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Irish War of Independence
Irish War of Independence
from Wikipedia

Irish War of Independence
Part of the Irish revolutionary period

Seán Hogan's flying column of the 3rd Tipperary Brigade, IRA during the war
Date21 January 1919 – 11 July 1921
(2 years, 5 months, 2 weeks and 6 days)
Location
Result See § Aftermath
Territorial
changes

Creation of the Irish Free State and Northern Ireland

Belligerents
Irish Republic  United Kingdom
Commanders and leaders
Military commanders: Political leaders: Military commanders: Political leaders:
Units involved
Irish Republican Army
  • British Army
  • Ulster Special Constabulary
Strength
c. 15,000 IRA members Total: c. 42,100
Casualties and losses

491 dead[1]

  • 24 executed
936 dead[1]
  • 523 RIC & USC
  • 413 British Army
  • About 900 civilians dead[1]
  • Total deaths: c. 2,300

The Irish War of Independence (Irish: Cogadh na Saoirse),[2] also known as the Anglo-Irish War, was a guerrilla war fought in Ireland from 1919 to 1921 between the Irish Republican Army (IRA, the army of the Irish Republic) and British forces: the British Army, along with the quasi-military Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC) and its paramilitary forces the Auxiliaries and Ulster Special Constabulary (USC). It was part of the Irish revolutionary period.

In April 1916, Irish republicans launched the Easter Rising against British rule and proclaimed an Irish Republic. Although it was defeated after a week of fighting, the Rising and the British response led to greater popular support for Irish independence. In the December 1918 election, republican party Sinn Féin won a landslide victory in Ireland. On 21 January 1919 they formed a breakaway government (Dáil Éireann) and declared Irish independence. That day, two RIC officers were killed in the Soloheadbeg ambush by IRA volunteers acting on their own initiative. The conflict developed gradually. For most of 1919, IRA activity involved capturing weaponry and freeing republican prisoners, while the Dáil set about building a state. In September, the British government outlawed the Dáil throughout Ireland, Sinn Féin was proclaimed (outlawed) in County Cork and the conflict intensified.[3] The IRA began ambushing RIC and British Army patrols, attacking their barracks and forcing isolated barracks to be abandoned. The British government bolstered the RIC with recruits from Britain—the Black and Tans and Auxiliaries—who became notorious for ill-discipline and reprisal attacks on civilians,[4] some of which were authorised by the British government.[5] Thus the conflict is sometimes called the "Black and Tan War".[6] The conflict also involved civil disobedience, notably the refusal of Irish railwaymen to transport British forces or military supplies.

In mid-1920, republicans won control of most county councils, and British authority collapsed in most of the south and west, forcing the British government to introduce emergency powers. About 300 people had been killed by late 1920, but the conflict escalated in November. On Bloody Sunday in Dublin, 21 November 1920, fourteen British intelligence operatives were assassinated; then the RIC fired on the crowd at a Gaelic football match in Croke Park, killing fourteen civilians and wounding sixty-five. A week later, the IRA killed seventeen Auxiliaries in the Kilmichael Ambush in County Cork. In December, the British authorities declared martial law in much of southern Ireland, and the centre of Cork city was burnt out by British forces in reprisal for an ambush. Violence continued to escalate over the next seven months; 1,000 people were killed and 4,500 republicans were interned. Much of the fighting took place in Munster (particularly County Cork), Dublin and Belfast, which together saw over 75 percent of the conflict deaths.[7]

The conflict in north-east Ulster had a sectarian aspect (see The Troubles in Ulster (1920–1922)). While the Catholic minority there mostly backed Irish independence, the Protestant majority were mostly unionist/loyalist. A mainly Protestant special constabulary was formed, and loyalist paramilitaries were active. They attacked Catholics in reprisal for IRA actions, and in Belfast a sectarian conflict raged in which almost 500 were killed, most of them Catholics.[8] In May 1921, Ireland was partitioned under British law by the Government of Ireland Act, which created Northern Ireland.

A ceasefire began on 11 July 1921. The post-ceasefire talks led to the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty on 6 December 1921. This ended British rule in most of Ireland and, after a ten-month transitional period overseen by the Provisional Government, the Irish Free State was created as a self-governing Dominion on 6 December 1922. Northern Ireland remained within the United Kingdom. After the ceasefire, violence in Belfast and fighting in border areas of Northern Ireland continued, and the IRA launched the failed Northern Offensive in May 1922. In June 1922, disagreement among republicans over the Anglo-Irish Treaty led to the eleven-month Irish Civil War. The Irish Free State awarded 62,868 medals for service during the War of Independence, of which 15,224 were issued to IRA fighters of the flying columns.[9]

Origins of the conflict

[edit]

Home Rule Crisis

[edit]

Since the 1870s, Irish nationalists in the Irish Parliamentary Party (IPP) had been demanding home rule, or self-government, from Britain, while not ruling out eventual complete independence. Fringe organisations, such as Arthur Griffith's Sinn Féin, instead argued for some form of immediate Irish independence, but they were in a small minority.[10]

The demand for home rule was eventually granted by the British government in 1912,[11] immediately prompting a prolonged crisis within the United Kingdom as Ulster unionists formed an armed organisation – the Ulster Volunteers (UVF) – to resist this measure of devolution, at least in territory they could control. In turn, nationalists formed their own paramilitary organisation, the Irish Volunteers.[12]

The British parliament passed the Government of Ireland Act 1914, known as the Home Rule Act, on 18 September 1914 with an amending bill for the partition of Ireland introduced by Ulster Unionist MPs, but the act's implementation was immediately postponed by the Suspensory Act 1914 due to the outbreak of the First World War in the previous month.[13] The majority of nationalists followed their IPP leaders and John Redmond's call to support Britain and the Allied war effort in Irish regiments of the New British Army, the intention being to ensure the commencement of home rule after the war.[14] However, a significant minority of the Irish Volunteers opposed Ireland's involvement in the war. The Volunteer movement split, a majority leaving to form the National Volunteers under Redmond. The remaining Irish Volunteers, under Eoin MacNeill, held that they would maintain their organisation until home rule had been granted. Within this Volunteer movement, another faction, led by the separatist Irish Republican Brotherhood, began to prepare for a revolt against British rule in Ireland.[15]

Easter Rising

[edit]

The plan for revolt was realised in the Easter Rising of 1916, in which the Volunteers launched an insurrection whose aim was to end British rule. The insurgents issued the Proclamation of the Irish Republic, proclaiming Ireland's independence as a republic.[16] The Rising, in which over four hundred people died,[17] was almost exclusively confined to Dublin and was put down within a week, but the British response, executing the leaders of the insurrection and arresting thousands of nationalist activists, galvanised support for the separatist Sinn Féin[18] – the party which the republicans first adopted and then took over as well as followers from Countess Markievicz, who was second-in-command of the Irish Citizen Army during the Easter Rising.[19] The British execution of the Rising's leaders also increased support in Ireland for both a violent uprising to achieve independence from British rule and an independent Irish republic. This support was further bolstered by the British government's decision to maintain martial law in Ireland until November 1916, the arrest of Irish critics of government policies and the possibility of conscription being extended to Ireland.[20]

First Dáil

[edit]
Result of the 1918 UK general election in Ireland

In April 1918, the British cabinet, in the face of the crisis caused by the German spring offensive, attempted with a dual policy to simultaneously link the enactment of conscription into Ireland with the implementation of home rule, as outlined in the report of the Irish Convention of 8 April 1918. This further alienated Irish nationalists and produced mass demonstrations during the Conscription Crisis of 1918.[21] In the 1918 general election Irish voters showed their disapproval of British policy by giving Sinn Féin 70% (73 seats out of 105,) of Irish seats, 25 of those being uncontested.[22] Sinn Féin won 91% of the seats outside of Ulster on 46.9% of votes cast but was in a minority in Ulster, where unionists were in a majority. Sinn Féin pledged not to sit in the UK Parliament at Westminster, but rather to set up an Irish parliament.[23] This parliament, known as the First Dáil, and its ministry, called the Aireacht, consisting only of Sinn Féin members, met at the Mansion House on 21 January 1919. The Dáil reaffirmed the 1916 proclamation with the Irish Declaration of Independence,[24] and issued a Message to the Free Nations of the World, which stated that there was an "existing state of war, between Ireland and England". The Irish Volunteers were reconstituted as the "Irish Republican Army" or IRA.[25] The IRA was perceived by some members of Dáil Éireann to have a mandate to wage war on the British Dublin Castle administration.[citation needed]

Forces

[edit]

British

[edit]

Military forces

[edit]
RIC and British Army personnel near Limerick, c. 1920

The heart of British power in Ireland was the Dublin Castle administration, often known to the Irish as "the Castle".[26] The head of the Castle administration was the lord lieutenant, to whom a chief secretary was responsible, leading—in the words of the British historian Peter Cottrell—to an "administration renowned for its incompetence and inefficiency".[26] Ireland was divided into three military districts. During the war, two British Army divisions, the 5th and the 6th divisions, were based in Ireland with their respective headquarters in the Curragh and Cork.[26] By July 1921 there were 50,000 British troops based in Ireland; by contrast there were 14,000 soldiers in metropolitan Britain.[27] While the British Army had historically been heavily dependent on Irish recruitment, concern over divided loyalties led to the redeployment from 1919 of all regular Irish regiments to garrisons outside Ireland itself.[28] There were also small groups of Royal Air Force personnel throughout the country as part of the 11th (Irish) Wing, but they were not permitted to use armed aircraft during the conflict.[29][30] There were also Royal Naval personnel, primarily at Cobh, County Cork, Haulbowline Royal Naval Dockyard, County Cork, and at Kingstown Royal Naval Shipyard, now Dún Laoghaire, County Dublin. There was also a battalion of the RMLI, sent to protect lighthouses, Coast Guard Stations and War Signal Stations. These latter forces only engaged when attacked.[31][32]

Police forces

[edit]

The two main police forces in Ireland were the Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC) and the Dublin Metropolitan Police (DMP).[33] Of the 17,000 policemen in Ireland, 513 were killed by the IRA between 1919 and 1921 while 682 were wounded.[33] Of the RIC's senior officers, 60% were Irish Protestants and the rest Catholic, while 70% of the rank and file of the RIC were Irish Catholic with the rest Protestant.[33] Although the RIC received training in the use of arms, their primary function was policing, not war.[34] There was also no specific counterinsurgent doctrine for the RIC to use at the time. Until March 1920, London regarded the unrest in Ireland as primarily an issue for the police and did not regard it as a war. Officially, the British government never classified the conflict as war.[35] The Army's function in Ireland was to assist the civil authority, when, in practice, it meant providing logistical, medical, and other support. It would not be until the early autumn of 1920 that the Army was permitted to undertake offensive action. In the course of the war, about a quarter of Ireland was put under martial law in late-November 1920, mostly in Munster and County Dublin; in the rest of the country British authority was not deemed sufficiently threatened to warrant it.[27][36]

Paramilitary Police forces
[edit]

The British created three paramilitary police forces to supplement the work of the RIC, recruited mostly from World War I veterans. The first were the "Temporary Constables" (better known as the "Black and Tans" after their uniform colours). They were demobilised servicemen from mainland Britain, who were sometimes given abbreviated training, and sent into the existing police stations. The first Black and Tans arrived in March 1920. The next group were the Temporary Cadets or Auxiliary Division (known as the "Auxies").[37][38][39] These men were former military officers recruited to act separate from the regular force. They were enrolled as officer cadets, with the effective rank of sergeant. The last group was the Ulster Special Constabulary (USC), which, as the name implies, functioned only in the counties of Ulster, and was recruited locally, almost entirely from the Loyalist/Protestant population. Unlike the Black and Tans and the Auxiliaries, the USC was separate from the RIC and had its own command. It was recruited extensively from the UVF and was known for its Anti-Catholicism.[40][41][42][43]

Irish republican

[edit]
West Connemara IRA flying column

On 25 November 1913, the Irish Volunteers were formed by Eoin MacNeill in response to the paramilitary Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) that had been founded earlier in the year to fight against home rule.[44] Also in 1913, the Irish Citizen Army was founded by the trade unionists and socialists James Larkin and James Connolly following a series of violent incidents between trade unionists and the Dublin police in the Dublin lock-out.[45] In June 1914, Nationalist leader John Redmond forced the Volunteers to give his nominees a majority on the ruling committee. When, in September 1914, Redmond encouraged the Volunteers to enlist in the British Army, a faction led by Eoin MacNeill broke with the Redmondites, who became known as the National Volunteers, rather than fight for Britain in the war.[45] Many of the National Volunteers did enlist, and the majority of the men in the 16th (Irish) Division of the British Army had formerly served in the National Volunteers.[46] The Irish Volunteers and the Irish Citizen Army launched the Easter Rising against British rule in 1916, when an Irish Republic was proclaimed. Thereafter they became known as the Irish Republican Army (IRA). Between 1919 and 1921 the IRA claimed to have a total strength of 70,000, but only about 3,000 were actively engaged in fighting against the Crown.[47] The IRA distrusted those Irishmen who had fought in the British Army during the First World War, but there were exceptions, such as Emmet Dalton, Tom Barry and Martin Doyle.[47] The basic structure of the IRA was the flying column which could number between 20 and 100 men.[47] Finally, Michael Collins created the "Squad"—gunmen responsible to himself who were assigned special duties such as the assassination of policemen and suspected informers within the IRA.[47]

Course of the war

[edit]

Pre-war violence

[edit]

The years between the Easter Rising of 1916 and the beginning of the War of Independence in 1919 were not bloodless. Thomas Ashe, one of the Volunteer leaders imprisoned for his role in the 1916 rebellion, died on hunger strike, after attempted force-feeding in 1917. In 1918, during disturbances arising out of the anti-conscription campaign, six civilians died in confrontations with the police and British Army and more than 1,000 people were arrested. There were raids for arms by the Volunteers,[48] and two Kerry Volunteers (John Brown and Robert Laide) were shot and killed on 16 April 1918 during a raid on the police barracks at Gortalea. Those men were the first Volunteers to be killed during a raid for arms.[49] At this time there was at least one shooting of a Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC) policeman, and an RIC barracks in Kerry was burnt.[50] The attacks brought a British military presence from the summer of 1918, which only briefly quelled the violence, and an increase in police raids.[51] However, there was as yet no co-ordinated armed campaign against British forces or RIC. In County Cork, four rifles were seized from the Eyeries barracks in March 1918, and men from the barracks were beaten that August.[51] In early July 1918, Volunteers ambushed two RIC men who had been stationed to stop a feis being held on the road between Ballingeary and Ballyvourney in the first armed attack on the RIC since the Easter Rising; one was shot in the neck, the other beaten, and police carbines and ammunition were seized.[51][52] Patrols in Bantry and Ballyvourney were badly beaten in September and October. In November 1918, Armistice Day was marked by severe rioting in Dublin that left over 100 British soldiers injured.[53]

Initial hostilities

[edit]
Police wanted poster for Dan Breen, one of those involved in the Soloheadbeg Ambush in 1919.

While it was not clear in the beginning of 1919 that the Dáil ever intended to gain independence by military means, and war was not explicitly threatened in Sinn Féin's 1918 manifesto,[54] an incident occurred on 21 January 1919, the same day as the First Dáil convened. The Soloheadbeg Ambush, in County Tipperary, was led by Seán Treacy, Séumas Robinson, Seán Hogan and Dan Breen acting on their own initiative. The IRA attacked and shot two RIC officers, Constables James McDonnell and Patrick O'Connell,[55] who were escorting explosives. Breen later recalled:

...we took the action deliberately, having thought over the matter and talked it over between us. Treacy had stated to me that the only way of starting a war was to kill someone, and we wanted to start a war, so we intended to kill some of the police whom we looked upon as the foremost and most important branch of the enemy forces. The only regret that we had following the ambush was that there were only two policemen in it, instead of the six we had expected.[56]

This is widely regarded as the beginning of the War of Independence.[57] The British government declared South Tipperary a Special Military Area under the Defence of the Realm Act two days later.[58] The war was not formally declared by the Dáil, and it ran its course parallel to the Dáil's political life. On 10 April 1919 the Dáil was told:

As regards the Republican prisoners, we must always remember that this country is at war with England and so we must in a sense regard them as necessary casualties in the great fight.[59]

In January 1921, two years after the war had started, the Dáil debated "whether it was feasible to accept formally a state of war that was being thrust on them, or not", and decided not to declare war.[60] Then on 11 March, Dáil Éireann President Éamon de Valera called for acceptance of a "state of war with England". The Dail voted unanimously to empower him to declare war whenever he saw fit, but he did not formally do so.[61]

Violence spreads

[edit]
Wall plaque in Great Denmark Street, Dublin where the Dublin IRA Active Service Unit was founded.

Volunteers began to attack British government property, carry out raids for arms and funds and target and kill prominent members of the British administration. The first was Resident Magistrate John C. Milling, who was shot dead in Westport, County Mayo, for having sent Volunteers to prison for unlawful assembly and drilling.[62] They mimicked the successful tactics of the Boers' fast violent raids without uniform. Although some republican leaders, notably Éamon de Valera, favoured classic conventional warfare to legitimise the new republic in the eyes of the world, the more practically experienced Collins and the broader IRA leadership opposed these tactics as they had led to the military débacle of 1916. Others, notably Arthur Griffith, preferred a campaign of civil disobedience rather than armed struggle.[63]

During the early part of the conflict, roughly from 1919 to the middle of 1920, there was a relatively limited amount of violence. Much of the nationalist campaign involved popular mobilisation and the creation of a republican "state within a state" in opposition to British rule. British journalist Robert Lynd wrote in The Daily News in July 1920 that:

So far as the mass of people are concerned, the policy of the day is not active but a passive policy. Their policy is not so much to attack the Government as to ignore it and to build up a new government by its side.[64]

Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC) as special target

[edit]
A group of RIC officers in 1917

The IRA's main target throughout the conflict was the mainly Irish Catholic Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC), the British government's armed police force in Ireland, outside Dublin. Its members and barracks (especially the more isolated ones) were vulnerable, and they were a source of much-needed arms. The RIC numbered 9,700 men stationed in 1,500 barracks throughout Ireland.[65]

A policy of ostracism of RIC men was announced by the Dáil on 11 April 1919.[62] This proved successful in demoralising the force as the war went on, as people turned their faces from a force increasingly compromised by association with British government repression.[66] The rate of resignation went up and recruitment in Ireland dropped off dramatically. Often, the RIC were reduced to buying food at gunpoint, as shops and other businesses refused to deal with them. Some RIC men co-operated with the IRA through fear or sympathy, supplying the organisation with valuable information. By contrast with the effectiveness of the widespread public boycott of the police, the military actions carried out by the IRA against the RIC at this time were relatively limited. In 1919, 11 RIC men and 4 Dublin Metropolitan Police G Division detectives were killed and another 20 RIC wounded.[67]

Other aspects of mass participation in the conflict included strikes by organised workers, in opposition to the British presence in Ireland. In Limerick in April 1919, a general strike was called by the Limerick Trades and Labour Council, as a protest against the declaration of a "Special Military Area" under the Defence of the Realm Act, which covered most of Limerick city and a part of the county. Special permits, to be issued by the RIC, would now be required to enter the city. The Trades Council's special Strike Committee controlled the city for fourteen days in an episode that is known as the Limerick Soviet.[68]

Similarly, in May 1920, Dublin dockers refused to handle any war matériel and were soon joined by the Irish Transport and General Workers' Union, who banned railway drivers from carrying members of the British forces. Blackleg train drivers were brought over from England, after drivers refused to carry British troops. The strike badly hampered British troop movements until December 1920, when it was called off.[69] The British government managed to bring the situation to an end, when they threatened to withhold grants from the railway companies, which would have meant that workers would no longer have been paid.[70] Attacks by the IRA also steadily increased, and by early 1920, they were attacking isolated RIC stations in rural areas, causing them to be abandoned as the police retreated to the larger towns.

Collapse of the British administration

[edit]

In early April 1920, 400 abandoned RIC barracks were burned to the ground to prevent them being used again, along with almost one hundred income tax offices. The RIC withdrew from much of the countryside, leaving it in the hands of the IRA.[71] In June–July 1920, assizes failed all across the south and west of Ireland; trials by jury could not be held because jurors would not attend. The collapse of the court system demoralised the RIC and many police resigned or retired. In August 1920 the Chief Secretary for Ireland Hamar Greenwood reported that 556 Constables and 313 Magistrates had resigned within two-month period.[72] The Irish Republican Police (IRP) was founded between April and June 1920, under the authority of Dáil Éireann and the former IRA Chief of Staff Cathal Brugha to replace the RIC and to enforce the ruling of the Dáil Courts, set up under the Irish Republic. By 1920, the IRP had a presence in 21 of Ireland's 32 counties.[73] The Dáil Courts were generally socially conservative, despite their revolutionary origins, and halted the attempts of some landless farmers at redistribution of land from wealthier landowners to poorer farmers.[74]

The Inland Revenue ceased to operate in most of Ireland. People were instead encouraged to subscribe to Collins' "National Loan", set up to raise funds for the young government and its army.[75] By the end of the year the loan had reached £358,000. It eventually reached £380,000. An even larger amount, totalling over $5 million, was raised in the United States by Irish Americans and sent to Ireland to finance the Republic.[70] Rates were still paid to local councils but nine out of eleven of these were controlled by Sinn Féin, who naturally refused to pass them on to the British government.[74] By mid-1920, the Irish Republic was a reality in the lives of many people, enforcing its own law, maintaining its own armed forces and collecting its own taxes. The British Liberal journal, The Nation, wrote in August 1920 that "the central fact of the present situation in Ireland is that the Irish Republic exists".[64]

The British forces, in trying to re-assert their control over the country, often resorted to arbitrary reprisals against republican activists and the civilian population. An unofficial government policy of reprisals began in 1919 in Fermoy, County Cork, when 200 soldiers of the King's Shropshire Light Infantry looted and burned the main businesses of the town on 8 September, after a member of their regiment—who was the first British Army soldier to die in the war—was killed in an armed raid by local IRA volunteers[76] on a church parade the day before (7 September). The ambushers were members of a unit of the No. 2 Cork Brigade under the command of Liam Lynch, who also wounded four British soldiers and disarmed the rest before fleeing in their cars. The local coroner's inquest refused to return a murder verdict over the soldier and local businessmen who had sat on the jury were targeted in the reprisal.[77]

Arthur Griffith estimated that in the first 18 months of the conflict, British forces carried out 38,720 raids on private homes, arrested 4,982 suspects, committed 1,604 armed assaults, carried out 102 indiscriminate shootings and burnings in towns and villages, and killed 77 people including women and children.[78] In March 1920, Tomás Mac Curtain, the Sinn Féin Lord Mayor of Cork, was shot dead in front of his wife at his home, by men with blackened faces who were seen returning to the local police barracks. The jury at the inquest into his death returned a verdict of wilful murder against David Lloyd George (the British Prime Minister) and District Inspector Swanzy, among others. Swanzy was later tracked down and killed in Lisburn, County Antrim. This pattern of killings and reprisals escalated in the second half of 1920 and in 1921.[79]

IRA organisation and operations

[edit]
Michael Collins

Collins was a driving force behind the independence movement. Nominally the Minister of Finance in the Republic's government and IRA Director of Intelligence, he was involved in providing funds and arms to the IRA units and in the selection of officers. Collins' charisma and organisational capability galvanised many who came in contact with him. He established what proved an effective network of spies among sympathetic members of the Dublin Metropolitan Police's G Division and other important branches of the British administration. The G Division men were a relatively small political division active in subverting the republican movement. They were detested by the IRA as often they were used to identify volunteers, who would have been unknown to British soldiers or the later Black and Tans. Collins set up the "Squad", a group of men whose sole duty was to seek out and kill "G-men" and other British spies and agents. Collins' Squad began killing RIC intelligence officers in July 1919.[80] Many G-men were offered a chance to resign or leave Ireland by the IRA. One spy who escaped with his life was F. Digby Hardy, who was exposed by Arthur Griffith before an "IRA" meeting, which in fact consisted of Irish and foreign journalists, and then advised to take the next boat out of Dublin.[81]

The Chief of Staff of the IRA was Richard Mulcahy, who was responsible for organising and directing IRA units around the country.[82] In theory, both Collins and Mulcahy were responsible to Cathal Brugha, the Dáil's Minister of Defence, but, in practice, Brugha had only a supervisory role, recommending or objecting to specific actions. A great deal also depended on IRA leaders in local areas (such as Liam Lynch, Tom Barry, Seán Moylan, Seán Mac Eoin and Ernie O'Malley) who organised guerrilla activity, largely on their own initiative. For most of the conflict, IRA activity was concentrated in Munster and Dublin, with only isolated active IRA units elsewhere, such as in County Roscommon, north County Longford and western County Mayo.

While the paper membership of the IRA, carried over from the Irish Volunteers, was over 100,000 men, Collins estimated that only 15,000 were active in the IRA during the war, with about 3,000 on active service at any time. There were also support organisations Cumann na mBan (the IRA women's group) and Fianna Éireann (youth movement), who carried weapons and intelligence for IRA men and secured food and lodgings for them. The IRA benefitted from the widespread help given to them by the general Irish population, who generally refused to pass information to the RIC and the British military and who often provided "safe houses" and provisions to IRA units "on the run".

Much of the IRA's popularity arose from the excessive reaction of the British forces to IRA activity. When Éamon de Valera returned from the United States, he demanded in the Dáil that the IRA desist from the ambushes and assassinations, which were allowing the British to portray it as a terrorist group and to take on the British forces with conventional military methods. The proposal was immediately dismissed.

Martial law

[edit]
A group of "Black and Tans" and Auxiliaries in Dublin, April 1921

The British increased the use of force; reluctant to deploy the regular British Army into the country in greater numbers, they set up two auxiliary police units to reinforce the RIC. The first of these, quickly nicknamed as the Black and Tans, were seven thousand strong and mainly ex-British soldiers demobilised after World War I. Deployed to Ireland in March 1920, most came from English and Scottish cities. While officially they were part of the RIC, in reality they were a paramilitary force. After their deployment in March 1920, they rapidly gained a reputation for drunkenness and poor discipline. The wartime experience of most Black and Tans did not suit them for police duties and their violent behavior antagonised many previously neutral civilians.[83]

In response to and retaliation for IRA actions, in the summer of 1920, the Tans burned and sacked numerous small towns throughout Ireland, including Balbriggan,[84] Trim,[85] Templemore[86] and others. In other acts of reprisal, between April and August 1920 over 100 mills, creameries and other economic targets were destroyed or burned.[87]

In July 1920, another quasi-military police body, the Auxiliaries, consisting of 2,215 former British army officers, arrived in Ireland. The Auxiliaries had a reputation just as bad as the Tans for their mistreatment of the civilian population but tended to be more effective and more willing to take on the IRA. The policy of reprisals, which involved public denunciation or denial and private approval, was famously satirised by Lord Hugh Cecil when he said: "It seems to be agreed that there is no such thing as reprisals but they are having a good effect."[88]

On 9 August 1920, the British Parliament passed the Restoration of Order in Ireland Act. It replaced the trial by jury by courts-martial by regulation for those areas where IRA activity was prevalent.[89]

On 10 December 1920, martial law was proclaimed in Counties Cork, Kerry, Limerick and Tipperary in Munster; in January 1921 martial law was extended to the rest of Munster in Counties Clare and Waterford, as well as counties Kilkenny and Wexford in Leinster.[90]

It also suspended all coroners' courts because of the large number of warrants served on members of the British forces and replaced them with "military courts of enquiry".[91] The powers of military courts-martial were extended to cover the whole population and were empowered to use the death penalty and internment without trial; Government payments to local governments in Sinn Féin hands were suspended. This act has been interpreted by historians as a choice by Prime Minister David Lloyd George to put down the rebellion in Ireland rather than negotiate with the republican leadership.[92] As a result, violence escalated steadily from that summer and sharply after November 1920 until July 1921. It was in this period that a mutiny broke out among the Connaught Rangers, stationed in India. Two were killed whilst trying to storm an armoury and one was later executed.[93]

Escalation: October–December 1920

[edit]
British soldiers and relatives of the victims outside Jervis Street Hospital during the military enquiry into the Bloody Sunday shootings at Croke Park

A number of events dramatically escalated the conflict in late 1920. First the Lord Mayor of Cork, Terence MacSwiney, died on hunger strike in Brixton Prison in London in October, while two other IRA prisoners on hunger strike, Joe Murphy and Michael Fitzgerald, died in Cork Jail. The killing of an unarmed pregnant mother Eileen Quinn in County Galway on 1 November 1920 lead to public outrage inspiring two poems by W. B. Yeats and prompting Lady Gregory to write articles of condemnation.[94]

Sunday, 21 November 1920, was a day of dramatic bloodshed in Dublin that became known as Bloody Sunday. In the early morning, Collins' Squad attempted to wipe out leading British intelligence operatives in the capital, in particular the Cairo Gang, killing 16 men (including two cadets, one alleged informer, and one possible case of mistaken identity) and wounding five others. The attacks took place at different places (hotels and lodgings) in Dublin.[95]

In response, RIC men drove in trucks into Croke Park (Dublin's GAA football and hurling ground) during a football match, shooting into the crowd. Fourteen civilians were killed, including one of the players, Michael Hogan, and a further 65 people were wounded.[96] Later that day two republican prisoners, Dick McKee, Peadar Clancy and an unassociated friend, Conor Clune who had been arrested with them, were killed in Dublin Castle. The official account was that the three men were shot "while trying to escape", which was rejected by Irish nationalists, who were certain the men had been tortured and then murdered.[97]

On 28 November 1920, one week later, the West Cork unit of the IRA, under Tom Barry, ambushed a patrol of Auxiliaries at Kilmichael, County Cork, killing all but one of the 18-man patrol.

