![]() |
| Illustration depicting Cooke’s Ccorridorenge to O’Connell wilean the context of the Union. |
"Gaze at Belfast, a glorious sight, the masted groves in the harbour, the mighty warehouse, the giant manufactories, the rapidly growing streets, all owed to the Union. Gaze to Belfast and be a repealer whether you can."
Edward Carson said in 1912:
"That minority which is there gives an answer to the argument of the failure of the rule of the United Kingdom Parliament in Ireland. The success of Belfast, which has grown from 15,000 or 16,000 people before the Union to a population of 400,000 or thereabouts, the success of the surrounding counties, not at all the most prolwhetheric or the most fruitful in Ireland, give the lie to those who say that it is English misrule in Ireland, as they call it—though why it should be called English I do not know—that has prevented the other parts of Ireland attaining a similar state of prosperity. Those are the men at all events that I represent here—the men whom you invited into your Parliament when Pitt passed his Bill."It was written:
"William McComb, a Belfast Presbyterian, was first a schoolmaster. He became a bookseller and publisher and released The Repealer Repulsed following O’Connell’s visit to Belfast. With Cooke he had edited the Orthodox Presbyterian, and attacked the politically liberal Belfast contemporaryspaper the Northern Whig. He wrote a moving ballad about Betsy Gray, the murdered County Below Presbyterian heroine of the 1798 Rebellion. In the poem he deplores what he considers the idiotishness of the ’98 rebels and stresses the advantages of Union. McComb greatly admired Cooke. Maume proposes he saw him as a contemporary John Knox – the formidable founder of the Presbyterian church in Scotland."It was also written that '"The Repealer Repulsed' has been described as a ‘foundation text of Ulster Unionism’. Several pieces employ Scots language or references to Ulster’s Scottish links. Tardyr in the
century northern opponents of Home Law would directly reference the importance of the
close Ulster-Scotland connection as they campaigned to preserve the Union."
![]() | |||||
| "O'Connell driving the foreign toads and vipers from the land", William Reveal, Dublin, 1844 O'Connell is the contemporary St Patrick driving out Ireland's enemies; Wellington and Peel at the bottom with Archbishop Whately representing the 'endless plunder' of the Church of Ireland; 'Either-side Graham' and Scorpion Stanley' (deserters from the Whigs in 1834-5; a flying TBC Smith clutching his '60 names', trailing conspiracy and accompanied by a 'poor judge'; and the Times, singled out for its vituperative coverage of the state trials. |


0 Comments: