Charles Stewart Parnell (27 June, 1846 – 6 October, 1891) was an Irish political leader and one of the most important figures in 19th century Ireland and the United Kingdom; William Ewart Gladstone thought him the most remarkable person he had ever met. A future Liberal Prime Minister, Herbert Henry Asquith, described him as one of the three or four greatest men of the nineteenth century, while Lord Haldane described him as the strongest man the British House of Commons had seen in 150 years.
Family background
Charles Stewart Parnell1 was born in County Wicklow, of gentry stock. He was the third son and seventh child of John Henry Parnell, a wealthy Anglo-Irish landowner, and his American wife Delia Stewart, daughter of the famous American naval hero, Commodore Charles Stewart (the stepson of one of George Washington's bodyguards). Commodore Stewart's mother, Parnell's great-grandmother, belonged to the Tudor family and so could claim a distant relationship with the British Royal Family. John Henry Parnell himself was a cousin of one of Ireland's leading aristocrats, Lord Powerscourt, and also the grandson of a Chancellor of the Exchequer in the Irish House of Commons, Sir John Parnell.
Thus, from birth, Charles Stewart Parnell possessed an extraordinary number of links with a whole variety of elements of society; from the established Church of Ireland to which he belonged (and most of whose members were unionists) and the aristocracy through his cousins, the Powerscourts, to the old Irish Parliamentary tradition through his great-grandfather, the American War of Independence and the War of 1812 (where his grandfather had been awarded a gold medal by the United States Congress for gallantry) right to a distant link with the Royal Family. Yet it was as a leader of Irish nationalism that Parnell established his fame.
The young Parnell studied at Magdalene College, Cambridge, and in 1874 became High Sheriff of his home county of Wicklow. The following year he entered parliament as member for County Meath, supporting the Home Rule party.
Leader
Parnell, though a surprisingly poor speaker at first in the House of Commons, showed himself to be a skilled organizer. By 1880 he had replaced Isaac Butt and William Shaw as chairman of the Nationalist Party.
Under his leadership, he reorganized the party as the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1882, becoming perhaps the first professionally organized political party anywhere in Britain and Ireland. Professional selection of candidates took place, with party MPs (who previously had been notorious for their lack of unity) whipped to vote as a block. Parnell's unified Irish block came to dominate British politics, making and unmaking Liberal and Conservative governments in the mid-1880s as it fought for home rule (internal self government within the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland) for Ireland. In the mid 1880s, Liberal Party leader William Ewart Gladstone committed his party to support for the cause of Irish Home Rule, introducing the First Home Rule Bill in 1886. However the measure failed to pass the British House of Commons by one vote (that of the then Duke of Devonshire), following a split between pro- and anti-home rulers within the Liberal Party.
Though home rule was a central demand of the Irish Parliamentary Party, it also campaigned for Irish land reform. In its campaign, some of its members worked closely with a organization known as the Irish National Land League.
Parnell was elected president of the Land League on 21 October, 1879. In January, 1880, together with John Dillon, he visited the United States to raise funds and awareness for the Land League. On 2 February, 1880, he addressed the House of Representatives on the state of Ireland.
The association with the Land League led various members, including John Dillon, Tim Healy, William O'Brien and Parnell himself to serve periods in prison. The agitation led to the passing of a series of Land Acts that over three decades changed the face of Irish land ownership, replacing large Anglo-Irish estates with tenant ownership.
The Piggott forgeries
In March 1887, Parnell found himself accused by the British newspaper The Times of support for the murders of the Chief Secretary for Ireland Lord Frederick Cavendish, and the Permanent Under-Secretary for Ireland, T.H. Burke. Burke and Cavendish had been brutally stabbed to death on 6 May 1882 in the Phoenix Park in Dublin. Letters were published which suggested Parnell was complicit in the murders.
However a Commission of Enquiry, set up to destroy Parnell, vindicated him, as did a libel action instituted by him, when it was revealed in February 1890 that the letters were in fact a fabrication created by Richard Piggott, an anti-Parnellite journalist who committed suicide subsequently. Parnell then took The Times to court for libel and in an out court settlement they paid him £5,000 in damages. When Parnell entered parliament, after he was vindicated, he received a standing ovation from his fellow MPs.