These actions marked a significant escalation of the conflict. In response, the counties of Cork, Kerry, Limerick, and Tipperary—all in the province of Munster—were put under martial law on 10 December under the Restoration of Order in Ireland Act; this was followed on 5 January in the rest of Munster and in counties Kilkenny and Wexford in the province of Leinster.[90] Shortly afterwards, in January 1921, "official reprisals" were sanctioned by the British and they began with the burning of seven houses in Midleton, County Cork. Questioned in the House of Commons in June 1921, Attorney-General for Ireland Denis Henry stated that he was informed by Commander-in-Chief Nevil Macready that 191 houses were destroyed in official reprisals in the area under martial law since January of that year.[98] In December 1920 Macready informed the Cabinet of the British Government that Military Governors in the martial law areas had been authorized to conduct reprisals.[99]

Aftermath of the burning of Cork by British forces

On 11 December, the centre of Cork City was burnt out by the Black and Tans, who then shot at firefighters trying to tackle the blaze, in reprisal for an IRA ambush in the city on 11 December 1920 which killed one Auxiliary and wounded eleven.[100] In May of that year, the IRA began a campaign of big house burnings which totaled 26 in Cork alone.[101]

Attempts at a truce in December 1920 were scuppered by Hamar Greenwood, who insisted on a surrender of IRA weapons first.[102]

Peak of violence: December 1920 – July 1921

[edit]

During the following eight months until the Truce of July 1921, there was a spiralling of the death toll in the conflict, with 1,000 people including the RIC police, army, IRA volunteers and civilians, being killed in the months between January and July 1921 alone.[103] This represents about 70% of the total casualties for the entire three-year conflict. In addition, 4,500 IRA personnel (or suspected sympathisers) were interned in this time.[104] In the middle of this violence, de Valera (as President of Dáil Éireann) acknowledged the state of war with Britain in March 1921.[105]

Between 1 November 1920 and 7 June 1921 twenty-four men were executed by the British.[106] The first IRA volunteer to be executed was Kevin Barry, one of The Forgotten Ten who were buried in unmarked graves in unconsecrated ground inside Mountjoy Prison until 2001.[107] On 1 February, the first execution under martial law of an IRA man took place: Cornelius Murphy, of Millstreet in County Cork, was shot in Cork City. On 28 February, six more were executed, again in Cork.

On 19 March 1921, Tom Barry's 100-strong West Cork IRA unit fought an action against 1,200 British troops—the Crossbarry Ambush. Barry's men narrowly avoided being trapped by converging British columns and inflicted between ten and thirty killed on the British side. Just two days later, on 21 March, the Kerry IRA attacked a train at the Headford junction near Killarney. Twenty British soldiers were killed or injured, as well as two IRA men and three civilians. Most of the actions in the war were on a smaller scale than this, but the IRA did have other significant victories in ambushes, for example at Millstreet in Cork and at Scramogue in Roscommon, also in March 1921 and at Tourmakeady and Carrowkennedy in Mayo in May and June. Equally common, however, were failed ambushes, the worst of which, for example at Mourneabbey,[108] Upton and Clonmult in Cork in February 1921, saw six, three, and twelve IRA men killed respectively and more captured. The IRA in Mayo suffered a comparable reverse at Kilmeena, while the Leitrim flying column was almost wiped out at Selton Hill. Fears of informers after such failed ambushes often led to a spate of IRA shootings of informers, real and imagined.

The biggest single loss for the IRA, however, came in Dublin. On 25 May 1921, several hundred IRA men from the Dublin Brigade occupied and burned the Custom House (the centre of local government in Ireland) in Dublin city centre. Symbolically, this was intended to show that British rule in Ireland was untenable. However, from a military point of view, it was a heavy defeat in which five IRA men were killed and over eighty captured.[109] This showed the IRA was not well enough equipped or trained to take on British forces in a conventional manner. However, it did not, as is sometimes claimed, cripple the IRA in Dublin. The Dublin Brigade carried out 107 attacks in the city in May and 93 in June, showing a falloff in activity, but not a dramatic one. However, by July 1921, most IRA units were chronically short of both weapons and ammunition, with over 3,000 prisoners interned.[110] Also, for all their effectiveness at guerrilla warfare, they had, as Richard Mulcahy recalled, "as yet not been able to drive the enemy out of anything but a fairly good sized police barracks".[111]

Still, many military historians have concluded that the IRA fought a largely successful and lethal guerrilla war, which forced the British government to conclude that the IRA could not be defeated militarily.[112] The failure of the British efforts to put down the guerrillas was illustrated by the events of "Black Whitsun" on 13–15 May 1921. A general election for the Parliament of Southern Ireland was held on 13 May. Sinn Féin won 124 of the new parliament's 128 seats unopposed, but its elected members refused to take their seats. Under the terms of the Government of Ireland Act 1920, the Parliament of Southern Ireland was therefore dissolved, and executive and legislative authority over Southern Ireland was effectively transferred to the Lord Lieutenant (assisted by Crown appointees). Over the next two days (14–15 May), the IRA killed fifteen policemen. These events marked the complete failure of the British Coalition Government's Irish policy—both the failure to enforce a settlement without negotiating with Sinn Féin and a failure to defeat the IRA.

By the time of the truce, however, many republican leaders, including Collins, were convinced that if the war went on for much longer, there was a chance that the IRA campaign as it was then organised could be brought to a standstill. Because of this, plans were drawn up to "bring the war to England".[citation needed] The IRA did take the campaign to the streets of Glasgow.[113] It was decided that key economic targets, such as the Liverpool docks, would be bombed. The units charged with these missions would more easily evade capture because England was not under, and British public opinion was unlikely to accept, martial law. These plans were abandoned because of the truce.

Aftermath

[edit]

Truce: July–December 1921

[edit]
A crowd gathers at the Mansion House in Dublin in the days before the truce

The war of independence in Ireland ended with a truce on 11 July 1921. The conflict had reached a stalemate. Talks that had looked promising the previous year had petered out in December when Prime Minister of the United Kingdom David Lloyd George insisted that the IRA first surrender their arms. Fresh talks, after the Prime Minister had come under pressure from H. H. Asquith and the Liberal opposition, the Labour Party and the Trades Union Congress, resumed in the spring and resulted in the truce. From the point of view of the British government, it appeared as if the IRA's guerrilla campaign would continue indefinitely, with spiralling costs in British casualties and in money. More importantly, the British government was facing severe criticism at home and abroad for the actions of British forces in Ireland. On 6 June 1921, the British made their first conciliatory gesture, calling off the policy of house burnings as reprisals. On the other side, IRA leaders, and in particular Collins, felt that the IRA as it was then organised could not continue indefinitely. It had been hard pressed by the deployment of more regular British soldiers to Ireland and by the lack of arms and ammunition.

The initial breakthrough that led to the truce was credited to three people: King George V, Prime Minister of South Africa General Jan Smuts and David Lloyd George. The King, who had made his unhappiness at the behaviour of the Black and Tans in Ireland well known to his government, was dissatisfied with the official speech prepared for him for the opening of the new Parliament of Northern Ireland, created as a result of the partition of Ireland. Smuts, a close friend of the King, suggested to him that the opportunity should be used to make an appeal for conciliation in Ireland. The King asked him to draft his ideas on paper. Smuts prepared this draft and gave copies to the King and to Lloyd George. Lloyd George then invited Smuts to attend a British cabinet meeting consultations on the "interesting" proposals Lloyd George had received, without either man informing the Cabinet that Smuts had been their author. Faced with the endorsement of them by Smuts, the King and Lloyd George, the ministers reluctantly agreed to the King's planned "reconciliation in Ireland" speech.

The speech, when delivered in Belfast on 22 June, was universally well received. It called on "all Irishmen to pause, to stretch out the hand of forbearance and conciliation, to forgive and to forget, and to join in making for the land they love a new era of peace, contentment, and good will".[114]

On 24 June 1921, the British coalition government's cabinet decided to propose talks with the leader of Sinn Féin. Coalition Liberals and Unionists agreed that an offer to negotiate would strengthen the government's position if Sinn Féin refused. Austen Chamberlain, the new leader of the Unionist Party, said that "the King's Speech ought to be followed up as a last attempt at peace before we go the full lengths of martial law".[115] Seizing the momentum, Lloyd George wrote to Éamon de Valera as "the chosen leader of the great majority in Southern Ireland" on 24 June, suggesting a conference.[116] Sinn Féin responded by agreeing to talks. De Valera and Lloyd George ultimately agreed to a truce that was intended to end the fighting and lay the ground for detailed negotiations. Its terms were signed on 9 July and came into effect on 11 July. Negotiations on a settlement, however, were delayed for some months as the British government insisted that the IRA first decommission its weapons, but this demand was eventually dropped. It was agreed that British troops would remain confined to their barracks.

Most IRA officers on the ground interpreted the truce merely as a temporary respite and continued recruiting and training volunteers. Nor did attacks on the RIC or British Army cease altogether. Between December 1921 and February of the next year, there were 80 recorded attacks by the IRA on the soon-to-be disbanded RIC, leaving 12 dead.[117] On 18 February 1922, Ernie O'Malley's IRA unit raided the RIC barracks at Clonmel, taking 40 policemen prisoner and seizing over 600 weapons and thousands of rounds of ammunition.[118] In April 1922, in the Dunmanway killings, an IRA party in Cork killed 10 local suspected Protestant informers in retaliation for the shooting of one of their men. Those killed were named in captured British files as informers before the truce signed the previous July.[119] Over 100 Protestant families fled the area after the killings.[citation needed]

Treaty

[edit]
Members of the Irish negotiation committee returning to Ireland in December 1921

Ultimately, the peace talks led to the negotiation of the Anglo-Irish Treaty (6 December 1921), which was then ratified in triplicate: by Dáil Éireann on 7 January 1922 (so giving it legal legitimacy under the governmental system of the Irish Republic), by the House of Commons of Southern Ireland in January 1922 (so giving it constitutional legitimacy according to British theory of who was the legal government in Ireland), and by both Houses of the British parliament.[120][121]

The Treaty allowed Northern Ireland, which had been created by the Government of Ireland Act 1920, to opt out of the Free State if it wished, which it duly did on 8 December 1922 under the procedures laid down. As agreed, an Irish Boundary Commission was then created to decide on the precise location of the border of the Free State and Northern Ireland.[122] The republican negotiators understood that the commission would redraw the border according to local nationalist or unionist majorities. Since the 1920 local elections in Ireland had resulted in outright nationalist majorities in County Fermanagh, County Tyrone, the City of Derry and in many district electoral divisions of County Armagh and County Londonderry (all north and west of the "interim" border), this might well have left Northern Ireland unviable. However, the Commission chose to leave the border unchanged; as a trade-off, the money owed to Britain by the Free State under the Treaty was cancelled (see Partition of Ireland).[123]

A new system of government was created for the new Irish Free State, though for the first year two governments co-existed; an Dáil Ministry headed by President Griffith, and a Provisional Government nominally answerable to the House of Commons of Southern Ireland and appointed by the Lord Lieutenant.[124]

Irish Civil War

[edit]

Most of the Irish independence movement's leaders were willing to accept this compromise, at least for the time being, though many militant republicans were not. A majority[citation needed] of the pre-Truce IRA who had fought in the War of Independence, led by Liam Lynch, refused to accept the Treaty and in March 1922 repudiated the authority of the Dáil and the new Free State government, which it accused of betraying the ideal of the Irish Republic. It also broke the Oath of Allegiance to the Irish Republic which the Dáil had instated on 20 August 1919.[125] The anti-Treaty IRA were supported by the former president of the Republic, Éamon de Valera, and ministers Cathal Brugha and Austin Stack.[126]

The funeral of Michael Collins
St. Mary's Pro-Cathedral, Dublin, August 1922

While the violence in the North was still raging, the South of Ireland was preoccupied with the split in the Dáil and in the IRA over the Treaty. In April 1922, an executive of IRA officers repudiated the Treaty and the authority of the Provisional Government which had been set up to administer it. These republicans held that the Dáil did not have the right to disestablish the Irish Republic. A hardline group of anti-Treaty IRA men occupied several public buildings in Dublin in an effort to bring down the Treaty and restart the war with the British. There were a number of armed confrontations between pro and anti-Treaty troops before matters came to a head in late June 1922.[121] Desperate to get the new Irish Free State off the ground and under British pressure, Collins attacked the anti-Treaty militants in Dublin, causing fighting to break out around the country.[121]

The subsequent civil war lasted until mid-1923 and cost the lives of many of the leaders of the independence movement, notably the head of the Provisional Government Michael Collins, ex-minister Cathal Brugha, and anti-Treaty republicans Harry Boland, Rory O'Connor, Liam Mellows, Liam Lynch and many others: total casualties have never been determined but were perhaps higher than those in the earlier fighting against the British. President Arthur Griffith also died of a cerebral haemorrhage during the conflict.[127]

Following the deaths of Griffith and Collins, W. T. Cosgrave became head of government. On 6 December 1922, following the coming into legal existence of the Irish Free State, W. T. Cosgrave became President of the Executive Council, the first internationally recognised head of an independent Irish government.[citation needed]

The civil war ended in mid-1923 in defeat for the anti-Treaty side.[128]

North-east

[edit]
Conflict deaths in Belfast 1920–1922.
  50–100 deaths per km2
  100–150 deaths per km2
  over 150 deaths per km2

The conflict in the north-east had a sectarian aspect. While Ireland as a whole had an Irish nationalist and Catholic majority, Unionists and Protestants were a majority in the north-east, largely due to 17th century British colonization. These Ulster Unionists wanted to maintain ties to Britain and did not want to be part of an independent Ireland. They had threatened to oppose Irish home rule with violence. The British government proposed to solve this by partitioning Ireland on roughly political and religious lines, creating two self-governing territories of the UK: Northern Ireland and Southern Ireland. Irish nationalists opposed this, most of them supporting the all-island Irish Republic.

The IRA carried out attacks on British forces in the north-east, but was less active than in the south. Protestant loyalists attacked the Catholic community in reprisal. There were outbreaks of sectarian violence from June 1920 to June 1922, influenced by political and military events. Most of it was in the city of Belfast, which saw "savage and unprecedented" communal violence between Protestants and Catholics.[129] In the Belfast violence, Hibernians were more involved on the Catholic/nationalist side than the IRA,[130] while groups such as the Ulster Volunteers were involved on the Protestant/loyalist side. There was rioting, gun battles and bombings. Almost 1,000 homes and businesses were destroyed and people were expelled from workplaces and mixed neighbourhoods. More than 500 were killed[131] and more than 10,000 became refugees, most of them Catholics.[132] The British Army was deployed and the Ulster Special Constabulary (USC) was formed to help the regular police. The USC was almost wholly Protestant and some of its members carried out reprisal attacks on Catholics.[133] Conflict continued in Northern Ireland after the July 1921 truce; both communal violence in Belfast and guerrilla conflict in rural border areas.[134]

Irish nationalists argued that the violence around Belfast was a pogrom against Catholics/nationalists, as Catholics were a quarter of the city's population but made up two-thirds of those killed, suffered 80% of the property destruction and made up 80% of refugees.[131] Historian Alan Parkinson says the term 'pogrom' is misleading, as the violence was not all one-sided nor co-ordinated.[135] The Irish government estimated that 50,000 left Northern Ireland permanently due to violence and intimidation.[136]

Summer 1920

[edit]
Catholic-owned businesses destroyed by loyalists in Lisburn, August 1920.

