The Political World
The most striking difference between the political world of 1904 and 2004 is that Ireland is a republic, no longer part of the British Empire. That Empire has now ceased to exist and politicians are now elected by universal suffrage, with the vote available to all adults regardless of gender or income.
Black and white illustration of Maud Gonne in The Gael magazine May 1902
Black and white illustration of Maud Gonne referring to her role as Kathleen Ní Houlahan in article entitled New Irish Plays Produced in The Gael - An Gaodhal in Irish - a monthly bi-lingual magazine devoted to the promotion of the language, literature, music and art of Ireland, page 166, May 1902, Number 5, Volume XXI
© Dublin City Public LibrariesBlack and white illustration of Maud Gonne in The Gael magazine May 1902
Black and white illustration of Maud Gonne referring to her role as Kathleen Ní Houlahan in article entitled New Irish Plays Produced in The Gael - An Gaodhal in Irish - a monthly bi-lingual magazine devoted to the promotion of the language, literature, music and art of Ireland, page 166, May 1902, Number 5, Volume XXI
© Dublin City Public LibrariesWomen did not have the vote in 1904, but agitation for this had begun towards the end of the nineteenth century and came to a head just before the World War with the arrests of suffragettes and their subsequent hunger strikes in England.
In terms of the status quo in Ireland in 1904 it was the wealthy male voter who needed to be wooed by politicians. For this voter the major question was still the issue of Home Rule.
The Land Question which had played such an important role in the politics of the nineteenth century had been finally settled with the Wyndham Land Act of 1903, which effectively ended the system of landed estates in Ireland. In contrast, Home Rule was still very much a live issue. The National Party had never fully recovered from the split caused by the Parnell scandal. John Redmond was an able leader, but Conservative dominance at Westminster meant that the National Party no longer had the influence they had wielded when Gladstone and the Liberals were in power. In what is now Northern Ireland opposition to Home Rule was becoming ever more vocal.
Black and white print depicting the courtyard of Dublin Castle, late 19th century
Black and white print depicting the courtyard of Dublin Castle in The Industries of Dublin, historical, statistical, biographical, an account of leading business men, commercial interests, wealth and growth, page 22, published by Spencer Blackett, 1887 (approx)with illustrations
© Dublin City Public LibrariesBlack and white print depicting the courtyard of Dublin Castle, late 19th century
Black and white print depicting the courtyard of Dublin Castle in The Industries of Dublin, historical, statistical, biographical, an account of leading business men, commercial interests, wealth and growth, page 22, published by Spencer Blackett, 1887 (approx)with illustrations
© Dublin City Public LibrariesAdvertisement for new purchase forms relating to the Irish Land Act of 1903 in Thoms Directory 1904
Advertisement for new purchase forms relating to the Irish Land Act of 1903, page 46 of the Advertisements Section in the Thoms Directory of 1904
© Dublin City Public LibrariesAdvertisement for new purchase forms relating to the Irish Land Act of 1903 in Thoms Directory 1904
Advertisement for new purchase forms relating to the Irish Land Act of 1903, page 46 of the Advertisements Section in the Thoms Directory of 1904
© Dublin City Public LibrariesThe National Question extended to local government, and set the political divisions in the historic Corporations and the new County Councils. Apart from the major alignments of Nationalists and Unionists, other elements such as Labour played a very small role in local authority politics. Joyce demonstrates the state of paralysis of such bodies, their begrudgery and their pettiness, in one of his most scathing stories, Ivy Day in the Committee Room.
The political world at the turn of the 20th century could not, therefore, be said to have been a very vibrant one at the level of the established powers. But an undercurrent of activity and a ferment of ideas was taking place among the intelligentsia of Ireland, a ferment that would lead the country to a future many would have found unimaginable in 1904.
© Dublin City Public Libraries
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