William O'Brien (2 October 1852 – 25 February 1928) was an
Irish
nationalist,
journalist, agrarian agitator, social revolutionary, politician,
party leader, newspaper publisher, author and Member of Parliament (MP.) in the
House of
Commons
of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Ireland
. He was particularly associated with the
campaigns for land reform in Ireland during the late 19th and early
20th centuries as well as his conciliatory approach to attaining
Irish Home Rule.
Family, education
William
O'Brien was born at Bank Place in Mallow
, County
Cork
, as second son of James O'Brien, a solicitor's
clerk, and his wife Kate, the daughter of James Nagle, a local
shopkeeper. On his mother's side he was descended from the
distinguished
Norman family of Nagles, long
settled in the vicinity of Mallow giving their name to the nearby
Nagle Mountains. He was also linked through his mother with the
statesman
Edmund Burke's mother's
family, as well as with the poet
Edmund
Spencer's family. The Nagles however, no longer held the status
or prosperity they once had. In the same month thirty-eight years
earlier
Thomas
Davis was born in Mallow. O'Brien's advocacy of the cause of
Irish Independence was to be in the same true tradition of his
esteemed fellow-townsman.
O'Brien shared his primary education with a townsman with whom he
was later to have a close political connection,
Canon Sheehan of Doneraile. He enjoyed his
secondary education at the Cloyne diocesan college, which resulted
in his being brought up in an environment noted for its religious
tolerance. He greatly valued having had this experience from an
early age, which strongly influenced his later views for the need
of such tolerance in Irish national life.
Early journalism
Financial
misfortune in 1868 caused the O'Brien family to move to Cork City
. A year later his father died, and the
illness of his elder and younger brother and his sister resulted in
him having to support his mother and siblings. Always a prolific
writer, it quickly earned him a job as newspaper reporter, first
for the
Cork Daily Herald. This was to be the primary
career which first attracted attention to him as a public figure.
He had begun legal studies at Queen's College, later
University College Cork, but although he never
graduated, he held a lifelong attachment to the institution, to
which he bequeathed his private papers.
Political origins
From an early age O'Brien's political ideas, like most of his
contemporaries, were shaped by the
Fenian
movement and the plight of the Irish tenant farmers, his elder
brother having participated in the rebellion of 1867. It resulted
in O'Brien himself becoming actively involved with the Fenian
brotherhood, resigning in the mid-1870s, because of what he
described in 'Evening Memories' (p.443-4) as "the gloom of
inevitable failure and horrible punishment inseparable from any
attempt at separation by force of arms".
As a journalist his attention was attracted in the first place to
the suffering of the tenant farmers.
Now on the staff of
the Freeman's Journal, after touring the Galtee
Mountains
around
Christmas 1877 he published articles describing their conditions,
which later appeared in pamphlet form. With this action he
first displayed his belief that only through parliamentary reform
and with the new power of the press that public opinion could be
influenced to pursue Irish issues constitutionally through open
political activity and the ballot box. Not least of all, responding
to the hopes of the new
Irish Home
Rule movement.
United Ireland Editor

Land War manifesto
In 1878 he met
Charles Stewart
Parnell at a Home Rule meeting. Parnell recognised his
exceptional talents as a journalist and writer, influencing his
rise to becoming a leading politician of the new generation. He
subsequently appointed him in 1881 as editor of the
Irish National Land League's
journal,
The United Irishman.
His association with
Parnell and the Irish
Parliamentary Party (IPP) led to his arrest and imprisonment
with Parnell, Dillon, William Redmond and other
nationalist leaders in Kilmainham Gaol
that October.
During his imprisonment until April 1882 he drafted the famous Land
War
No Rent Manifesto -- a rent-withholding scheme
personally led by O'Brien, escalating the conflict between the
Land League and
Gladstone's government. He was
persecuted nine times in the course of years.
Agitator and M.P.