While the IRA was less active in the north-east than in the south, Ulster unionists saw themselves as besieged by Irish republicans. The January and June 1920 local elections saw Irish nationalists and republicans win control of many northern urban councils, as well as Tyrone and Fermanagh county councils. Derry City had its first Irish nationalist and Catholic mayor.[137]

Fighting broke out in Derry on 18 June 1920 and lasted a week. Catholic homes were attacked in the mainly Protestant Waterside, and Catholics fled by boat across the Foyle while coming under fire. In the Cityside, Loyalists fired from the Fountain neighbourhood into Catholic streets, while the IRA occupied St Columb's College and returned fire. At least fourteen Catholics and five Protestants were killed in the violence.[138] Eventually, 1,500 British troops were deployed in Derry and imposed a curfew.[139]

On 17 July, British Colonel Gerald Smyth was assassinated by the IRA in Cork. He had allegedly told police officers to shoot civilians who did not immediately obey orders.[140] Smyth came from Banbridge, County Down. Loyalists retaliated by attacking many Catholic homes and businesses in Banbridge and expelling Catholics from their jobs, forcing many to flee the town.[141] There were similar attacks in nearby Dromore.[142]

On 21 July, loyalists drove 8,000 "disloyal" co-workers from their jobs in the Belfast shipyards, all of them either Catholics or Protestant labour activists. Some were viciously attacked.[143] This was partly in response to recent IRA actions and partly because of competition over jobs due to high unemployment. It was fuelled by rhetoric from Unionist politicians. In his Twelfth of July speech, Edward Carson had called for loyalists to take matters into their own hands, and had linked republicanism with socialism and the Catholic Church.[144] The expulsions sparked fierce sectarian rioting in Belfast, and British troops used machine-guns to disperse rioters. By the end of the day, eleven Catholics and eight Protestants were killed and hundreds wounded.[143] Catholic workers were soon driven out of all major Belfast factories. In response, the Dáil approved the 'Belfast Boycott' of Unionist-owned businesses and banks in the city. It was enforced by the IRA, who halted trains and lorries and destroyed goods.[145]

On 22 August, the IRA assassinated RIC Inspector Oswald Swanzy as he left church in Lisburn. Swanzy had been implicated in the killing of Cork Mayor Tomás Mac Curtain. In revenge, loyalists burned and looted hundreds of Catholic businesses and homes in Lisburn, forcing many Catholics to flee (see the Burnings in Lisburn). As a result, Lisburn was the first town to recruit special constables. After some of them were charged with rioting, their colleagues threatened to resign, and they were not prosecuted.[146]

Unionist leader James Craig.

In September, Unionist leader James Craig wrote to the British government demanding that a special constabulary be recruited from the ranks of the Ulster Volunteers. He warned, "Loyalist leaders now feel the situation is so desperate that unless the Government will take immediate action, it may be advisable for them to see what steps can be taken towards a system of organised reprisals against the rebels".[147] The USC was formed in October and, in the words of historian Michael Hopkinson, "amounted to an officially approved UVF".[147]

Spring–summer 1921

[edit]
The Lord Lieutenant inspecting troops outside Belfast City Hall on the day Northern Ireland's parliament first met.

After a lull in violence in the North, the conflict there intensified again in spring 1921. In February, as reprisal for the shooting of a Special Constable, USC and UVF men burned ten Catholic homes and a priest's house in Rosslea, County Fermanagh.[148] The following month, the IRA attacked the homes of sixteen Special Constables in the Rosslea district, killing three and wounding others.[149]

The Act of Partition came into force on 3 May 1921.[150] That month, James Craig secretly met Éamon de Valera in Dublin. They discussed the possibility of a truce in Ulster and an amnesty for prisoners. Craig proposed a compromise of limited independence for the South and autonomy for the North within the UK. The talks came to nothing and violence in the North continued.[151] Elections to the Northern parliament were held on 24 May, in which Unionists won most seats. Its parliament first met on 7 June and formed a devolved government, headed by Craig. Republican and nationalist members refused to attend. King George V addressed the ceremonial opening of the Northern parliament on 22 June.[150] The next day, a train carrying the king's armed escort, the 10th Royal Hussars, was derailed by an IRA bomb at Adavoyle, County Armagh. Five soldiers and a train guard were killed, as were fifty horses. A civilian bystander was also shot dead by British soldiers.[152]

Loyalists condemned the truce as a 'sell-out' to republicans.[153] On 10 July, a day before the ceasefire was to begin, police launched a raid against republicans in west Belfast. The IRA ambushed them on Raglan Street, killing an officer. This sparked a day of violence known as Belfast's Bloody Sunday. Protestant loyalists attacked Catholic enclaves in west Belfast, burning homes and businesses. This led to sectarian clashes between Protestants and Catholics, and gun battles between police and nationalists. The USC allegedly drove through Catholic enclaves firing indiscriminately.[154] Twenty people were killed or fatally wounded (including twelve Catholics and six Protestants) before the truce began at noon on 11 July.[155] After the truce came into effect on 11 July, the USC was demobilized (July–November 1921). The void left by the demobilized USC was filled by loyalist vigilante groups and a revived UVF.[156]

There were further outbreaks of violence in Belfast after the truce. Twenty people were killed in street fighting and assassinations from 29 August to 1 September 1921 and another thirty were killed from 21 to 25 November. Loyalists had by this time taken to throwing bombs randomly into Catholic streets and the IRA responded by bombing trams carrying Protestant workmen.[157]

Early 1922

[edit]

Despite the Dáil's acceptance of the Anglo-Irish Treaty in January 1922, which confirmed the future existence of Northern Ireland, there were clashes between the IRA and British forces along the new border from early 1922. In part, this reflected Collins' view that the Treaty was a "stepping stone", rather than a final settlement. That month, Collins became head of the new Irish Provisional Government and the Irish National Army was founded, though the IRA continued to exist.[158]

In January 1922, members of the Monaghan Gaelic football team were arrested by Northern police on their way to a match in Derry. Among them were IRA volunteers with plans to free IRA prisoners from Derry prison. In response, on the night of 7–8 February, IRA units crossed the border and captured almost fifty Special Constables and prominent loyalists in Fermanagh and Tyrone. They were to be held as hostages for the Monaghan prisoners. Several IRA volunteers were also captured during the raids.[159] This operation had been approved by Michael Collins, Richard Mulcahy, Frank Aiken and Eoin O'Duffy.[160] The Northern Ireland authorities responded by sealing-off many cross-border roads.[161]

In February and March 1922, violence in the North reached levels that had not been seen before. Between 11 February and 31 March, 51 Catholics were killed with 115 wounded, with 32 Protestants killed and 86 wounded.[162] On 11 February, IRA volunteers stopped a group of armed Special Constables at Clones railway station, County Monaghan. The USC unit was travelling by train from Belfast to Enniskillen (both in Northern Ireland), but the Provisional Government was unaware that British forces would be crossing through its territory. The IRA called on the Specials to surrender for questioning, but one of them shot dead an IRA sergeant. This sparked a firefight in which four Specials were killed and several wounded. Five others were captured.[163] The incident threatened to set off a major confrontation between North and South, and the British government temporarily suspended the withdrawal of British troops from the South. The Border Commission was set up to mediate in any future border disputes, but achieved very little.[164]

These incidents provoked retaliation attacks by loyalists against Catholics in Belfast, sparking further sectarian clashes. In the three days after the Clones incident, more than 30 people were killed in the city, including four Catholic children and two women who were killed by a loyalist grenade on Weaver Street.[164]

On 18 March, Northern police raided IRA headquarters in Belfast, seizing weapons and lists of IRA volunteers. The Provisional Government condemned this as a breach of the truce.[165] Over the next two weeks, the IRA raided several police barracks in the North, killed several officers and captured fifteen.[165][166]

On 24 March, six Catholics were shot dead by Special Constables who broke into the home of the McMahon family. This was in revenge for the IRA killing of two policemen.[167] A week later, six more Catholics were killed by Specials in another revenge attack, known as the Arnon Street massacre.[168]

Winston Churchill had arranged a meeting between Collins and James Craig on 21 January and the southern boycott of Belfast goods was lifted but then re-imposed after several weeks. The two leaders had further meetings, but despite a joint declaration that "peace is declared" on 30 March, violence continued.[169]

Summer 1922: Northern Offensive

[edit]
Still from the 1922 topical silent film 'Battle of Belleek' showing British troops with a captured IRA flag after the recapture of the village

In May 1922 the IRA launched a Northern Offensive, secretly backed by Collins, head of the Irish Provisional Government. By this time, the IRA was split over the Anglo-Irish Treaty, but both pro and anti-Treaty units were involved. Some weaponry sent by the British to arm the National Army were in fact given to IRA units and their weapons sent to the North.[170] However, the offensive was a failure. An IRA Belfast Brigade report in late May concluded that continuing the offensive was "futile and foolish" and would "place the Catholic population at the mercy of the Specials".[171]

In April and May 1922, the IRA's Third Northern Division (under the command of Seamus Woods and Roger McCorley) conducted attacks on over 86 commercial premises in Belfast leading to £500,000 in damages.[172] Multiple RIC barracks were attacked including the RIC Belfast Headquarters (Musgrave Street Barracks). After the 22 May assassination of West Belfast Unionist MP William Twaddell, the Northern government introduced internment and 350 IRA men were arrested in Belfast, crippling its organisation there.[173] The biggest clash of the IRA offensive was the Battle of Pettigo and Belleek, which ended with British troops using artillery to dislodge around 100 IRA volunteers from the border villages of Pettigo and Belleek, killing three volunteers. This was the last major confrontation between the IRA and British forces during the revolutionary period.[174] The cycle of sectarian violence in Belfast continued. In May, 75 people were killed in Belfast and another 30 in June. Several thousand Catholics fled the violence and sought refuge in Glasgow and Dublin.[175] On 17 June, in revenge for the killing of two Catholics by Specials, Frank Aiken's IRA unit shot dead six Protestant civilians in Altnaveigh, south Armagh. Three Specials were also ambushed and killed.[176]

Collins held Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson, MP for North Down, responsible for the attacks on Catholics in the North and may have been behind his assassination in June 1922, though who ordered the shooting is unproven.[177] The event helped to trigger the Irish Civil War. Winston Churchill insisted after the killing that Collins take action against the Anti-Treaty IRA, whom he assumed to be responsible.[178] The outbreak of civil war in the south ended the violence in the North, as the war demoralised the northern IRA and diverted the organisation from the issue of partition. The Irish Free State quietly ended Collins' policy of covert armed action in Northern Ireland.

The violence in the North was over by late 1922.[179]

Detention

[edit]

Ballykinlar internment camp was the first mass internment camp in Ireland during the Irish War of Independence holding almost 2,000 men.[180] Ballykinlar gained a reputation for brutality: three prisoners were shot dead and five died from maltreatment.[181] At HM Prison Crumlin Road in Belfast, Cork County Gaol (see 1920 Cork hunger strike) and Mountjoy jail in Dublin some of the political prisoners went on hunger strike. In 1920 two Irish republicans died as a result of hunger strikes—Michael Fitzgerald d. 17 October 1920 and Joe Murphy d. 25 October 1920.[182]

Irish republican internees at Ballykinlar Internment Camp 1920

Conditions during internment were not always good—during the 1920s, the vessel HMS Argenta was moored in Belfast Lough and used as a prison ship for the holding of Irish republicans by the British government after Bloody Sunday. Cloistered below decks in cages which held 50 internees, the prisoners were forced to use broken toilets which overflowed frequently into their communal area. Deprived of tables, the already weakened men ate off the floor, frequently succumbing to disease and illness as a result. There were several hunger strikes on the Argenta, including a major strike involving upwards of 150 men in the winter of 1923.[183]

Killing of alleged spies

[edit]

In recent decades, attention has been drawn to the IRA's killing of civilians in the south, who they alleged were informers. Several historians, notably Peter Hart have alleged that those killed in this manner were often simply considered "enemies" rather than being proven informers. Especially vulnerable, it is argued, were Protestants, ex-soldiers and tramps. "It was not merely (or even mainly) a matter of espionage, spies and spy hunters, it was a civil war between and within communities".[184] The notion that sectarianism was a factor in a majority of killings has been criticised, with opposing historians contending that Protestant victims were killed for their resistance to republican goals rather than their religious beliefs.[185][101]

Victims' bodies were often disfigured and left with notes that alleged espionage, claimed responsibility and/or discouraged similar deception.[185] Their hair forcefully removed, women were more often disfigured than killed, instead marked as supposed traitors.[185]

Propaganda war

[edit]
The symbol of the Republic:
The Irish tricolour which dated back to the Young Ireland rebellion of 1848
A symbol of British rule:
The standard of the Lord Lieutenant, using the union flag created under the Act of Union 1800

Another feature of the war was the use of propaganda by both sides.[186]

The British government also collected material on the liaison between Sinn Féin and Soviet Russia, in an unsuccessful attempt to portray Sinn Féin as a crypto-communist movement.[187]

The Catholic Church hierarchy was critical of the violence of both sides, but especially that of the IRA, continuing a long tradition of condemning militant republicanism. The Bishop of Kilmore, Patrick Finegan, said: "Any war... to be just and lawful must be backed by a well grounded hope of success. What hope of success have you against the mighty forces of the British Empire? None... none whatever and if it unlawful as it is, every life taken in pursuance of it is murder."[188] Thomas Gilmartin, the Archbishop of Tuam, issued a letter saying that IRA men who took part in ambushes "have broken the truce of God, they have incurred the guilt of murder".[189] However, in May 1921, Pope Benedict XV dismayed the British government when he issued a letter that exhorted the "English as well as Irish to calmly consider . . . some means of mutual agreement", as they had been pushing for a condemnation of the rebellion.[190] They declared that his comments "put HMG (His Majesty's Government) and the Irish murder gang on a footing of equality".[190]

Desmond FitzGerald and Erskine Childers were active in producing the Irish Bulletin, which detailed government atrocities which Irish and British newspapers were unwilling or unable to cover. It was printed secretly and distributed throughout Ireland, and to international press agencies and US, European and sympathetic British politicians.

