Éamon de Valera

Irish politician (1882–1975)
(Redirected from Eamon de Valera)

Éamon de Valera[1][2] (born with the name Edward George de Valera, English pronunciation: /ˈeɪmən dɛ vəˈlɛɹə/) (14 October 1882 – 29 August 1975(1975-08-29) (aged 92)) was one of the dominant political figures in 20th century Ireland. Co-owner of one of the Irish Press Newspapers, he served in public office from 1917 to 1973. Several times he was either head of state or head of government in Ireland.


Éamon de Valera
De Valera, photographed c. 1922–30
3rd President of Ireland
In office
25 June 1959 – 24 June 1973
TaoiseachSeán Lemass
Jack Lynch
Liam Cosgrave
Preceded bySeán T. O'Kelly
Succeeded byErskine H. Childers
2nd Taoiseach
In office
20 March 1957 – 23 June 1959
PresidentSeán T. O'Kelly
TánaisteSeán Lemass
Preceded byJohn A. Costello
Succeeded bySeán Lemass
In office
13 June 1951 – 2 June 1954
PresidentSeán T. O'Kelly
TánaisteSeán Lemass
Preceded byJohn A. Costello
Succeeded byJohn A. Costello
In office
29 December 1937 – 18 February 1948
PresidentDouglas Hyde
Seán T. O'Kelly
TánaisteSeán T. O'Kelly
Seán Lemass
Preceded byNew office
Succeeded byJohn A. Costello
Leader of the Opposition
In office
2 June 1954 – 20 March 1957
PresidentSeán T. O'Kelly
TaoiseachJohn A. Costello
Preceded byJohn A. Costello
Succeeded byJohn A. Costello
In office
18 February 1948 – 13 June 1951
PresidentSeán T. O'Kelly
TaoiseachJohn A. Costello
Preceded byRichard Mulcahy
Succeeded byJohn A. Costello
In office
11 August 1927 – 9 March 1932
PresidentW. T. Cosgrave
Preceded byThomas Johnson
Succeeded byW. T. Cosgrave
Leader of Fianna Fáil
In office
23 March 1926 – 23 June 1959
Preceded byNew office
Succeeded bySeán Lemass
President of the Executive Council
In office
9 March 1932 – 29 December 1937
Vice PresidentSeán T. O'Kelly
Preceded byW. T. Cosgrave
Succeeded byOffice abolished
President of the Irish Republic
In office
26 August 1921 – 9 January 1922
Preceded byNew office
Succeeded byArthur Griffith
2nd President of Dáil Éireann
In office
1 April 1919 – 26 August 1921
Preceded byCathal Brugha
Succeeded byOffice abolished
Constituencies represented
Teachta Dála
In office
August 1922 – June 1959
ConstituencyClare
In office
December 1918 – June 1922
ConstituencyClare East
Member of the Northern Ireland Parliament
for South Down
In office
30 November 1933 – 9 February 1938
Preceded byJohn Henry Collins
Succeeded byJames Brown
Member of the Northern Ireland Parliament
for Down
In office
24 May 1921 – 22 May 1929
Preceded byConstituency created
Succeeded byConstituency abolished
Member of Parliament
for East Clare
In office
10 July 1917 – 15 November 1922
Preceded byWillie Redmond
Succeeded byConstituency abolished
Personal details
Born
George de Valero

(1882-10-14)14 October 1882
New York City, New York, U.S.
Died29 August 1975(1975-08-29) (aged 92)
Blackrock, Dublin, Ireland
Cause of deathPneumonia and heart failure
Resting placeGlasnevin Cemetery, Dublin, Ireland
NationalityIrish
Political partyFianna Fáil
Other political
affiliations
Cumann na Poblachta
(1922–1923)
Sinn Féin
(1916–1922)
(1923–1926)
Spouse(s)Sinéad de Valera
(m. 1910; d. 1975)
Children
Parents
Education
Alma materRoyal University of Ireland
Profession
Signature

De Valera was a leader of Ireland's struggle for independence from the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. He also led opposition to the anti-Treaty in the Irish Civil War. De Valera was the author of the Constitution of Ireland.

