insane at the time of the murders
and the Courtmartial concluded that he "was guilty of the offenses
with which he was charged, but was insane at the time of their
commission".
While Hart was apparently confined to a Criminal Lunatic Asylum,
other Auxiliaries literally got away with murder. On 9 February
1921, James Murphy and Patrick Kennedy were arrested by Auxiliaries
in Dublin. Two hours later, constables of the
Dublin Metropolitan Police found
the two men lying shot in
Drumcondra:
Kennedy was dead, and Murphy was dying. Murphy died in Mater
Hospital, Dublin on 11 February, but before the end, he declared
that he and Kennedy had been shot by their Auxiliary captors. A
military court of inquiry was held, and Captain W L King,
commanding officer of F Company ADRIC, was arrested for the
killings. King was court-martialled on 13-15 February, but
acquitted, after Murphy's dying declaration was ruled inadmissible,
and two officers from F Company provided perjured alibis for
Captain King at the time of the shootings. Just short of two weeks
later at the
Clonmult Ambush in
county Cork, an Auxiliary company were accused of killing seven IRA
men after they had surrendered.
But while the authorities often turned a blind eye to reprisals,
they were less tolerant of crimes against "civilians" - loyal and
non-political people. A number of Auxiliaries were dismissed and
prosecuted for theft, including a one-armed former Temporary Cadet,
Major Evan Cameron Bruce, who was imprisoned for robbing a
creamery, after being dismissed from the Division for striking a
civilian without cause. On 19 February 1921, Commandant Crozier
resigned after a dispute over discipline with the Police Adviser.
Crozier
had dismissed twenty-one Temporary Cadets accused of looting a
licensed grocery store belonging to Protestants in County Meath
. When General Tudor reinstated these men
pending an official inquiry, Crozier left the Force. He was
replaced by his assistant, Brigadier-General
E
A Wood, who commanded the Division until it was
demobilized.
History and popular memory
The Temporary Cadets of the ADRIC were and are often confused with
the Black and Tans: many atrocities laid at the door of the latter
were in reality attributable to the Auxiliaries. Disbanded along
with the RIC in 1922, many Auxiliaries joined the
Palestine Police Force. As with the
Black and Tans, they are still a
contentious issue in Ireland, though their misdeeds were a godsend
to
Sinn Féin's Publicity Bureau at
the time.
Auxiliaries figure prominently in historical films like
Michael Collins,
The Last September, and
The Wind That
Shakes the Barley.
References
- A D Harvey, "Who Were the Auxiliaries?" Historical
Journal 35, no. 3 (1992): 665-69.
- David Leeson, "The Black and Tans: British Police in the First
Irish War, 1920-21," (PhD: McMaster University, 2003).
- Charles Townshend, The British Campaign in Ireland,
1919-1921 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1975).