While the military war made most of Ireland ungovernable from early 1920, it did not actually remove British forces from any part. But the success of Sinn Féin's propaganda campaign reduced the option of the British government to deepen the conflict; it worried in particular about the effect on British relations with the US, where groups like the American Committee for Relief in Ireland had so many eminent members. The British cabinet had not sought the war that had developed since 1919. By 1921 one of its members, Winston Churchill, reflected:

What was the alternative? It was to plunge one small corner of the empire into an iron repression, which could not be carried out without an admixture of murder and counter-murder.... Only national self-preservation could have excused such a policy, and no reasonable man could allege that self-preservation was involved.[191]

Casualties

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Monument to IRA fighters in Phibsborough, Dublin

According to The Dead of the Irish Revolution, 2,346 people were killed or died as a result of the conflict. This counts a small number of deaths before and after the war, from 1917 until the signing of the Treaty at the end of 1921. Of those killed, 919 were civilians, 523 were police personnel, 413 were British military personnel, and 491 were IRA volunteers[1] (although another source gives 550 IRA dead).[67] About 44% of these British military deaths were by misadventure (such as accidental shooting) and suicide while on active service, as were 10% of police losses and 14% of IRA losses.[192] About 36% of police personnel who died were born outside Ireland.[192]

At least 557 people were killed in political violence in what became Northern Ireland between July 1920 and July 1922. Many of these deaths took place after the truce that ended fighting in the rest of Ireland. Of these deaths, between 303 and 340 were Catholic civilians, between 172 and 196 were Protestant civilians, 82 were police personnel (38 RIC and 44 USC), and 35 were IRA volunteers. Most of the violence took place in Belfast: at least 452 people were killed there – 267 Catholics and 185 Protestants.[193]

Post-war evacuation of British forces

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Soldiers of a British cavalry regiment leaving Dublin in 1922

By October 1921 the British Army in Ireland numbered 57,000 men, along with 14,200 RIC police and some 2,600 auxiliaries and Black and Tans. The long-planned evacuation from dozens of barracks in what the army called "Southern Ireland" started on 12 January 1922, following the ratification of the Treaty and took nearly a year, organised by General Nevil Macready. It was a huge logistical operation, but within the month Dublin Castle and Beggars Bush Barracks were transferred to the Provisional Government. The RIC last paraded on 4 April and was formally disbanded on 31 August. By the end of May the remaining forces were concentrated in Dublin, Cork and Kildare. Tensions that led to the Irish Civil War were evident by then and evacuation was suspended. By November about 6,600 soldiers remained in Dublin at 17 locations. Finally on 17 December 1922 The Royal Barracks (now housing collections of the National Museum of Ireland) was transferred to General Richard Mulcahy and the garrison embarked at Dublin Port that evening.[194]

Compensation

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In May 1922 the British Government with the agreement of the Irish Provisional Government established a commission chaired by Lord Shaw of Dunfermline to examine compensation claims for material damage caused between 21 January 1919 and 11 July 1921.[195] The Irish Free State's Damage To Property (Compensation) Act, 1923 provided that only the Shaw Commission, and not the Criminal Injury Acts, could be used to claim compensation.[196] Originally, the British government paid claims from unionists and the Irish government those from nationalists; claims from "neutral" parties were shared.[197] After the 1925 collapse of the Irish Boundary Commission, the UK, Free State and Northern Ireland governments negotiated revisions to the 1921 Treaty; the Free State stopped contributing to the servicing of the UK national debt, but took over full responsibility for compensation for war damage, with the fund increased by 10% in 1926.[198] The Compensation (Ireland) Commission worked until March 1926, processing thousands of claims.[197]

Role of women in the war

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Constance Markievicz was a member of the Irish Citizen Army and fought in the Easter Rising. In 1919 she was appointed Minister for Labour in the Government of the Irish Republic

Although most of the fighting was carried out by men, women played a substantial supporting role in the Irish War of Independence. Before the Easter Rising of 1916, many Irish nationalist women were brought together through organisations fighting for women's suffrage, such as the Irish Women's Franchise League.[199] The republican socialist Irish Citizen Army promoted gender equality and many of these women—including Constance Markiewicz, Madeleine ffrench-Mullen, and Kathleen Lynn—joined the group.[200] In 1914, the all-female paramilitary group Cumann na mBan was launched as an auxiliary of the Irish Volunteers. During the Easter Rising, some women participated in fighting and carried messages between Irish Volunteer posts while under fire from British troops.[201] After the rebel defeat, Éamon de Valera opposed the participation of women in combat and they were limited to supporting roles.[202]

During the conflict, women hid IRA volunteers being sought by the British, nursed wounded volunteers, and gathered money to help republican prisoners and their families. Cumann na mBan engaged in undercover work to set back the British war effort. They smuggled guns, ammunition, and money to the IRA; Kathleen Clarke smuggled gold worth £2,000 from Limerick to Dublin for Collins.[203] Because they sheltered wanted men, many women were subject to raids on their homes by British forces, with acts of sexual violence sometimes being reported but not confirmed.[202] Intimidation was more commonly applied to women than physical violence.[204] It is estimated that there were between 3,000 and 9,000 members of Cumann na mBan during the war, and in 1921 there were 800 branches throughout the island. It is estimated that fewer than 50 women were imprisoned by the British during the war.[203]

Memorial

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A memorial called the Garden of Remembrance was erected in Dublin in 1966, on the fiftieth anniversary of the Easter Rising. The date of signing of the truce is commemorated by the National Day of Commemoration, when all those Irish men and women who fought in wars in specific armies (e.g., the Irish unit(s) fighting in the British Army in 1916 at the Battle of the Somme) are commemorated.

The last survivor of the conflict, Dan Keating (of the IRA), died in October 2007 at the age of 105.[205]

Cultural depictions

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Literature

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Television and film

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See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Irish War of Independence, spanning from January 1919 to July 1921, was a guerrilla campaign conducted by the Irish Republican Army (IRA) against British Crown forces, including the Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC), British Army units, and auxiliary police such as the Black and Tans and Auxiliaries, with the objective of establishing an independent Irish republic free from United Kingdom rule. The conflict ignited with the Soloheadbeg ambush on 21 January 1919, where IRA volunteers seized explosives and killed two RIC constables, coinciding with the First Dáil's declaration of independence following Sinn Féin's electoral triumph in 1918. Employing flying columns for mobile ambushes, assassinations of intelligence targets, and disruption of British administration through parallel Sinn Féin courts and local governance, the IRA's asymmetric tactics eroded British control, particularly in rural areas, while urban operations like Bloody Sunday in November 1920 saw mutual heavy losses in Dublin. British countermeasures involved escalated military presence, internment without trial, and reprisals including the destruction of property and civilian casualties, exemplified by the burning of Cork city in December 1920, which intensified international scrutiny and domestic war fatigue in Britain post-World War I. The war concluded with a truce on 11 July 1921, paving the way for negotiations that yielded the Anglo-Irish Treaty in December 1921, granting dominion status to the Irish Free State over 26 counties but partitioning the six northeastern counties as Northern Ireland within the UK, a compromise that achieved partial independence yet precipitated the Irish Civil War due to republican opposition to oath-taking and partition. Total fatalities approached 1,400, encompassing combatants from both sides and civilians caught in the crossfire, underscoring the conflict's intensity despite its relatively low scale compared to conventional wars.

Origins of the Conflict

Home Rule Crisis and Unionist Opposition

The Third Irish Home Rule Bill, introduced by Liberal Prime Minister H. H. Asquith on 11 April 1912, proposed establishing an Irish parliament in Dublin with authority over domestic affairs while reserving imperial matters and certain taxes for Westminster. The legislation passed its third reading in the House of Commons on 16 January 1913 by a margin of 10 votes, but faced staunch resistance in the House of Lords, where Conservatives aligned with Irish Unionists to block it. Ulster Unionists, primarily Protestants in the northern counties who comprised about one-quarter of Ireland's population and dominated its industrial economy, rejected Home Rule as a prelude to full separation from Britain and potential Catholic ascendancy in governance. Opposition crystallized on Ulster Day, 28 September 1912, when roughly 218,206 men signed the at mass rallies across the province, vowing to employ "all means which may be found necessary" to thwart the bill's implementation, with some signing in their own blood to underscore commitment. An accompanying declaration garnered signatures from 228,991 women, bringing total participants to approximately 471,000, including Ulster natives abroad. Led by barrister and Belfast businessman James Craig, the campaign fused constitutional petitioning with threats of provincial autonomy or resistance, forging the (UVF) in January 1913 as a body numbering up to 100,000 by mid-1914 to defend against perceived Nationalist aggression. Escalation peaked in early 1914 amid fears of military enforcement. The incident unfolded on 20 March when 57 officers, including Brigadier-General commanding the 3rd Cavalry Brigade, tendered resignations rather than deploy against Ulster resisters, prompting War Secretary J. E. B. Seely to issue a memorandum affirming officers' freedom from suppressing Ulster loyalists—a concession that effectively sanctioned potential mutiny and eroded government authority. Days later, on 24-25 April, the UVF executed the , smuggling approximately 24,000 German rifles and 3-5 million rounds of ammunition via ships to , , and Bangor, with customs officials instructed not to intervene, highlighting Unionist logistical prowess and official tolerance. These events underscored Unionist determination to partition from any framework, pressuring Asquith toward an amending bill for temporary Ulster exclusion, though the original measure received on 18 September 1914, only to be suspended indefinitely by . The crisis militarized Irish politics, demonstrating that armed defiance could compel British retreat and inspiring reciprocal Nationalist mobilization, yet revealed asymmetric state leniency toward Unionist paramilitarism compared to later Republican actions.

Easter Rising and Radical Nationalist Turn

The Easter Rising began on 24 1916, Easter Monday, when around 1,200 members of the , , and allied groups, under the direction of a Military Council dominated by the , seized key sites in such as the General Post Office and proclaimed the establishment of an independent Irish Republic via a public manifesto signed by seven leaders including , , and Thomas Clarke. The action extended to limited engagements elsewhere in Ireland but remained uncoordinated due to a countermanded mobilization order and German arms shipment failure, limiting overall rebel strength to under 2,000 active participants. British forces, numbering over 16,000 troops and police by the conflict's end, suppressed the uprising through artillery bombardment and infantry assaults, leading to the rebels' on 29 after six days of urban fighting that devastated central . Total fatalities reached 485, with civilians comprising the majority at over 250, alongside roughly 140 British military and police deaths and 80-90 rebel losses; wounded exceeded 2,500, underscoring the disproportionate civilian toll from crossfire and shelling. British authorities under General John Maxwell imposed martial law and conducted rapid court-martials for over 3,000 arrests, sentencing 160 to death but confirming executions for only 15 ringleaders, carried out by firing squad in Kilmainham Gaol and other sites between 3 and 12 May 1916; notable among them were Pearse (shot 3 May), Connolly (executed while wounded and seated on 12 May), and 13 others including MacDonagh, Plunkett, and Ceannt. These proceedings, criticized even in British parliamentary debates for their haste and lack of due process—Connolly's execution, for instance, defied conventions for incapacitated prisoners—served to elevate the condemned as martyrs rather than criminals. An additional 1,700 were deported without trial to internment camps in Britain and Wales, further alienating Irish communities. Initially, the Rising garnered minimal public backing in Ireland, where many viewed the rebels as reckless disruptors amid the First World War—over 200,000 Irishmen served in British forces, and Dublin crowds jeered surrendering insurgents for the property destruction estimated at £3 million—but the executions reversed this, fostering widespread revulsion at perceived British vindictiveness and reframing the event as a heroic stand against oppression. Funeral processions for executed leaders drew massive crowds, amplifying republican symbolism and eroding support for moderate constitutionalism, as evidenced by Sinn Féin's pivot from fringe abstentionism under Arthur Griffith to a mass movement absorbing IRB militants and Rising survivors upon their 1917 releases. This backlash intensified anti-British sentiment, particularly as conscription threats loomed in 1918, propelling Sinn Féin to win four by-elections in 1917-1918 and dominate the December 1918 UK general election with 73 of 105 Irish seats, supplanting the Home Rule-oriented Irish Parliamentary Party. The Rising thus catalyzed a profound of , resurrecting physical-force —dormant since failed nineteenth-century uprisings—in place of parliamentary , as the executions underscored to nationalists the futility of British concessions amid wartime priorities and entrenched unionist resistance. Sinn Féin's platform evolved to reject Westminster entirely, establishing the in 1919 as a rival and endorsing armed resistance, directly precipitating the War of Independence; this turn reflected not inherent mass militancy but a reactive dynamic where British countermeasures inadvertently legitimized separatist claims, shifting causal momentum from negotiated to insurgent confrontation.

First Dáil and Declaration of Independence

In the December 1918 United Kingdom general election, secured 73 of the 105 parliamentary seats allocated to , reflecting widespread support for and following the and wartime disillusionment. These elected members, known as teachtaí dála (TDs), boycotted the Westminster as pledged in their manifesto and instead assembled on 21 January 1919 as , asserting it as the legitimate of a sovereign Irish Republic. The inaugural session convened in the Mansion House's Round Room in , with proceedings conducted primarily in Irish to symbolize cultural revival and national sovereignty. Attendance was limited to 27 TDs due to British arrests and suppressions of other Sinn Féin leaders, including Éamon de Valera and Arthur Griffith; Cathal Brugha, a veteran of the 1916 Rising, presided over the gathering. The Dáil adopted the Democratic Programme, outlining social reforms emphasizing land redistribution, workers' rights, and welfare provisions, though its implementation was constrained by ongoing conflict. More crucially, it proclaimed the Declaration of Independence, affirming: "In the presence of Almighty God... we declare the right of the people of Ireland to the ownership of Ireland, and to the unfettered control of Irish destinies, to be sovereign and indefeasible." This document repudiated British authority, invoked historical precedents of self-determination, and appealed for international recognition, positioning the Dáil as the executive and legislative authority of the Irish Republic. The First Dáil's formation represented a constitutional challenge to British rule, establishing parallel institutions such as courts and local governance structures that operated alongside, and in opposition to, the United Kingdom's administration. Britain refused to acknowledge the Dáil's legitimacy, viewing it as an illegal assembly, which precipitated heightened tensions and the onset of guerrilla warfare by the on the same day as the Dáil's opening, marked by the . The assembly's actions derived authority from the electoral mandate, yet lacked immediate external validation, underscoring the unilateral nature of the independence claim amid partitioned sentiments, particularly Unionist opposition in .