From 1883-1885 O'Brien was elected MP for
Mallow. Following the
abolition of that constituency he represented
Tyrone South from
1885 to 1886,
North East Cork
from 1887-1892, and
Cork City from
1892-1895 and from 1901-1918, in the House of Commons. There were
three periods of absence: 1886-7, from 1895-1900, and eight months
in 1904. Amid the turmoil of Irish politics in the late 19th
century he was frequently arrested and imprisoned for his support
for various Land League protests.
In 1887
O'Brien helped to organise a rent strike
during the Plan of Campaign at the
estate of Lady Kingston near Mitchelstown, County Cork
. On 9 September, after an 8,000-strong
demonstration led by
John Dillon, three
estate tenants were shot dead, and others wounded, by police at the
town's courthouse where O'Brien had been brought for trial on
charges of incitement under a new
Coercion Act.
This event became
known as the Mitchelstown
Massacre
.
Later that
year, thousands of demonstrators marched in London to demand his
release from prison, and clashed with police at Trafalgar
Square
on Bloody
Sunday (November 10).

Bloody Sunday (1887)
Even in prison, O'Brien continued his protests, refusing to wear
prison uniform in 1887.
Being left without cloths, a Blarney
tweed suit
was smuggled in. He occasionally wore this much publicised
suit in the Commons when confronting his incarcerator,
Arthur Balfour. His imprisonment also
inspired protests – notably the 1887 '
Bloody Sunday' riots in London. In 1889
he escaped from a courtroom but was sentenced
in absentia
for conspiracy.
He fled to America accompanied by Dillon who
was on bail, then to France where both held negotiations with
Parnell at Boulogne-sur-Mer
over the leadership of the party.
When
these broke down, both returned to Folkestone
giving themselves up, subsequently serving four
months in Clonmel
and Galway
gaols. Here O'Brien began to reconsider his political
future, using the time to write an acclaimed novel, a
Fenian romance with a land reform theme set in 1860:
When We Were Boys, which was published in 1890.
Marriage, reorientation
In 1890 he married Sophie Raffalovich, sister of poet and socialite
Marc André Sebastian
Raffalovich and daughter of the Russian Jewish banker, Hermann
Raffalowich, domiciled in Paris. It was to mark a major turning
point in O'Brien's personal and political life. His wife brought
considerable wealth into the marriage, enabling him to act with
political independence and providing finances to establish his own
newspapers. His wife (1860-1960) who survived him by over 30 years,
gave him considerable moral and emotional support for his political
pursuits. Their relationship added an abiding love for France and
attachment to Europe to his life, where he often retired to
recuperate.
By 1891 he had become disillusioned with Parnell's political
leadership, although emotionally loyal to him he tried to persuade
him to retire after the
O'Shea
divorce case. On Parnell's death that year and the ensuing IPP
split, he remained aloof from aligning himself with either side of
the Party, either the rump pro-Parnellite
Irish National League (INL) led by
John Redmond or with the
anti-Parnellite
Irish National
Federation (INF) group under
John
Dillon, although he saw the weight of strength in the latter.
O'Brien worked hard in the 1893 negotiations leading to Parliament
passing Gladstone's
Second
Home Rule Bill , which the Lords however rejected. (
Gladstone's speech on the
First Home Rule Bill had
beseeched parliament not to reject it).
United Irish League
Distancing himself from the party turmoils,
he retired from parliament in 1895, settling for a while with his
wife near Westport,
County Mayo
, which enabled him to experience at first hand from
his Mayo retreat the distressed hardship of the peasantry in the
West of Ireland, trying to eke out an existence in its rocky
landscape.
Believing strongly that agitational politics combined with
constitutional pressures were the best means of achieving
objectives, O'Brien established on the 16. January 1898 the
United Irish League (UIL) at
Westport, with
Michael Davitt as
co-founder and
John Dillon present. It
was to be a new grass-roots organisation with a programme to
include agrarian agitation, political reform and Home Rule. It
coincided with the passing of the revolutionary
Local Government Act
1898 which broke the power of the landlord dominated "Grand
Juries", passing for the first time absolute democratic control of
local affairs into the hands of the people through elected Local
County Councils.