His family

change

De Valera was born in the New York Nursery and Child's Hospital in New York City in 1882 to an Irish mother; he said that his parents were Catherine Coll Wheelwright, an immigrant from Bruree, County Limerick, and Juan Vivion de Valera, a Spanish-Cuban settler and sculptor, and that they were married in 1881 in New York.

In 1885, after his father's death, de Valera was taken to Ireland by his Uncle Ned. He was brought up by his grandmother Elizabeth Coll, her son Patrick and her daughter Hannie, in County Limerick. At the age of sixteen, he won a scholarship to Blackrock College, County Dublin. In his first year in Blackrock College he was Student of the Year. In 1903 was became mathematics teacher at Rockwell College, County Tipperary. When he graduated in mathematics from the Royal University of Ireland he went back to Blackrock College He taught in many other colleges, including Belvedere college where he taught Kevin Barry, the young Irish republican hanged by the British during the Irish War of Independence.

Early political activity

change

De Valera was an active gaeilgeoir (Irish language enthusiast). In 1908 he joined the Conradh na Gaeilge (the Gaelic League), where he met Dubhghlas de hÍde, later first President of Ireland, and also Sinéad Flanagan, another teacher who he married on 8 January 1910 at St Paul's Church, Arran Quay, Dublin.

Easter Rising

change

On 25 November 1913 he joined the Irish Volunteers. He was soon elected captain of the Donnybrook company, then commandant of the Third Battalion and adjutant of the Dublin Brigade. He also joined the Irish Republican Brotherhood, which secretly controlled the central executive of the Volunteers.

On 24 April 1916 the Easter Rising began. De Valera occupied Boland's Mills, Grand Canal Street in Dublin. After the fighting de Valera was court-martialled, convicted, and sentenced to death, but the sentence was changed to for life imprisonment. This was because he was not kept in Kilmainham Jail with the first prisoners executed. The delay meant British authorities started to check if he really was an American citizen, and wonder how the United States would react to the execution of one of its citizens.

De Valera's supporters say he showed leadership skills and a great ability for planning. His enemies claim he suffered a nervous breakdown during the Rising.

After imprisonment in Dartmoor, Maidstone and Lewes prisons in England, de Valera and other prisoners were released under an amnesty in June 1917. On 10 July 1917 he was elected member of the British House of Commons for East Clare (the constituency which he represented in Dail Eireann until 1959) in a by-election after MP Willie Redmond died fighting in World War I.

President of Sinn Féin

change

British newspapers and picture postcards often called the Easter Rising the Sinn Féin rebellion. From 1917 de Valera was president of Sinn Féin. He and the other survivors of the Rising took over Sinn Féin and then turned into a republican party. Arthur Griffith, had wanted an Anglo-Irish "dual monarchy", with an independent Ireland governed separately from Britain, their only link being a shared monarch, like Canada and Britain today.

That had been the way Ireland was governed with the so-called Constitution of 1782 under Henry Grattan, until Ireland joined with Great Britain to form the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland in 1801.

President of Dáil Éireann

change


Sinn Féin won 73 out of 104 Irish seats in the 1918 general election. A lot more people wanted an independent Ireland after the leaders of the Easter Rising were executed of the 1916 leaders and the threat of conscription. In January 1919, these Sinn Féin MPs, or "TD"s, met in the Mansion House (City Hall), Dublin and formed the First Dáil Éireann (English: Assembly of Ireland).

De Valera was not at this meeting because he had been arrested. He escaped from Lincoln Prison in February 1919, and when he got back to Dublin he replaced Cathal Brugha as Prime Minister Irish: Príomh Aire. The Dáil Constitution passed by the Dáil said that the Príomh Aire was prime minister not head of state.

In September 1919 the British authorities said that The Dáil was illegal. The fighting against Britain escalated into the Irish War of Independence (also called the 'Anglo-Irish War').

President of the Republic

change

In January 1921, he got back from the United States with a loan of $5,500,000 This made him very popular.

In August 1921 de Valera had Dáil Éireann change the 1919 Dáil Constitution to upgrade his title from prime minister to President of the Republic. He said that as Irish head of state he would not go to the Treaty Negotiations of October–December 1921 because the British head of state, King George V would not be there either.