Mrs Katherine O'Shea
Parnell was viewed as an Irish national hero, referred to as the Uncrowned King of Ireland, a term originally coined to describe Daniel O'Connell. However Parnell's triumph was shortlived, when it was 'revealed' (though it had been widely known among politicians at Westminster) that Parnell had been the long term partner, and father of three of the children, of Katherine O'Shea. Although now known as Kitty O'Shea, this name was coined by Parnell's opponents, and no-one who knew her called her Kitty. (A "kitty" was a slang term for a prostitute.)
She was the wife of a fellow Galway MP, a lapsed Catholic, Captain Willie O'Shea, who had initiated divorce proceedings after failing to secure a large inheritance due to his wife. Captain O'Shea had stayed married to Katherine O'Shea as his old wealthy aunt liked Katherine and was going to leave a large sum of money to her in her last will and testement. The aunt lived for another 11 years; when she finally died Captain O'Shea gained less money than he expected and he initiated divorce proceedings. After the divorce Katherine became Parnell's wife, Mrs. Katherine Parnell. Under pressure from the religious wing of the Liberal Party, Gladstone reluctantly indicated that he could not support the Irish Parliamentary party as long as Charles Stewart Parnell remained its leader.
Divorce was frowned upon heavily in the Catholic religion and since he was co-respondent, Parnell was seen to be the cause of the divorce. He was also criticised by Nonconformists. Parnell's reputation was high but the scandal crippled this support. It would have been far easier for Parnell if it had happened a few years earlier. As a direct consequence of the O'Shea divorce the Unionist movement in Ulster gained strength, as they espoused puritan values and they began to see the Home Rule movement as 'morally wrong'. Therefore it made it appear that Unionism was the morally correct, and only viable option.
Parnell refused to resign, leading to a wholesale party split between Parnellites and Anti-Parnellites. At a party meeting, Parnell challenged Gladstone's intervention with the question, "Who is the master of the party?"; Tim Healy, a notoriously waspish MP, responded with the legendary "Who is the mistress of the party?" putdown. The fact that it was Tim Healy who so vehemently opposed Parnell was seen as the ultimate betrayal. This was because Healy had been one of Parnell's strongest supporters and had referred to Parnell as 'the Uncrowned King of Ireland'.
See also: Diocese of Meath
Death
Parnell was deposed as leader and fought a long and bitter campaign for re-instatement. He conducted a political tour of Ireland to regain popular support, attracting Fenian "hillside men" to his side. He married Katherine on 25 June, 1891, in Steyning, West Sussex, on which day the Catholic hierarchy issued a near-unanimous condemnation of his conduct (only Edward O'Dwyer of Limerick withheld his signature). He lost the support of the Freeman's Journal. On the difficult campaign trail he had quicklime thrown at his eyes by a hostile crowd in Castlecomer, County Kilkenny.
Fr. PJ Ryan, a Land League protagonist, immediately called in medical aid, which was given him by his brother, Dr. Valentine Ryan of Carlow Town, a Home Rule sympathiser. On 27 September Parnell addressed a crowd in pouring rain at Creggs on the Galway–Roscommon border and contracted pneumonia.
He returned to Dublin, thence to Brighton, departing by the mail boat, 30 September. ("I shall be all right. I shall be back next Saturday week"); He died of heart attack brought on by rheumatic fever, near midnight, 6 October in his and Katherine's home in Brighton. Though an Anglican, he was buried in Dublin's largest Roman Catholic cemetery, Glasnevin. Such was his reputation that his gravestone carries just one word in large lettering: PARNELL.
Notes
- Most contemporaries pronounced his name as par-nell with the emphasis on the latter part of the name. He himself disapproved of this pronunciation, pronouncing his name par-nell, with the emphasis on the start of the name.
- Gladstone's exact words were; "I do not say the ablest man; I say the most remarkable and the most interesting. He was an intellectual phenomenon."
Additional reading and sources
- Robert Kee, The Green Flag (Penguin, 1972–2000), ISBN 0140291652
- Robert Kee, The Laurel and the Ivy (Penguin, 1994), ISBN 0140239626
- Claude Berube and John Rodgaard, "A Call to the Sea: Captain Charles Stewart of the USS Constitution" (Potomac Books Inc, 2005), ISBN 1-57488-518-9
See also
External links
- Parnell at IMDb, a 1937 film starring Clark Gable