The UIL was explicidly designed to reconcile the various
parliamentary fragments existing since the Parnell split, which
proved very popular, its branches sweeping over most of the country
organised by its general secretary
John O'Donnell , dictating to
the demoralised Irish party leaders the terms for reconstruction,
not only of the party but the nationalist movement in Ireland. The
movement was backed by O'Brien's new newspaper
The Irish
People (Sept. 1899 -Nov. 1904 and Sept. 1905 -Mar.
1909).
Around 1900 O'Brien, an unbending social reformer and agrarian
agitator, was the most influential and powerful figure within the
nationalist movement, although not formally its leader. His UIL was
by far the largest organisation in the country, comprising 1150
branches and 84,355 members. The result of the rapid growth of his
UIL as a national organisation in achieving unity through organised
popular opinion, was to effect a quick defensive reunion under
John Redmond of the discredited IPP
factions of the
INL and the
INF, largely fearing
O’Brien’s return to the political field. This unity disturbed
O’Brien as it resulted in most of the ineffective party candidates
being re-elected in the
1900 general election,
preventing the UIL from using its power in the pre-selection of
candidates. Within a few years the IPP was however, to tactically
adjunct the UIL under its wing manoeuvering it out of O'Brien's
control.
Land Act architect
O'Brien next intensified the UIL agitation for land purchase by
tenant farmers, pressurising for compulsory purchase. It resulted
in the calling of the December 1902 Land Conference, an initiative
by moderate landlords led by
Lord Dunraven for a settlement by conciliatory agreement
between landlord and tenant. After six sessions all tenant’s
demands were conceded, O’Brien having guided the official
nationalist movement into endorsement of a new policy of
conciliation. He followed this by campaigning vigorously for the
greatest piece of social legislation Ireland had yet seen,
orchestrating the
Wyndham
Land Purchase Act (1903) through
parliament, which effectively ended
landlordism, solving the age old
Irish Land Question.
This masterful strategy of bringing about agreement on land
purchase between tenants and landlords under the Act, though
supported by Redmond, was condemned by a Dillon led campaign backed
by his ally
Thomas
Sexton and the party's newspaper, the
Freeman's Journal, against O’Brien,
ferociously attacking him for putting Land Purchase and
Conciliation before Home Rule,
Michael
Davitt on the grounds that the Act did not espouse land
nationalisation. Severely in disagreement with all adversaries,
O’Brien left the Irish Parliamentary Party in November 1903 for
five years, retiring his parliamentary seat. His Cork electorate
however, insistently pushed through his re-election eight months
later. O’Brien’s intention of shocking the party to its senses,
failed.,
He then embarked on advancing full scale implementation of the Act
in alliance with
D. D. Sheehan MP.’s
Irish Land and Labour
Association (ILLA), which by 1904 had become the new
organisational base for O’Brien’s political activities. This
aggravated the Dillonite section of the IPP further. Determined to
destroy both "before they poison the whole country", they published
continual denunciations in the
Freeman's Journal, then
coupéd the UIL by means of its new secretary, Dillon’s chief
lieutenant,
Joseph Devlin M.P.,
Grandmaster of the
Ancient Order of Hibernians,
Devlin eventually gaining organisational control over the entire
UIL and IPP organisations.
Housing Acts
Britain had two bills to pay for past wrongs. After financing
tenant land purchase, tenant farmers were now proud proprietors
largely in control of local government. The next bill to pay was
for extensive rural housing of the tens of thousands of migrant
farm labourers struggling to survive in stone cabins, barns or mud
hovels. A long standing demand by the ILLA branches and D.D.
Sheehan.
O'Brien saw its prime importance and negotiated during 1905, which,
after the January
1906 general election,
was to become the
Bryce Labourers
(Ireland) Act (1906), and during the course of the
next five years financed the erection of over 40,000 commodious
cottage homes, each on an acre of land. This unique social housing
programme unparalleled anywhere in Europe brought about an
unprecedented agrarian revolution, changing the face of the Irish
countryside,
Renewed publication of O'Brien's newspaper
The Irish
People (1905-1909) exalting the cottage building, its
editorials equally countermanding the IPP's Dublin "bosses"
attempts to curtail the program, fearing settled rural communities
would no longer be dependent on Party and Church. Munster took full
advantage, erecting most of the cottages, additional funding
following under
Birrell's
Labourers Act 1911
.