Belligerent Forces and Organization

British Security Apparatus

The Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC) formed the core of Britain's policing apparatus in Ireland, functioning as a force tasked with maintaining order, gathering intelligence, and countering republican insurgency. Established in 1822, the RIC operated from a network of over 1,500 dispersed across rural areas, enabling rapid response to disturbances but also making isolated posts vulnerable to IRA attacks. By early 1919, the force comprised predominantly Irish-born personnel, with Catholics forming about 74% of its composition between January 1919 and January 1921, though morale plummeted amid targeted assassinations and boycotts that isolated constables from local communities. The RIC suffered the highest casualties among forces, with widespread resignations reducing effective strength and prompting reinforcements. In response to RIC attrition, the British government authorized the recruitment of temporary constables known as the in March 1920, drawing primarily from demobilized veterans to bolster police posts. These reinforcements, who adopted khaki army uniforms mixed with RIC dark green, numbered an estimated 10,000 enlistees overall, serving in mixed companies alongside regular RIC personnel to conduct patrols, raids, and convoy escorts. An estimated 42% of were wounded during service, reflecting the intensity of guerrilla engagements. Distinct from the Black and Tans, the (Auxiliaries) was formed in July 1920 as a mobile counter-insurgency unit composed of about 2,000 former British officers organized into independent companies. Auxiliaries operated in flying columns for aggressive operations against IRA units, emphasizing rapid reprisals and intelligence-driven ambushes, though their lack of formal police training contributed to disciplinary issues. The Dublin Metropolitan Police (DMP) handled urban policing in the capital, maintaining a strength of around 1,100 officers in 1916, with its plainclothes G Division specializing in political intelligence and surveillance of Sinn Féin and IRA activities. G Division detectives faced systematic elimination by IRA squads, culminating in the Bloody Sunday assassinations of 21 November 1920, which decimated its ranks and exposed vulnerabilities in British informant networks. Complementing police efforts, the British Army provided military support, deploying approximately 20,000 troops by 1921 for garrison duties, cordon-and-search operations, and armored lorry convoys, though regular forces were used judiciously to avoid perceptions of outright occupation. Military intelligence units, reorganized under specialized branches, coordinated with police to map IRA structures, though penetration of republican secrecy remained limited. Total Crown security personnel peaked at around 41,000, yet the asymmetric nature of IRA guerrilla tactics strained this apparatus, leading to reliance on reprisals and collective punishments.

Irish Republican Army Structure and Capabilities

The (IRA) during the War of Independence operated as a clandestine organization, evolving from the and formally adopting the IRA name in 1919 under the authority of the . Its structure emphasized decentralization to facilitate guerrilla operations, with General Headquarters (GHQ) in providing overall direction through key figures like Michael Collins, who served as Director of Intelligence and Operations. GHQ coordinated intelligence networks, arms procurement, and strategic guidance, but local units retained significant autonomy due to communication challenges and the need for rapid response in rural areas. At the base level, the IRA was organized into companies of local volunteers, which formed battalions and were then grouped into brigades typically aligned with counties or sub-regions, numbering around 74 brigades by the July 1921 truce. In 1921, GHQ introduced a divisional layer to consolidate brigades in geographic areas, resulting in by the time of the negotiations, enhancing coordination for larger operations while preserving brigade-level initiative. Total membership swelled to approximately 115,000 volunteers by mid-1921, though active combatants were far fewer, reflecting a mix of full-time fighters and part-time supporters providing and intelligence. Specialized units included flying columns, mobile guerrilla bands pioneered in August 1920 by Liam Lynch in Cork, consisting of 12 to 30 full-time fighters per brigade for hit-and-run ambushes. By late 1921, most brigades fielded such columns or Active Service Units (ASUs), with national full-time strength estimated at 1,379 men, enabling sustained pressure on British forces through mobility and local terrain knowledge. In urban areas like Dublin, Collins' "Squad"—a small ASU of about 20-30 assassins—targeted British intelligence operatives, disrupting Crown control via selective killings. IRA capabilities centered on asymmetric warfare, leveraging ambushes, sabotage of communications, and raids on Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC) barracks to acquire arms, as initial stockpiles were limited to shotguns, revolvers, and smuggled rifles. GHQ operated a secret munitions factory in Dublin for basic production, but chronic shortages hampered conventional engagements, forcing reliance on surprise tactics and civilian networks for evasion and resupply. This structure proved effective in rural strongholds like Munster, where columns inflicted disproportionate casualties—such as at Crossbarry in March 1921—but vulnerabilities emerged in open confrontations or areas lacking popular support, underscoring the IRA's dependence on guerrilla mobility over sustained firepower.

Course of Hostilities

Prelude and Opening Engagements (1919)

The First Dáil Éireann convened on January 21, 1919, in Dublin's Mansion House, where Sinn Féin representatives elected in the December 1918 general election assembled instead of taking seats at Westminster. The assembly adopted a Declaration of Independence, proclaiming an Irish Republic sovereign and democratic, repudiating British authority, and appealing for international recognition. This act formalized the separatist challenge, though the Dáil initially emphasized non-violent legitimacy through parallel institutions like courts and local governance, reflecting a strategy of moral and political suasion over immediate armed conflict. Coinciding with the Dáil's session, members of the South Tipperary Brigade of the Irish Volunteers—later the Irish Republican Army (IRA)—executed the Soloheadbeg ambush that afternoon near Tipperary town. Eight volunteers, including Seán Treacy, Dan Breen, Seán Hogan, and Séamus Robinson, targeted a Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC) escort transporting gelignite explosives for local quarries. The group intended to seize the munitions without fatalities, but when Constables James McDonnell and Patrick O'Connell resisted by reaching for their rifles, the volunteers opened fire, killing both. The IRA secured 965 pounds of gelignite and detonators, marking the first military action asserting the republic's claim, though uncoordinated with the Dáil and not initially framed as war's onset. Throughout 1919, IRA activity remained sporadic and localized, focusing on arms procurement through raids on RIC barracks and post offices rather than sustained combat. Notable actions included the May 25 Knocklong ambush in Limerick, where volunteers rescued from a train under RIC guard, killing two constables in the exchange. By mid-year, the IRA's General Headquarters was established under , with Michael Collins directing intelligence efforts in , but nationwide coordination lagged, limiting engagements to under 100 incidents, mostly non-lethal. British forces, primarily the RIC supplemented by small military detachments, responded with arrests and fortifications, recording 11 police deaths by year's end against minimal IRA losses, underscoring the conflict's tentative guerrilla inception.

Escalation to Widespread Guerrilla Warfare (1920)

In the first half of 1920, the (IRA) intensified its campaign against the Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC) through coordinated attacks on rural police , employing tactics that foreshadowed full-scale . These operations included sieges and raids that resulted in the destruction or severe damage of numerous isolated outposts, prompting widespread RIC resignations and the evacuation of many barracks by early 1920. On April 10, 1920, the IRA executed approximately 150 simultaneous assaults across , targeting RIC infrastructure and accelerating the collapse of rural policing. The IRA's organizational evolution in mid-1920 marked a pivotal shift toward mobile guerrilla units known as , which enabled sustained hit-and-run operations independent of fixed brigade structures. Initial columns emerged as early as June 1920 in areas like Kerry's No. 2 Brigade, predating formal General Headquarters (GHQ) directives; by October, GHQ instructed "on the run" volunteers to form such units, typically 20-30 strong, emphasizing rapid mobility and ambushes over static engagements. Examples included the North Longford Flying Column, established late 1920 under , which conducted ambushes killing several RIC personnel that year. This structure exploited Ireland's terrain for evasion, transforming sporadic raids into a nationwide by the war's second half. Britain responded to the escalating IRA threat by reinforcing the RIC with ex-servicemen recruits, forming the Black and Tans on March 25, 1920, to bolster numbers amid mounting desertions. These temporary constables, alongside regular forces, adopted aggressive countermeasures, including reprisals against civilian property and populations suspected of aiding insurgents, which further alienated rural communities and fueled recruitment for the IRA. The assassination of RIC Divisional Inspector Colonel Gerald Smyth on July 17, 1920, in Cork—retaliation for his order to shoot suspected republicans without arrest—exemplified the IRA's targeted killings of security leadership, prompting intensified British cordons and searches. The conflict reached a zenith of reciprocal violence on November 21, 1920, during "Bloody Sunday" in Dublin, where IRA "Squad" units assassinated 14 British intelligence officers in preemptive strikes against informants. British forces retaliated by raiding Croke Park during a Gaelic football match, killing 14 civilians and wounding dozens, while further arrests and shootings that day brought the toll to over 30 dead. This cycle of ambushes, assassinations, and reprisals solidified guerrilla warfare as the dominant mode, with violence spreading beyond Munster to nationwide ambushes and counter-operations by late 1920.

Peak Violence and British Response (Late 1920–Mid 1921)

The period from late 1920 to mid-1921 represented the apex of violence in the Irish War of Independence, with the Irish Republican Army (IRA) executing high-profile assassinations and ambushes while British authorities deployed reinforced paramilitary units and authorized reprisals. On 21 November 1920, an IRA assassination squad under Michael Collins targeted British intelligence operatives known as the Cairo Gang, killing 14 in Dublin hotels and boarding houses. In immediate retaliation, Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC) and Auxiliary Division members raided Croke Park during a Gaelic football match between Dublin and Tipperary, firing into the crowd and killing 14 civilians, including Tipperary player Michael Hogan; two additional spectators died from wounds shortly after. Three IRA leaders, including Dublin Brigade commandant Dick McKee, were also killed while in British custody that day, contributing to over 30 deaths in total. British reinforcements, including the Black and Tans—temporary constables recruited from Britain starting in June 1920—and the of ex-officers formed in October 1920, intensified counter-operations but gained notoriety for indiscipline and unofficial reprisals against civilians. On 28 November 1920, IRA flying column commander Tom Barry ambushed an patrol near Kilmichael, , killing 17 of 18 Auxiliaries in a fierce engagement that lasted about 15 minutes; three IRA volunteers died, and five were wounded. This success for the IRA prompted the British government under Hamar Greenwood to tacitly approve "official reprisals" by Crown forces in response to attacks, marking a shift toward systematic retaliation. Reprisals escalated dramatically on 11-12 December 1920, after an IRA ambush at Dillon's Cross wounded 12 Auxiliaries; that night, British forces, including Auxiliaries and RIC, set fire to central Cork city, destroying approximately five acres of property, including over 50 businesses, two hotels, and City Hall, with damages estimated at £5 million. In parallel, martial law was proclaimed on 10 December in Munster counties Cork, Kerry, Limerick, and Tipperary, empowering military courts, imposing curfews, and permitting property seizures and executions without trial; it was extended to Clare and Waterford in January 1921. These measures aimed to dismantle IRA networks through mass arrests—over 4,000 republicans interned by mid-1921—and targeted raids, though they often alienated civilians and fueled recruitment for the IRA. Into early 1921, IRA flying columns in Munster conducted frequent ambushes, disrupting British supply lines and patrols, while British forces pursued "hunt and kill" operations, encircling suspected IRA units in cordons and sweeps. Notable IRA actions included the 7 May 1921 Coolavokig ambush in Kerry, where 11 Auxiliaries were killed, but British intelligence successes led to disasters for the IRA, such as the 20 February Clonmult ambush in Waterford, where 12 volunteers were killed and 11 captured. The cycle of ambushes and reprisals rendered parts of Munster ungovernable for British administration, with violence concentrating in rural areas where IRA units operated semi-autonomously, culminating in unsustainable attrition that pressured both sides toward truce negotiations by July.

Truce and Path to Negotiations (July–December 1921)

The truce halting active hostilities in the Irish War of Independence took effect at noon on July 11, 1921, following preliminary talks in Dublin's Mansion House that began on July 8. The agreement stemmed from a British cabinet decision on June 24 to initiate discussions with Sinn Féin leaders, recognizing the conflict's stalemate after intensified guerrilla warfare and reprisals had strained both sides. Terms stipulated cessation of attacks on British forces and civilians, prohibition of provocative armed displays, non-interference with property, allowance for peaceful picketing, and adherence to local IRA command structures for enforcement. Initial post-truce diplomacy involved Éamon de Valera meeting British Prime Minister David Lloyd George in London on July 14 and 15, where de Valera sought clarification on negotiation terms but rejected preliminary British proposals for dominion status within the Empire. These exchanges highlighted irreconcilable positions, with Britain insisting on imperial ties and Ireland demanding full sovereignty, yet both sides proceeded cautiously to avoid resuming war. Meanwhile, the truce enabled the IRA to recruit, train, and procure arms, while British forces remained largely confined to barracks in southern Ireland, though sporadic violations occurred, particularly in Ulster where sectarian violence persisted unabated. Between July 12 and year's end, at least 145 killings were recorded, over half in Belfast amid ongoing clashes disregarding the ceasefire. Formal negotiations commenced with the Anglo-Irish Conference in London on October 11, 1921, at 10 Downing Street, comprising an Irish delegation led by Arthur Griffith and Michael Collins, alongside George Gavan Duffy, Eamonn Duggan, and Robert Barton. British representatives, headed by Lloyd George and including Winston Churchill and Austen Chamberlain, aimed to secure partition safeguards and naval defense rights at southern ports. Over subsequent weeks, debates centered on Ireland's constitutional status, fiscal autonomy, and Ulster's opt-out provisions, with the Irish side initially demanding external association rather than full dominion integration. Tensions escalated in late November as Lloyd George issued an ultimatum on , warning resumption of hostilities unless progress was made, prompting the Irish delegation—despite internal divisions and de Valera's reservations—to accept compromise terms establishing the as a with oath to and partition boundary commission. The Articles of Agreement were signed on December 6, 1921, marking the truce's transformation into a framework for partitioned , though it ignited immediate controversy over concessions to British strategic interests and the North's exclusion. Throughout, truce liaison officers on both sides managed localized breaches, but the period's relative calm facilitated the diplomatic shift from guerrilla conflict to treaty resolution.

Regional Dynamics in the North-East

Early Sectarian Clashes (1920)

In the north-east of , particularly in , sectarian tensions that had simmered for years boiled over into violence in mid-1920, fueled by unionist fears over electoral gains in local council elections earlier that year and the ongoing IRA campaign against British forces elsewhere. These clashes were distinct from the in the south, manifesting instead as urban riots, mob expulsions, and targeted attacks on Catholic neighborhoods and businesses, often in retaliation for IRA assassinations of police officers. Unionist leaders, including figures like , had warned of reprisals against perceived supporters, exacerbating divisions in mixed industrial areas like shipyards where economic competition for jobs intertwined with political loyalties. The initial major outbreak occurred on July 21, 1920, coinciding with the funeral of Royal Irish Constabulary Divisional Commissioner Gerald Smyth, assassinated by the IRA on July 17 in County Cork. Posters appeared in Belfast shipyards calling for the expulsion of "Sinn Feiners," leading to coordinated attacks by Protestant workers on Catholic and socialist colleagues; approximately 2,200 workers were driven out of the yards that day, with the total expulsions across Belfast industries reaching around 7,500, including nearly 6,000 Catholics and 1,800 Protestant trade unionists suspected of republican sympathies. This sparked widespread rioting in Belfast, with mobs burning Catholic homes and shops in areas like York Street and the Falls Road; over the following days, 18 people were killed—10 nationalists and 8 unionists—and more than 300 wounded, primarily civilians caught in street fighting or sniper fire from rooftops. Violence briefly subsided but reignited on August 22, 1920, after the IRA killed District Inspector Oswald Swanzy in Lisburn, prompting retaliatory pogroms there and in Belfast; unionist crowds burned hundreds of Catholic properties, displacing thousands and destroying businesses, while clashes left 22 dead and 170 seriously injured in east Belfast alone. British troops and police intervened with machine guns and barricades, imposing a curfew on September 1, but their efforts were hampered by divided loyalties among local forces. These early clashes resulted in over 1,000 homes and businesses damaged or destroyed by year's end, with around 11,000 workers overall expelled from employment in Belfast, severely impacting the linen and engineering sectors amid post-World War I unemployment. The IRA's presence in Ulster remained limited, conducting sporadic attacks but unable to mount effective defense, leaving Catholic communities vulnerable to disproportionate loyalist aggression. By late 1920, the pattern of expulsion and arson had displaced over 20,000 people in , with Catholics bearing the brunt—comprising about two-thirds of fatalities despite being a minority in the city—highlighting the one-sided nature of much of the early violence despite mutual rioting. These events underscored the fragility of partition prospects under the , as unionist paramilitary groups like the began mobilizing formally, setting the stage for further escalation into 1921.

