List of members of the Senate of Southern Ireland

The Senate of Southern Ireland was the upper house of the Parliament of Southern Ireland, established de jure in 1921 under the terms of the Government of Ireland Act 1920. The Act stipulated that there be 64 senators, but only 40 were selected and the Senate met only briefly before being dissolved.

Composition

The Senate's composition was specified in the Second Schedule of the 1920 Act, and the mode and time of selection in the Fourth Schedule. These were similar to those suggested for the Senate in the report of the Irish Convention of 1917–18.[1] The 64 members were as follows:

In practice, however, only 40 senators were selected. The Irish Republic established by Sinn Féin in 1919 rejected the legitimacy of the 1920 Act. Sinn Féin gained control of the county councils in the 1920 local elections. The Irish Congress of Trade Unions and Labour Party supported the Republic, and the Roman Catholic hierarchy also refused to co-operate. Of the incomplete membership, many had participated in the Irish Convention.[3] Not all those selected attended its few sessions.

In 1922, both the Irish Republic and Southern Ireland were superseded by Irish Free State. Some of the Southern Ireland senators were subsequently senators in the Free State Seanad (upper house), either appointed by W. T. Cosgrave, President of the Executive Council, or elected by the members of the Dáil (lower house).

List

Class Name Attendance Irish Convention Free State Seanad Notes
Lord Chancellor of Ireland Ross, JohnSir John Ross Too ill to attend Baronet.
Lord Mayor of Dublin O'Neill, LaurenceLaurence O'Neill Boycotted Member Independent Nationalist
Lord Mayor of Cork O'Callaghan, DonalDonal O'Callaghan Boycotted Then incumbent (Thomas C. Butterfield) was a member Sinn Féin. Also returned for Cork Borough in the 1921 election to the House of Commons of Southern Ireland. Article 18(4) of the 1920 Act precluded anyone from sitting in both Houses at once; since O'Callaghan boycotted both, sitting instead in the Second Dáil, the question was moot in his case.
Commerce Andrews, Edward H.Edward H. Andrews Attended. Member Former president of Dublin chamber of commerce.[4]
Commerce (Retail) Arnott, JohnSir John Arnott Attended Of Arnotts department store. Baronet.
Commerce (Farming) Everard, NugentSir Nugent Everard Attended Appointed Baronet
Commerce (Banking) Guinness, HenryHenry Guinness Attended Appointed
Commerce (Distilling) Jameson, AndrewAndrew Jameson Attended Member Appointed
Commerce or Professions Glynn, H. P.H. P. Glynn Attended
Commerce or Professions Westropp, George O'CallaghanGeorge O'Callaghan Westropp Attended Landowner and local government activist.[5]
Professions (Education) Beattie, AndrewSir Andrew Beattie Attended Commissioner of National Education. Leading Dublin Presbyterian.
Professions (Education) Campbell, J. W. R.J. W. R. Campbell Attended. Schoolmaster and Methodist minister.[6]
Professions (Law) Denning, Frederick F.Frederick F. Denning Attended. King's Counsel.[7]
Professions (Law) Gamble, CharlesCharles Gamble Attended. President of the Law Society of Ireland.[8]
Professions (Engineering) Griffith, JohnSir John Griffith Did not attend Elected
Professions (Medicine) Moore, JohnSir John William Moore Attended Physician to the Meath Hospital and medical administrator.[9]
Professions (Medicine) Taylor, WilliamSir William Taylor Attended Former President of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland.[10]
Labour 03 Three Representatives not selected Boycotted 07 Seven members
Bishop (Roman Catholic) 04 Four Representatives not selected Did not attend 04 Four members (Cashel, Ross, Raphoe, and Down & Connor).
Bishop (Church of Ireland) D'Arcy, CharlesCharles D'Arcy Did not attend. Predecessor (John Crozier) was a member. Archbishop of Armagh. The see is mainly in Northern Ireland.
Bishop (Church of Ireland) Gregg, JohnJohn Gregg Attended. Predecessor (John Bernard) was a member. Archbishop of Dublin
Peer Cloncurry Peer (Baron Cloncurry) Lawless, FrederickFrederick Lawless Attended
Peer Desart Peer (Earl of Desart) Cuffe, HamiltonHamilton Cuffe Did not attend Member
Peer Donoughmore Peer (Earl of Donoughmore) Hely-Hutchinson, RichardRichard Hely-Hutchinson Did not attend
Peer Dunraven and Mount-Earl Peer (Earl of Dunraven and Mount-Earl) Wyndham-Quin, WindhamWindham Wyndham-Quin Did not attend Member Appointed
Peer Freyne Peer (Baron de Freyne) French, FrancisFrancis French Did not attend
Peer HolmPatrick Peer (Baron HolmPatrick) Hamilton, HansHans Hamilton Did not attend
Peer Inchiquin Peer (Baron Inchiquin) O'Brien, LuciusLucius O'Brien Did not attend
Peer Kenmare Peer (Earl of Kenmare) Browne, ValentineValentine Browne Did not attend
Peer Mayo Peer (Earl of Mayo) Bourke, DermotDermot Bourke Did not attend Member Appointed
Peer Midleton Peer (Earl of Midleton) Brodrick, St JohnSt John Brodrick Did not attend Member
Peer Oranmore and Browne Peer (Baron Oranmore and Browne) Browne, GeoffreyGeoffrey Browne Did not attend Member
Peer Powerscourt Peer (Viscount Powerscourt) Wingfield, MervynMervyn Wingfield Did not attend
Peer Rathdonnell Peer (Baron Rathdonnell) McClintock-Bunbury, ThomasThomas McClintock-Bunbury Attended
Peer Sligo Peer (Marquess of Sligo) Browne, GeorgeGeorge Browne Attended
Peer Wicklow Peer (Earl of Wicklow) Howard, RalphRalph Howard Did not attend Appointed
Peer ZZZ Peer 01 16th representative Did not attend
Privy Councillor Brabazon, ReginaldReginald Brabazon Did not attend Earl of Meath
Privy Councillor Forbes, BernardBernard Forbes Did not attend Member Appointed Earl of Granard
Privy Councillor Goulding, WilliamSir William Goulding Did not attend. Member First of the Goulding baronets
Privy Councillor Kavanagh, Walter MacMurroughWalter MacMurrough Kavanagh Did not attend. Member Former unionist-turned-nationalist MP,[11] and chairman of County Carlow council.[12]
Privy Councillor Mahon, BryanSir Bryan Mahon Attended Appointed
Privy Councillor Nugent, AnthonyAnthony Nugent Did not attend Earl of Westmeath
Privy Councillor Stafford, ThomasSir Thomas Stafford Did not attend Member FRCSI; Medical Commissioner of the Local Government Board for Ireland; baronet.[13]
Privy Councillor Waldron, Laurence AmbroseLaurence Ambrose Waldron Resigned before the first meeting
County councillor 14 14 Representatives not selected Boycotted 38 38 members, one per county and county borough; also several from urban district councils.