In the interest of united, O'Brien rejoined the Parliamenatry Party
in 1908. During negotiations that year for additional funding of
land purchase under an amending bill, Redmond called a UIL
convention for December in Dublin, claiming the bill over-burdened
the British Treasury and the rate payers. Over 3000 delegates
attended. Devlin had the hall filled in advance with 400 of his
militant Mollies , so that
when O'Brien and his followers tried to speak in favour of the
bill, they were battoned into silence. The bill eventually passed
as Birrell's
Land Purchase Act (1909) ,
falling far short in its financial provisions.
All-for-Ireland League
As an outcome of the "Baton-Convention" O’Brien felt himself again
driven from the party. He foresaw that the IPP, undermined by the
AOH, was on a fatal radical path which would frustrate any
All-Ireland Home Rule settlement. As a counter measure he
established a new League, which was to build on the success his
combined "doctrine of conciliation" with "conference plus business"
achieved during the 1902 Land Conference with landlords and the
ensuing 1903 Land Purchase Act, believing all moderate unionists
could still be similarly won over to All-Ireland Home Rule. For
many nationalists on the other hand, the adoption of a conciliatory
approach to the "hereditary enemy" involved too sharp a deviation
from traditional thinking.
In March 1909 he inaugurated the
All-for-Ireland League (AFIL) in
Kanturk with
James
Gilhooly MP as Chairman and D.D. Sheehan Hon. Secretary. The
AFIL’s political objective was the attainment of an All-Ireland
parliament with the consent rather than by the compulsion of the
Protestant and
Unionist community, under the banner of
the "Three Cs", for Conference, Conciliation and Consent as applied
to Irish politics. The League was supported by many prominent
Protestant gentry, leading landlords and Munster business figures..
The political activist
Canon Sheehan
of Doneraile was also a founder member.
Ill-health striking O’Brien, he departed for
Florence
, Italy
to
recuperate, returning for the January 1910 general election,
in which the Cork electorate returned eight "O'Brienite"
MPs. Throughout 1910 his AFIL movement was opposed an Irish
Party supported by the Catholic clergy. It returned eight
independent AFIL MPs in the December
1910 general election
to be O'Brien's new political party. From July 1910 until late 1916
O’Brien published the League’s newspaper, the
Cork Free
Press. Election results published by it showed Independents
throughout Ireland had won 30% of votes cast.
O’Brien saw it opportune for a co-operative understanding with
Arthur Griffith's moderate
Sinn Féin movement, having in common -
attaining objectives through "moral protest" - political resistance
and agitation rather than militant physical-force. Neither O’Brien
nor Griffith advocated total
abstentionism from the Commons, and regarded
Dominion Home Rule, modelled on Canada or Australia, as acceptable.
Although Griffith favoured co-operation, a special Sinn FeÃn
executive council meeting called to consider co-operation regretted
it was not possible because its constitution would not allow it. In
the following years O’Brien and his party continued to associate
themselves with Griffith's movement both in and out of parliament.
In June 1918 Griffith asked O’Brien to have the writ moved for his
candidacy in the
Cavan-east
by-election (moved by AFIL MP
Eugene
Crean) to which Griffith was elected with a sizable
majority.
In 1911 O'Brien proposed Dominion Home Rule in a letter to
Asquith as the only viable solution to the "Irish
Question".