Loyalist Mobilization and IRA Incursions (1921–1922)

The Ulster Special Constabulary (USC), established on 22 October 1920 at the urging of unionist leaders including James Craig and Basil Brooke, served as the primary loyalist force mobilized to counter Irish Republican Army (IRA) activities in Northern Ireland following the formation of the devolved government on 22 June 1921. Structured into A-class (full-time, uniformed), B-class (part-time, locally based), and C-class (reserve) units, the USC recruited heavily from Protestant unionist organizations such as the Ulster Volunteers and Orange Order, arming over 20,000 members by early 1922, including 3,500 A-class and 16,000 B-class personnel. Under Northern Ireland Prime Minister James Craig, who assumed office in June 1921 and advocated for "a system of organised reprisals" against IRA actions, the USC was deployed to patrol urban areas and rural borders, often conducting searches, arrests, and counter-ambushes amid rising sectarian tensions. Despite the Anglo-Irish truce of 11 July 1921, IRA units in Ulster persisted with targeted killings of police and loyalists, sparking cycles of reprisals in Belfast where gun battles on 10 July 1921 alone claimed 16 lives on the eve of the truce. Loyalist mobilization intensified as Craig's administration, with British sanction, distributed arms to Protestant communities to defend against perceived republican subversion, leading to accusations of USC complicity in anti-Catholic violence, including the burning of 161 houses in Newry on 12 June 1922 and the Weaver Street bombing in Belfast on 17 February 1922 that killed six civilians. By January 1922, Craig ordered full USC mobilization in response to IRA shootings, resulting in the internment of 728 republican suspects under the Special Powers Act enacted on 7 April 1922, which contributed to a decline in violence by mid-year. IRA incursions escalated in early 1922, particularly along the southern border, as Michael Collins sponsored a northern offensive to challenge partition, involving cross-border raids from Donegal and coordinated attacks by pro- and anti-Treaty units. On 7-8 February 1922, IRA forces in Tyrone and seized around 40 unionists as hostages, prompting USC and British troop responses. The campaign peaked in late May 1922 with the occupation of border villages Belleek and on 27 May, where IRA units clashed with USC patrols before British forces, authorized by at the request of the government, deployed artillery and infantry to dislodge them by early June, resulting in four IRA fatalities. These actions, including bomb attacks and arson in causing over £3 million in damage, fueled loyalist reprisals but ultimately failed to alter the border, with approximately 100 fatalities recorded in the border region during the first half of 1922.

Tactics, Atrocities, and Controversies

IRA Guerrilla Methods and Targeted Killings

The Irish Republican Army (IRA) shifted to guerrilla warfare in 1919, emphasizing hit-and-run ambushes, sabotage, and avoidance of conventional battles against superior British forces. Early actions included arms raids on police barracks to secure weapons, as the IRA lacked heavy armament. By mid-1920, the formation of flying columns—mobile, full-time units of 20 to 100 volunteers—enabled sustained operations, with these groups relying on local support for food, intelligence, and shelter while conducting rapid strikes and dispersals. Over 25 such columns operated by war's end, transforming sporadic attacks into coordinated campaigns that inflicted casualties on British patrols and convoys. Ambushes formed the core of IRA rural tactics, often involving meticulous scouting and barricades to trap vehicles before opening fire with rifles and shotguns. The Kilmichael ambush on November 28, 1920, exemplified this approach, where a West Cork flying column of about 36 men attacked a 17-vehicle Auxiliary Division convoy, killing 16 Auxiliaries in a fierce close-quarters fight amid rocky terrain. Such operations prioritized surprise and mobility, with IRA units melting into the countryside post-engagement to evade reprisals, though success depended heavily on accurate intelligence to position forces effectively. In urban areas, particularly Dublin, the IRA employed targeted assassinations against British intelligence operatives, orchestrated by Michael Collins' Squad, a specialized unit formed in July 1919 to eliminate Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC) spies and detectives. The operation peaked on Bloody Sunday, November 21, 1920, when IRA hit teams assassinated 14 suspected agents—known as the Cairo Gang—in simultaneous raids across the city, disrupting British counter-intelligence networks. These killings, based on IRA intelligence from infiltrated sources and surveillance, aimed to decapitate enemy espionage rather than engage in open combat. The IRA also executed civilians suspected of informing for British forces, with approximately 196 such killings recorded between 1919 and 1921, often in rural areas where betrayals threatened ambush plans or safe houses. These actions, justified internally as necessary for operational security, involved summary trials or direct eliminations, contributing to a climate of fear that deterred collaboration but drew accusations of vigilantism. In Cork alone, 42 alleged spies met this fate, underscoring the insurgency's reliance on community coercion alongside military tactics.

British Reprisals, Auxiliaries, and Intelligence Operations

British forces engaged in reprisals against Irish communities following IRA attacks on police and military personnel, with an unofficial policy emerging as early as September 1919 in Fermoy, County Cork, where 200 soldiers from the King's Shropshire Light Infantry looted and burned local businesses after an IRA shooting of a soldier. These actions escalated in 1920, including the sacking of Balbriggan in September after the killing of RIC Sergeant William Reilly, where British forces burned approximately 50 houses, looted shops, and killed two civilians. Similar reprisals occurred in Tuam and Thurles in July 1920, involving arson and destruction in response to IRA ambushes on RIC personnel. In Mallow on 27-28 September 1920, British troops burned much of the town center following the death of an Auxiliary Division officer in an IRA attack. By late 1920, the British government shifted toward official reprisals in certain areas, particularly after declaring martial law in parts of Munster in December, allowing for sanctioned destruction of property linked to IRA activities. The most notorious example was the burning of Cork city center on 11 December 1920 by Auxiliaries and Black and Tans, destroying 40 buildings and causing damages estimated at £3 million, in retaliation for an IRA ambush that killed a British lorry driver and wounded others. These reprisals, while aimed at deterring IRA support, often targeted civilian property indiscriminately and fueled republican recruitment by alienating the population. To bolster the Royal Irish Constabulary amid resignations and IRA pressure, the British recruited the Black and Tans in March 1920, enlisting about 9,000 ex-servicemen from World War I to serve as temporary constables, often wearing makeshift uniforms combining khaki and RIC dark green. In July 1920, the Auxiliary Division (ADRIC) was formed, comprising around 2,200 demobilized officers organized into independent companies for mobile counter-guerrilla operations, commanded by figures like Brigadier-General Frank Crozier until his resignation over disciplinary issues. Both groups, underpaid and hastily trained, gained notoriety for excessive force, including summary executions, looting, and arson during reprisals, with the Auxiliaries particularly implicated in events like the Balbriggan sack and Cork burning due to their elite status and relative autonomy. British authorities, including Chief Secretary Hamar Greenwood, initially denied systematic misconduct but later acknowledged isolated excesses while defending the units' necessity against IRA insurgency. British intelligence efforts focused on dismantling the IRA's urban networks, particularly in , through the deployment of undercover agents known as the Cairo Gang—a loose group of 15-20 British officers and informers operating from rooms in Dublin's Cairo Café and other sites. These agents, many with wartime experience, gathered information on IRA leadership, leading to arrests but also vulnerabilities due to lax security. On 21 November 1920, IRA intelligence chief Michael Collins orchestrated "Bloody Sunday," dispatching hit squads to assassinate 14 members of the Cairo Gang in coordinated raids, disrupting British operations and eliminating key spies like Captain George Bennett and Lieutenant George McIrvin. In response, British forces raided during a Gaelic football match, killing 14 civilians including player Michael Hogan, though official inquiries attributed most deaths to panic-induced stampedes rather than direct fire. Overall, British intelligence successes were limited by IRA counter-intelligence, including Collins' network, which prioritized eliminating informants over conventional spying.

Civilian Impacts, Propaganda, and Moral Equivalence Debates

Civilian casualties in the Irish War of Independence numbered in the hundreds, contributing to a total death toll of approximately 1,400, which included over 600 British security forces personnel and more than 700 civilians alongside Irish Republican Army (IRA) fighters. British reprisals against IRA actions frequently targeted civilian property, involving the destruction of homes and businesses owned by suspected nationalists, with thousands of such incidents recorded across southern Ireland. These measures, often executed by Royal Irish Constabulary auxiliaries known as Black and Tans, exacerbated economic hardship through property loss and disrupted local commerce, particularly in rural areas where boycotts and raids compounded the effects. The burning of Cork city center on December 11, 1920, exemplified the scale of civilian devastation, as British forces and auxiliaries set fire to over 200 businesses and numerous residences in unofficial retaliation for IRA attacks, rendering 2,600 people homeless and causing damages estimated at £5 million. Such events, alongside widespread house burnings in counties like Kerry and Limerick, fostered a climate of fear among non-combatants, with civilians comprising about 39 percent of fatalities during the conflict period. IRA operations, while primarily aimed at police and military targets, occasionally resulted in civilian deaths through ambushes or executions of alleged informers, though these were fewer and often justified internally as necessary to combat collaboration. Propaganda efforts by and the IRA emphasized British atrocities to sway domestic and international opinion, portraying reprisals as evidence of imperial brutality and framing the struggle as a defense against state terror, which proved effective in undermining British legitimacy. British authorities countered by censoring Irish press outlets and depicting IRA members as murderous gangsters rather than legitimate combatants, yet graphic reports and images of burned towns like Cork eroded support in Britain and abroad, as the reprisals appeared disproportionate to IRA guerrilla tactics. This asymmetry in narrative control contributed to the IRA's strategic victory in the "war of words," amplifying calls for negotiations by 1921. Debates on moral equivalence center on the asymmetry of power and intent, with traditional narratives emphasizing British reprisals as indiscriminate state violence against a civilian population resisting occupation, while post-revisionist historiography highlights IRA's role in initiating cycles of violence through assassinations and the execution of over 100 suspected spies or informers, many of whom were civilians without formal trials. Some scholars argue against equivalence, noting the IRA's general avoidance of mass civilian targeting compared to British policy tolerances for punitive destruction, which affected thousands uninvolved in combat; others contend that both employed terror strategically, with IRA actions sowing community divisions and British responses entrenching sectarian fears, particularly in border regions. These discussions underscore causal realities: reprisals often followed IRA ambushes killing dozens of police in single incidents, yet their broad application blurred lines between combatants and non-combatants, fueling long-term societal trauma without resolving the underlying conflict.

Casualties, Detention, and Societal Toll

Verified Casualty Figures and Breakdowns

Comprehensive empirical research into casualties of the Irish War of Independence (1919–1921) has yielded estimates of approximately 2,000 fatalities directly attributable to the conflict, based on cross-referenced archival records, pension applications, and contemporary reports compiled in a major database. This figure excludes deaths from the 1916 and the subsequent (1922–1923), focusing on guerrilla engagements, reprisals, and associated violence from late 1919 through the truce in July 1921. Exact totals remain provisional, as underreporting of IRA losses and some civilian deaths persists due to the irregular nature of the warfare and incomplete British and republican documentation; however, the database methodology prioritizes verifiable identities and circumstances over anecdotal claims. British security forces bore significant losses, with over 500 (RIC) officers killed by IRA attacks during the war period, comprising the majority of crown force fatalities given the police's frontline role in rural patrols and barracks defense. British Army deaths numbered fewer, primarily from ambushes and raids, with records indicating around 200–300 soldiers lost in action or to related violence between 1919 and 1921, though precise aggregation varies by inclusion of disease or accidents. and temporary constables () added to these tolls, but their integration into RIC statistics often blurs distinctions; overall, crown forces accounted for roughly 40–45% of combatant deaths, reflecting the IRA's targeted focus on police infrastructure over regular troops. IRA volunteers suffered approximately 400–500 killed in engagements, supplemented by 24 official executions post-capture, with losses concentrated in 1920–1921 amid escalated British sweeps and intelligence operations. Civilian deaths totaled under 1,000, often from crossfire, reprisal burnings, or sectarian clashes, representing about 40% of the overall toll and underscoring the war's asymmetric impact on non-combatants despite guerrilla tactics minimizing urban battles. These figures derive from pension-dependent mappings and fatality registers, which undercount non-claimants but provide the most robust cross-verified data available, highlighting disproportionate violence in Munster counties like Cork (538 recorded deaths).
CategoryApproximate Number KilledPrimary Causes
British Security Forces (RIC/police dominant)>500IRA ambushes, assassinations
200–300Engagements, reprisal-related
IRA Volunteers400–500 (plus 24 executed)Combat, arrests
Civilians<1,000Reprisals, , incidental

Internment Policies and Civilian Detentions

British internment policies during the Irish War of Independence relied on the Defence of the Realm Act (DORA) to detain suspects without trial, escalating after the IRA's Bloody Sunday attacks on 21 November 1920, which prompted widespread arrests of suspected republican activists. This measure aimed to disrupt IRA operations by removing key figures from circulation, with internees often being civilians lacking formal charges or judicial oversight. By January 1921, accumulated internment numbers reached 1,478, growing to over 3,300 by April and approximately 4,000 by the truce in July 1921. Key facilities included Ballykinlar Camp in County Down, established in 1920 as the first mass internment site, which held up to 2,000 prisoners suspected of IRA involvement; other camps were Bere Island and Spike Island in County Cork, and two in the Curragh, County Kildare. Conditions in these camps were deliberately austere to demoralize detainees, featuring inadequate shelter, exposure to cold and damp, and limited medical care, resulting in at least five deaths from maltreatment at Ballykinlar and three internees shot dead there. Illnesses exacerbated by environmental hardships claimed additional lives, such as that of Patrick O'Toole, a 29-year-old internee who died in 1921. Despite hardships, prisoners organized educational classes, sports, lectures, orchestras, and crafts like macramé and bone carvings to maintain morale and structure. Hunger strikes emerged as a primary form of against , drawing international attention and pressuring authorities; notable cases included those mirroring Terence MacSwiney's 74-day strike in 1920, though many occurred in Irish camps. These actions led to some releases and highlighted the policy's coercive nature, but persisted until the truce, after which most detainees were freed without prosecution. The practice disproportionately affected civilian communities, as many internees were non-combatants with familial or ties, contributing to societal strain and republican portraying the camps as tools of repression. In contrast, the IRA did not operate formal internment camps due to logistical constraints but conducted ad hoc detentions of civilians suspected of informing for British forces, typically involving brief interrogations that frequently culminated in executions rather than sustained imprisonment. Between 1919 and 1921, the IRA killed at least 196 such civilians accused of spying, with around 25 cases involving bodies concealed or "disappeared" to avoid reprisals. These actions, justified internally as necessary for operational security, lacked the scale or infrastructure of British internment but inflicted targeted terror on communities, with executions often following hasty "trials" by local IRA units.