The Treaty

change

The Treaty replaced the Republic by a dominion of the British Commonwealth with the King represented by a Governor-General of the Irish Free State. This was just how Canada was governed. Treaty was finally signed on 6 December 1921.

De Valera's opponents said that he did not join the negotiations because he knew that the British would only allow an Irish dominion, not a republic, and did not want to be blamed for giving up the idea of a republic. De Valera said he was angry because the delegates working out the treaty had not asked him before signing the treaty. But at a secret session of the Dáil during the Treaty Debates and publicised in January 1922, his ideas for a treaty included dominion status, the 'Treaty Ports',[3] a veto by the parliament in Belfast, and the king as head of the Commonwealth. Ireland's would pay a share of the imperial debt.[4]

When the Treaty was accepted by 64 votes to 57, de Valera and a large minority of Sinn Féin TDs left Dáil Éireann. He resigned and Arthur Griffith was elected President of Dáil Éireann in his place.[5]

In March 1922, de Valera made an angry speech saying that, if the Treaty was accepted, it might be necessary to "wade through Irish blood" to achieve Irish freedom. Later he said that

the IRA would have to wade through, perhaps, the blood of some of the members of the Government, in order to get Irish freedom

— De Valera, speaking in Thurles

De Valera's enemies said that this was encouraging civil war.

Civil War broke out in late June 1922.

Civil War

change

Fighting in the Irish Civil War started on 28 June 1922 and ended in May 1923 when the pro-treaty Free State forces beat the anti-Treaty IRA.

De Valera was supposed to be the head of the anti-Treatyites, but he had little power. Usually he had little influence with the IRA Chief of Staff, Liam Lynch. De Valera formed a republican government on 25 October 1922 but it had no real authority and was never like the Dáil governments of 1919–21, which was an alternative government to the British, even running their own courts.

When the IRA's new Chief of Staff called a ceasefire Frank Aiken on 30 May 1923 the government had won. Many republicans were arrested when they came out of hiding and returned home. De Valera was arrested in County Clare and interned until 1924.

The 'empty formula'

change

De Valera resigned from the presidency of Sinn Féin after losing a vote to accept the Free State Constitution (if the Oath of Allegiance was dropped). In March 1926 he formed a new party, Fianna Fáil (Soldiers of Destiny). Fianna Fáil was successful in elections, but for over a year a it did not take its seats in the Dáil. When a new law made candidates promise to take the oath if elected, de Valera and his TDs took the Oath of Allegiance in 1927. They said the oath was "an empty formula" that is, just words they had to say, they did not have to believe them.

Back in Power

change

Six years after it was founded Fianna Fáil won 72 seats in the 1932 general election, and had a plurality in the Dáil. That is, it was the largest party but had less than half of all of the seats, which would be a majority. On 9 March Governor-General James McNeill appointed de Valera President of the Executive Council . He abolished the oath and stopped paying money owed to Britain.

De Valera called a general election in January 1933 and won 77 seats, giving him an overall majority. Under his leadership, Fianna Fáil won further general elections in 1937, 1938, 1943 and 1944.

De Valera was his own Minister for External Affairs. He attended meetings of the League of Nations, and was president of the Council of the League on his first appearance at Geneva in 1932. In 1934, he supported the admission of the Soviet Union into the League. In September 1938 he was elected nineteenth president of the Assembly of the League, a tribute to the international recognition he had won by his independent stance on world questions.