Home Rule became technically assured after a
new Home Rule bill was introduced in 1912 with the IPP holding the
balance of power at Westminster
. During the 1913-14 parliamentary debates on
the
Third Home Rule Bill,
O'Brien, alarmed by
Unionist
resistance to the bill, opposed the IPP's coercive "Ulster must
follow" policy, and published in January 1914 specific concession
which would enable Ulster join a Dublin parliament "any price for
an United Ireland, but never partition". The
Ulster Volunteers armed to resist likely
"
Rome Rule" , Redmond's
Irish Volunteers armed likewise to ensure
enactment of all-Ireland self-government. Rejecting O'Brien's
initiatives, the Redmond-Dillon-Devlin hardline alliance remained
uncompromising -- "no concessions for Ulster".
In May 1914 O'Brien and his followers abstained from the final vote
passing the
Home Rule Act 1914 ,
denouncing it as a "partition deal", after Sir
Edward Carson leader of the
Ulster Unionist Party forced through
an amendment mandating the
partition of Ireland , the
Nationalist's confrontation course with Ulster ending in
fiasco.
Rallying for Europe
O'Brien saw the outbreak of
World War I
in August as an opportunity to undertake a last crusade to preserve
at any price the unity of Ireland, by uniting the Green and Orange
in a common cause, declaring himself on the side of
the Allied and Britain's European war
effort. O'Brien was the first Nationalist leader to call on
Irish Volunteers for the front.
Towards the end of August he had an interview with
Lord Kitchener,
Secretary of State for War, and laid before him a scheme for
raising an
Irish Army Corps
embracing all classes and creeds, South and North. Kitchener
favoured the idea .
O’Brien immediately summoned a meeting held
in the Cork
Town Hall
under the auspices of the All-for-Ireland League on the 2nd
September, the hall packed with an enthusiastic audience of men and
women. In a speech that far exceeded Redmond’s in favour of
its adherence to England cause, he said:- :
O'Brien later wrote: "Whether Home Rule is to have a future will
depend upon the extent to which the
Nationalists in combination with
Ulster Covenanters, do their part
in the firing line on the
fields of
France" . He stood on recruiting platforms with the other
National leaders and spoke out encouragingly in favour of voluntary
enlistment in the
Royal Munster
Fusiliers and other
Irish
regiments.
Changing tides
O'Brien, alarmed at the increased activity of Sinn Féin in 1915,
predicted the danger of a potential republican eruption,
culminating in the IRB
1916 Rebellion
, in which however Sinn Féin were not involved. He was forced to
cease publication of his
Cork Free Press in 1916 soon
after the appointment of
Lord Decies as Chief Press
Censor for Ireland. Decies warned the press to be careful about
what they published. Such warnings had little effect when dealing
with such papers as the
Cork Free Press.
It was suppressed
after its republican editor, Frank Gallagher, accused the
British authorities of lying about the conditions and situation of
republican prisoners in the Frongoch internment camp
.
O'Brien accepted the Rising and the ensuing changed political
climate in 1917 as the best way of ridding the country of IPP and
AOH stagnation. Home Rule had been lost in 1913, an inflexible IPP
long out of touch with reality, reflected by Britain's two failed
attempts to introduce Home Rule in 1916 and again in 1917. O'Brien
refused to participate in the
Irish
Convention after
southern
unionist representatives he had proposed were turned down. The
Convention ended as he predicted in failure when Britain attempted
to link the enactment of Home Rule with conscription.
During
the anti-conscription
crisis in April 1918 O'Brien and his AFIL left the House of
Commons
and joined Sinn Féin and other prominentaries in
the mass protests in Dublin. Seeing no future for his
conciliatory political concepts in a future election, he believed
Sinn Féin in its moderate form had earned the right to represent
nationalist interests. He and the other members of his
All-for-Ireland League party stood aside putting their seats at the
disposal of Sinn Féin, its candidates returned unopposed in the
December
1918 general
elections. In an address to the election he had said:
"We cannot subscribe to a programme of armed
resistance in the field, or even of permanent withdrawal from
Westminster; but to the spirit of Sinn Féin, as distinct from its
abstract programme, the great mass of independent single-minded
Irishmen have been won over, and accordingly they ought now to have
a full and sympathetic trial for enforcing the Irish nation's right
of self-determination."