See also

Sources

Notes

  1. Cd.9019, p.13
  2. "The Lives of the Lord Chancellors and Keepers of the Great Seal of Ireland - from the earliest times to the reign of Queen Victoria" by J. Roderick O'Flanagan, 1870 publication
  3. Cd. 9019, pp.52–53
  4. "Past Presidents". Dublin Chamber of Commerce. Retrieved 5 February 2011.
  5. "Papers of George O'Callaghan-Westropp (1864–1944)". UCD. pp. IE UCDA P38. Retrieved 6 September 2013.
  6. The Christian advocate. 95. Hunt & Eaton. 1920. p. 993.
  7. "Remembrance Day". The Irish law times and solicitors' journal. 71: 323. 1937.
  8. "The Incorporated Law Society of Ireland". The Irish law times and solicitors' journal. 55: 124. 1921.
  9. B., J. W.; T. G. Moorehead (23 October 1937). "Obituary: Sir John William Moore". British Medical Journal (4007): 831–834. PMC 2087590Freely accessible.
  10. Crawley, Frank C.; H. C. Drury; William Pearson; W. Boxwell (February 1933). "In memoriam. Sir William Taylor (1871–1933)" (PDF). Irish Journal of Medical Science. Springer-Verlag. 8 (2): 86–90. doi:10.1007/BF02954546. ISSN 1863-4362.
  11. Maume, Patrick (1999). The long gestation: Irish nationalist life 1891–1918. Gill & Macmillan. p. 101.
  12. "Irish point of view on new tillage rules; Rt. Hon. Walter McMurrough Kavanagh Expresses Opinion With Regard to Compulsory Tillage Regulations in Ireland Farmer's Comments How Regulations Appear to an Irish Landowner". Christian Science Monitor. Boston. 28 March 1917. p. 3.
  13. "Obituary: Sir Thomas Stafford, Bt., F.R.C.S.I". British Medical Journal. 1 (3881): 1102. 25 May 1935. doi:10.1136/bmj.1.3881.1102. PMC 2460354Freely accessible. PMID 20779108.
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