De Valera's new constitution – Bunreacht na hÉireann

change
Éamon de Valera
Timeline 1882–1975
Birth   14 October 1882 in New York.
1885   Sent by his mother to live with her family in Ireland.
1904   Graduates from the Royal University of Ireland.
1908   Joins the Gaelic League.
1910   8 January marries Sinéad Flanagan.
1913   25 November: Joins Irish Volunteers.
1916   24 April: Commander in Bolands Mills during the Easter Rising. Later sentenced to death for participation but death sentence not carried out
1917   Joins Sinn Féin and replaces long-time leader Arthur Griffith as president. Elected MP for East Clare but refuses to take his seat in the House of Commons.
1918   November Elected MP in 1918 general election.
1919   1 April: Elected Príomh Aire (chief minister) of the new Dáil Éireann, the assembly formed by a majority of Irish MPs. Forms his first government. May Travels to the United States to lobby on behalf of the Irish Republic.
1921   July: Irish and British government call truce. October—December: Envoys Plenipotentiary negotiate Anglo-Irish Treaty. December Dáil, against de Valera's advice, approves Treaty. De Valera resigns as president. Seeks re-election but is defeated.
1922–1923   Irish Civil War
1926   March: Leaves Sinn Féin and sets up his own republican party, Fianna Fáil.
1927   Faced with disqualification from contesting elections, takes the Oath of Allegiance and enters Free State Dáil.
1932   Forms his first Free State government.
1937   Enactment of new constitution, Bunreacht na hÉireann, becomes Taoiseach for the first time.
1948   Loses power for the first time in the modern Irish state.
1951   Re-elected as Taoiseach.
1954   Loses power for the second time.
1957   Re-elected as Taoiseach for the last time.
1959   Elected as President of Ireland.
1966   Re-elected as President.
1973   Retires from Public Office.
Death   29 August, 1975

During the 1930s, de Valera changed a lot of the Irish Free State constitution.

The Governor-General of the Irish Free State could reserve or deny the Royal Assent to any changes after being advised (ordered) by His Majesty's Government in London. After a legal argument with the British Government the power this was changed to His Majesty's Government in the Irish Free State

That meant that de Valera was the only person who could stop a bill becoming law.

De Valera abolished:

When King Edward VIII abdicted (resigned) as King of Ireland de Valera passed two Bills;

  • one took out all mention of the King and Governor-General in the constitution
  • the second said the King's only job was formally sending and receiving ambassadors.

In July 1936, de Valera wrote to King Edward in London saying that he planned to introduce a new constitution. This was only a little different from the Bunreacht na hÉireann (meaning literally the Constitution of Ireland).

The new constitution was not an act of the Dáil but was voted for in a referendum, because de Valera wanted a new start for the new country he was setting up.

Neutrality in World War II

change

Ireland stayed neutral in World War II, which was called The Emergency in Ireland. Both the possibility of a German invasion and a British invasion were discussed in the Dáil.

But even though de Valera hated Britain, Irish neutrality often favoured the allies:

  • The Irish government weather reportshelped to decide when D-Day should be;
  • British planes from Lough Erne in County Fermanagh flew a shortcut across Donegal to patrol the Atlantic.
  • The German Ambassador's Eduard Hempel radio transmitter was shut down in 1943.
  • Crashed airmen "operational" flights were interned until the end of the war. If the flight was "non-operational" the crew were allowed home. Nearly all Allied airmen were said to be on "non-operational" flights, while German airmen were judged to be on "operational"
  • Roughly 45,000 Irish men voluntarily joined the Allied forces (including Patrick and Tom Clancy, who had also been IRA volunteers).

In May 1945, de Valera visited the German minister in Dublin, to express sympathy over the death of the Führer.[6] Along with President Douglas Hyde, de Valera was the only head of government to do this. De Valera did not visit the American embassy following the death of Roosevelt, as David Gray, the American Ambassador said he would not receive de Valera. All flags were flown at half-mast on Roosevelt's death on de Valera's instructions

Post–war period

change

After sixteen years in power, Fianna Fáil lost the 1948 election. John A. Costello was Taoiseach of a coalition Government. It was Costello who declared Ireland a republic, making de Valera's friend President Ó Ceallaigh Ireland's head of state. In 1951 de Valera was returned to power but without an overall majority. Many people thought this was his worst government. He spent several months in the Netherlands where he had six operations on his eyes.

Fianna Fáil was defeated again in the 1954 general election, but in 1957 de Valera, won a majority of nine seats. This was the beginning of another sixteen year period in office for Fianna Fáil. But de Valera was only Taoiseach for two years.

In 1959 he was elected President of Ireland, as which he served until 1973. At his retirement at the age of 90, he was the oldest Head of State in the world.