Aftermath and Partition

Anglo-Irish Treaty Terms and Ratification

Negotiations for the Anglo-Irish Treaty commenced on October 11, 1921, in London, involving an Irish delegation comprising Arthur Griffith as chairman, Michael Collins, Robert Barton, Eamon Duggan, and George Gavan Duffy, opposite a British team led by Prime Minister David Lloyd George. The talks, held amid the truce of July 1921, addressed Irish demands for independence while accommodating British strategic interests, culminating in the treaty's signing on December 6, 1921. The treaty's core provisions established the Irish Free State as a self-governing dominion with constitutional status equivalent to that of Canada within the British Empire's community of nations. Article 1 granted this dominion parity, while Article 2 provided for a provisional government to oversee the transition until a constituent assembly could draft a constitution. Article 3 mandated an oath of allegiance by members of the Irish parliament to the British Crown, affirming fidelity to the King as head of the associated states. Partition was enshrined in Articles 11 and 12, allowing Northern Ireland—comprising the six northeastern counties—to opt out of the Free State via a petition to the British Parliament, with a boundary commission to delineate the frontier if necessary. Britain retained defense prerogatives, including temporary access to specified naval facilities in southern Ireland under Article 8, and the treaty included mutual trade preferences and arbitration mechanisms for disputes. Ratification proceeded in the Second Dáil Éireann, where the treaty text was presented on December 14, 1921, sparking intense debate lasting into January. Proponents, led by Griffith and Collins, argued it secured substantive independence and averted renewed war, while opponents under Éamon de Valera contended it compromised republican ideals by retaining monarchical ties and partition. On January 7, 1922, the Dáil approved the treaty by a narrow margin of 64 votes to 57, with four members absent or paired. De Valera resigned as president on January 9, succeeded by Griffith, formalizing the pro-treaty stance amid emerging divisions that presaged civil conflict. The British Parliament ratified it on December 16, 1921, enabling implementation.

British Evacuation, Compensation, and Administrative Transition

The British military evacuation from southern Ireland commenced shortly after the Anglo-Irish Treaty's ratification on 6 December 1921, with the symbolic handover of Dublin Castle occurring on 16 January 1922, marking the transfer of administrative control from the British Under-Secretary to representatives of the Provisional Government. Progressive withdrawals followed, including the Royal Air Force's departure from Baldonnel aerodrome on 4 May 1922, and the evacuation of barracks at Naas and the Curragh on 16 May 1922. By late June 1922, most British troops had departed, though isolated garrisons persisted until the final pullout from key Dublin installations on 17 December 1922, coinciding with the Irish Free State's formal establishment and the replacement of British forces by Irish troops at remaining sites. This phased process, overseen by British Commander-in-Chief Nevil Macready, involved handing over barracks and military installations to Provisional Government forces, often amid tensions from the emerging Irish Civil War. Compensation mechanisms addressed wartime property damage and loyalist losses under the Treaty's provisions and subsequent legislation, with the Irish Grants Committee (IGC) established by the British government to evaluate claims from southern Irish loyalists for personal injuries, property destruction, expulsions, and boycotts. The IGC processed thousands of such claims, awarding payments for verified losses incurred during the conflict. In the Irish Free State, the Damage to Property Act of 1923 provided for compensation of malicious injuries post-truce, estimated to cover costs exceeding £50 million in property damage, though awards to loyalists were frequently deemed inadequate or illusory by claimants and British parliamentary critics. This legislation excluded pre-truce damages in many cases, prompting ongoing disputes in British debates where loyalists argued for fuller restitution from the Free State, highlighting tensions over accountability for conflict-related destruction. Administrative transition unfolded through the Provisional Government of Ireland, formed post-Treaty to govern the 26 counties during the interim period from December 1921 to December 1922, bridging British rule and the Irish Free State's inception. This body, led by Michael Collins, assumed control of evacuated facilities, including six Dublin installations such as the Viceregal Lodge on 14 December 1922, and enacted policies to stabilize governance amid civil strife. The Free State's Constitution, approved by the Third Dáil and enacted via the Constitution of the Irish Free State (Saorstát Éireann) Act 1922, formalized dominion status equivalent to Canada, effective 6 December 1922, with William T. Cosgrave succeeding as president upon the Provisional Government's dissolution. This shift dismantled centuries of direct British administration, transferring fiscal, judicial, and civil service functions to Irish authorities, though retention of Treaty Ports until 1938 preserved limited British naval presence. The process emphasized continuity in public administration to avert chaos, with British officials aiding the handover despite underlying hostilities.

Irish Civil War Triggers and Outcomes

The Anglo-Irish Treaty, signed on 6 December 1921, established the Irish Free State as a dominion within the British Commonwealth, requiring an oath of allegiance to the Crown and formalizing the partition of Ireland by allowing Northern Ireland to opt out of the new state via a boundary commission. Opposition from Éamon de Valera and hardline republicans centered on the treaty's failure to deliver a 32-county Irish Republic, the oath's perceived subordination to Britain, and the entrenchment of partition, which left six Ulster counties under British rule. These divisions fractured Sinn Féin and the Irish Republican Army (IRA), with pro-treaty forces led by Michael Collins and Arthur Griffith viewing the agreement as a pragmatic step toward independence, while anti-treaty elements, controlling much of the IRA's military structure, rejected it as a betrayal of the 1919 Dáil declaration of an independent republic. The treaty's ratification by the Second Dáil on 7 January 1922 passed narrowly, 64 votes to 57, amid intense debate and de Valera's resignation as president, deepening the rift and leading to parallel pro- and anti-treaty IRA armies. Tensions escalated through spring 1922, with anti-treaty IRA units seizing the in on 14 April as a symbolic republican stronghold and engaging in sporadic clashes, including the assassination of British field marshal Sir Henry Wilson on 22 June by anti-treaty gunmen, which prompted the to secure British artillery support. The ignited on 28 June 1922 when pro-treaty forces shelled the , sparking urban fighting in and a nationwide guerrilla conflict as anti-treaty units retreated to rural strongholds in and the west. Pro-treaty forces, reorganized as the National Army and bolstered by British-supplied arms and up to 55,000 troops, achieved military dominance by late 1922 through conventional assaults on anti-treaty positions, including the recapture of Cork in August after fierce resistance. The anti-treaty side, numbering around 15,000 but hampered by internal divisions and lack of foreign support, shifted to hit-and-run ambushes, prolonging irregular warfare but failing to dislodge the government. Key setbacks included the death of Collins in an ambush at Béal na Bláth on 22 August 1922, which demoralized pro-treaty ranks temporarily but did not alter the trajectory, and the execution of 77 anti-treaty prisoners by the Free State, including Erskine Childers in November 1922, which hardened republican resolve yet underscored the pro-treaty commitment to suppressing rebellion. The war concluded without formal surrender on 24 May 1923, when IRA leader ordered a and arms dump, effectively yielding to pro- control amid public war-weariness and economic strain. Verified fatalities totaled approximately 1,426, with 648 pro-treaty military deaths, 438 anti-treaty combatants killed, and 336 civilians, reflecting the conflict's fratricidal intensity concentrated in , , and border areas rather than widespread societal collapse. Politically, the outcome solidified the under William Cosgrave's government from September 1922, entrenching partition as Northern Ireland's government rejected the boundary commission and solidified unionist rule, while anti-treaty survivors formed in 1926, entering power in 1932 to incrementally dismantle constraints through constitutional means. The civil war's legacy included enduring familial and regional animosities, with pro-treaty victory prioritizing state stability over ideological purity, though at the cost of over 80 official executions that fueled republican narratives of betrayal.

Strategic Assessments and Legacy

Effectiveness of IRA Tactics versus British Countermeasures

The (IRA) employed guerrilla tactics, including ambushes, assassinations, and mobile , which proved effective in targeting the dispersed (RIC) and disrupting British administration in rural areas. By early 1920, IRA attacks had forced the abandonment or destruction of numerous RIC , reducing British presence in southern Ireland and contributing to over 600 British security force deaths by war's end. Ambushes accounted for approximately 22% of the conflict's roughly 2,300 fatalities, with 66% of RIC personnel involved in such actions killed or wounded, demonstrating the lethality of these operations against smaller patrols. British countermeasures initially struggled against IRA adaptability and superior local intelligence, particularly in urban centers like Dublin where Michael Collins' network eliminated key British agents. The deployment of the Black and Tans and Auxiliary Division in 1920 aimed to bolster police forces but often devolved into undisciplined reprisals, such as the burning of civilian property, which alienated the population and fueled IRA recruitment rather than restoring order. Intelligence efforts, including attempts to infiltrate IRA units, yielded mixed results, as IRA non-recognition of British courts and propaganda campaigns amplified the impact of British atrocities internationally. By spring 1921, British adaptations—such as larger patrols, active service platoons, , and targeted sweeps—disrupted flying columns, leading to IRA reverses like the Clonmult ambush where 12 volunteers were killed in a British trap, and a decline in major ambushes after March. declarations in parts of and increased involvement curbed some IRA mobility, but failed to decisively dismantle the guerrilla network due to widespread civilian support and the conflict's asymmetric nature. Overall, while IRA tactics inflicted disproportionate casualties relative to their numbers—estimated at over 500 Crown forces killed against 550-700 IRA combat deaths—they could not achieve territorial control or outright , instead eroding British political will and prompting the July 1921 truce.

Historiographical Revisionism and Debunked Narratives

Revisionist historiography of the Irish War of Independence, gaining prominence from the 1970s amid archival openings and the Northern Ireland Troubles, critiques the orthodox nationalist framework that framed the IRA as unalloyed liberators combating imperial brutality. Scholars like those associated with empirical re-examinations argue that this view, rooted in participant memoirs and early state-sanctioned narratives, overlooked the war's asymmetric dynamics, where IRA operations—totaling around 1,300 actions from 1919 to 1921—inflicted disproportionate harm on Irish police and civilians relative to British military cohesion. Instead, revisionists highlight how Sinn Féin's 1918 electoral triumph, yielding 73 of 105 Irish seats, already eroded British parliamentary legitimacy, suggesting armed escalation amplified divisions without guaranteeing military victory. A key debunked narrative involves the romanticization of IRA ambushes as emblematic of tactical genius. Records indicate over half of major engagements, such as those by flying columns in counties like Cork and Tipperary, yielded minimal enemy fatalities—often under five per action—while exposing IRA units to retaliatory sweeps that decimated local support bases through arrests exceeding 5,000 by 1921. This challenges folklore glorifying figures like those in the West Connemara Column, revealing reliance on evasion over sustained combat, with IRA losses nearing 900 dead against roughly 500 British security personnel killed. The Bloody Sunday shootings of November 21, 1920, exemplify revised interpretations of alleged British massacres. Initial reports claimed 14 unarmed civilians killed at , but forensic and witness re-assessments confirm several victims carried concealed weapons and included IRA intelligence operatives, framing the raid as a targeted response to the earlier of 14 British agents rather than indiscriminate slaughter. Debunking extends to atrocity attributions, where nationalist accounts exaggerate unprovoked British reprisals while minimizing IRA-initiated terror. Events like the December 11, 1920, burning of Cork—destroying 40 buildings and causing £3 million in damage—followed IRA bombings killing 12 Auxiliaries days prior, yet were officially condoned as policy under martial law. Revisionists note IRA squads executed 100-200 suspected informers extrajudicially, targeting rural loyalists and ex-soldiers in acts akin to terrorism, as evidenced by Dublin Brigade logs, countering the one-sided victimhood trope. The necessity of the war itself faces scrutiny: revisionists contend it hastened partition's entrenchment—leaving 126,000 square miles under British control in Ulster—rather than forcing concession, as British resolve held with 200,000 troops deployed, and the July 11, 1921, Truce stemmed more from Lloyd George's cabinet fatigue post-World War I than IRA attrition. This perspective, drawing on declassified War Office files, indicts romanticized causality, attributing outcomes to political bargaining over battlefield dominance, though critics of revisionism decry it for diluting anti-colonial agency amid academia's left-leaning tendencies to normalize violence in "national liberation."

Long-Term Partition Consequences and Cultural Memory

The partition of Ireland under the Government of Ireland Act 1920 and the Anglo-Irish Treaty of December 6, 1921, established Northern Ireland as a self-governing entity within the United Kingdom comprising six northeastern counties with a Protestant unionist majority, while the Irish Free State encompassed the remaining 26 counties. This division entrenched sectarian demographics, with Northern Ireland's population at partition approximately 1.25 million (66% Protestant, 34% Catholic), fostering a unionist-dominated Stormont parliament that prioritized Protestant interests through practices such as gerrymandering electoral boundaries and allocating public housing to maintain unionist control. These structural inequalities contributed to Catholic disenfranchisement, with nationalists comprising about one-third of the electorate yet securing minimal representation, exacerbating grievances that simmered until erupting in the civil rights movement of the late 1960s. Economically, partition severed integrated trade networks, with pre-1921 north-south commerce accounting for roughly 20% of Irish exports; post-partition, the Free State adopted protectionist policies that initially stifled growth, yielding per capita income stagnation until the 1960s, while Northern Ireland's shipbuilding and linen industries declined amid UK deindustrialization, relying on subventions from Westminster that by 2022 constituted about 20% of its budget. By contrast, the Republic of Ireland's liberalization from the 1959 era propelled GDP per capita to surpass Northern Ireland's by 57% in gross national income terms by 2022, highlighting divergent paths where the South's outward orientation contrasted with the North's subsidy-dependent model amid persistent underperformance in productivity and innovation. Socially, partition's legacy manifested in heightened sectarian violence, including over 500 deaths in Belfast riots of 1920–1922 and the displacement of 20,000 Catholics, patterns that presaged the Troubles (1968–1998), which claimed 3,532 lives through bombings, shootings, and reprisals rooted in unresolved partition grievances and discriminatory governance. In cultural memory, the War of Independence and partition are commemorated differently across jurisdictions, with the Republic emphasizing republican heroism through state ceremonies like the 2016 centenary events honoring figures such as Michael Collins, while downplaying the Treaty’s compromises and the ensuing Civil War to foster national unity. Northern Irish unionists frame the era as a successful bulwark against absorption into a Catholic-majority state, evident in loyalist parades and memorials to the Ulster Volunteer Force, whereas nationalists invoke partition as an enduring injustice, fueling narratives in literature and republican historiography that portray it as a British imposition thwarting self-determination. This bifurcated remembrance perpetuates polarization, as seen in contested sites like Belfast's murals depicting both IRA volunteers and unionist defenders, though post-Troubles efforts like the 1998 Good Friday Agreement have prompted shared history initiatives amid ongoing debates over selective forgetting of atrocities on both sides.

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