O'Brien disagreed with the establishment of a southern
Irish Free State under the
Treaty, still believing that
Partition of Ireland was too high a
price to pay for partial independence. Retiring from political
life, he contented himself with writing and declined
De Valera's offer to stand for
Fianna Fáil in the 1927 general election.
He died suddenly on 25. February 1928 while on a visit to London
with his wife at the age of 75. His remains rest in Mallow, and one
of the principal streets in the town bears his name to this day.
His head-bust overlooks the town Council's Chamber Room and one of
his finest portraits hangs in University College Cork.
In 1920
Arthur Griffith said of
O'Brien:
“The task of William O’Brien’s generation
was well and bravely done, had it not been so the work we are
carrying out in this generation would have been
impossible.
In that great work none of Parnell’s
lieutenants did so much as William
O’Brien.â€
Notes
- MacDonagh, Michael: William O'Brien, the Irish
Nationalist All for Ireland, and Ireland for All
p.186, Ernst Benn London (1928)
- O’Brien, Joseph V.: William O’Brien and the course of Irish
Politics, 1881-1918, The All-for-Ireland League
p.193, University of California Press (1976) ISBN
0-520-02886-4
- Maume, Patrick: The long Gestation, Irish Nationalist Life
1891-1918 p.207 (note 322), Gill & Macmillan (1999) ISBN
0-7171-2744-3
- MacDonagh, Michael: The Life of William O'Brien, the Irish
Nationalist, p.200, Ernst Benn London (1928)
- O'Brien, Joseph V.: William O'Brien and the course of Irish
Politics p.215, Uni. California Press (1976)
- Martin, Peter; Censorship in the two Irelands 1922-39,
Introduction p.9, Irish Academic Press (2008) ISBN
0-7165-2829-0
- MacDonagh, Michael: The Life of William O'Brien, the Irish
Nationalist, The Irish Free State p.234, Ernst Benn
London (1928)
- MacDonagh, Michael: The Life of William O'Brien, the Irish
Nationalist, The Irish Free State p.237, Ernst Benn
London (1928)
Works
O'Brien's books, a number of which are collections of his
journalistic writings and political speeches, include:
- Christmas on the Galtees (1878) Village Irish Christmas
- When we were boys (1890)
- Irish Ideas (1893) Ideas (1893)
- A Queen of Men, Grace O'Malley (1898)
- Recolections (1905)
- An Olive Branch in Ireland (1910)
- The Downfall of Parliamentarianism (1918)
- Evening Memories (1920)
- The Responsibility for Partition (1921)
- The Irish Revolution (1921)
- Edmund Burke as an Irishman (1924)
References
- O'Brien, William: An Olive Branch in Ireland,
Macmillian London (1910)
- O'Brien, William: The Downfall of Parliamentarianism,
Maunsel & Roberts Dublin & London (1918)
- O’Brien, William: The Responsibility for Partition,
Maunsel & Roberts Dublin & London (1921)
- Sheehan, D. D.: Ireland since Parnell, Daniel O’Connor
London (1921)
- MacDonagh, Michael: The Life of William O'Brien, the Irish
Nationalist, Ernst Benn London (1928)
- Schilling, Friedrich K.: William O'Brien
and the All-for-Ireland League, thesis (1956), Trinity
College, Dublin

- Miller, David W.: Church, State and Nation in Ireland
1898-1921, Gill & Macmillan (1973) ISBN 0 7171 0645 4
- O'Brien, Joseph: William O'Brien and the course of Irish
politics, University of California Press (1976) ISBN
0-520-02886-4
- Clifford, Brendan: Cork Free Press An Account of
Ireland's only Democratic Anti-Partition Movement, Athol
Books, Belfast (1984)
- Warwick-Halle, Sally: William O'Brien and the Irish land
war, Irish Academic Press, Dublin (1990) ISBN
07-1652-458-9
- Callanan, Frank: T. M Healy, Cork University
Press (1996) ISBN 1-85918-172-4
- Maume, Patrick: The long Gestation, Irish Nationalist Life
1891-1918, Gill & Macmillan (1999) ISBN 0-7171-2744-3