Éamon de Valera died in Linden Convalescent Home, Blackrock, County Dublin on 29 August 1975 aged 92. His wife, Sinéad de Valera, four years his senior, had died the previous January, on the eve of their 65th wedding anniversary. He is buried in Dublin's Glasnevin Cemetery.

Overview

change

In his recent controversial biography by Tim Pat Coogan says that his failures are more than his achievements, and that de Valera's popularity fell as Michael Collins's rose.

Garret Fitzgerald summarised[7] his last term as Taoiseach;

Total economic stagnation marked de Valera's last seven years as leader of his party - because all of the chickens of his disastrous commitment to an inward-looking policy of self sufficiency were coming home to roost.

References

change
  1. His name is frequently misspelled Eamonn De Valera but in fact he never used the second 'n' in his first name (the standard Irish spelling) and always a small 'd' in 'de Valera', which is proper in Spanish names (de meaning 'of').
  2. "Eamon(n)" actually translates into English as Edmond or Edmund. The correct Irish translation of "Edward" is Éadhbhard.
  3. ports in Ireland that the Royal Navy had a right to use
  4. "De Valera's Treaty proposals". Archived from the original on 2012-02-18. Retrieved 2007-10-06.
  5. "www.ucc.ie/celt/published/E900003-001/". Retrieved 2007-04-12.
  6. Duggan, J. P. (2002). Herr Hempel at the German Legation in Dublin 1937-1945. Irish Academic Press. ISBN 0-7165-2757-X.
  7. Garret Fitzgerald, Irish Times, September 16, 2006.

Other websites

change
Parliament of the United Kingdom (1801–present)
Preceded by
Willie Redmond
Sinn Féin MP for Clare East
1917–1922
Succeeded by
Constituency abolished
Parliament of Northern Ireland
Preceded by
Sinn Féin/Independent Republican MP for Down
1921–1929
Succeeded by
Constituency divided
Preceded by
Sinn Féin/Independent Republican MP for South Down
1933–1938
Succeeded by
Oireachtas
Preceded by
Newly created constituency
Sinn Féin Teachta Dála for Clare
1922–1926
Succeeded by
De Valera left Sinn Féin and founded the Fianna Fáil Party
Preceded by
De Valera was previously a member of Sinn Féin
Fianna Fáil Teachta Dála for Clare
1926–1959
Succeeded by
Seán Ó Ceallaigh
Political offices
Preceded by
Arthur Griffith
Leader of the Sinn Féin Party
1917–1926
Succeeded by
John J. O'Kelly
Preceded by
Cathal Brugha
President of Dáil Éireann
1919–1921
Succeeded by
Office replaced by President of the Republic
Preceded by
Office of President of Dáil Éireann
President of the Irish Republic
1921–1922
Succeeded by
Arthur Griffith
Preceded by
William J. Walsh
Chancellor of the National University of Ireland
1921–1975
Succeeded by
T. K. Whitaker
Preceded by
Newly founded party
Leader of the Fianna Fáil Party
1926–1959
Succeeded by
Seán Lemass
Preceded by
Thomas Johnson
Leader of the Opposition
1927–1932
Succeeded by
W. T. Cosgrave
Preceded by
N/A
President of the League of Nations Council
1932
Succeeded by
N/A
Preceded by
W. T. Cosgrave
President of the Executive Council
1932–1937
Succeeded by
Office abolished and replaced by Taoiseach
Preceded by
Newly created office
Taoiseach
1937–1948
Succeeded by
John A. Costello
Preceded by
Patrick McGilligan
Minister for External Affairs
1932–1948
Succeeded by
Seán MacBride
Preceded by
Aga Khan III
President of the League of Nations Assembly
1938
Succeeded by
Carl Joachim Hambro
Preceded by
Richard Mulcahy
Leader of the Opposition
1948–1951
Succeeded by
John A. Costello
Preceded by
John A. Costello
Taoiseach
1951–1954
Succeeded by
John A. Costello
Preceded by
John A. Costello
Leader of the Opposition
1954–1957
Succeeded by
John A. Costello
Preceded by
John A. Costello
Taoiseach
1957–1959
Succeeded by
Seán Lemass
Preceded by
Seán T. O'Kelly
President of Ireland
1959–1973
Succeeded by
Erskine H. Childers