From the BBC:
“NI 100: Tracing the history
of the 100-year-old Irish border”
(NI police, including members of
the Ulster Special Constabulary, guarding a road near the Fermanagh/Cavan
border - circa 1920s)
On May 3 1921, Northern Ireland
officially came into existence as the partition of the island of Ireland took
legal effect. The decision to split Ireland in two followed decades of turmoil
between nationalists, who wanted independence from British rule, and unionists,
who wanted to remain in the United Kingdom. The border divided the 32-county
island into two separate jurisdictions - six counties in the north-east became
Northern Ireland, which is still part of the UK. The other 26-county territory
became the Irish Free State, but is now the Republic of Ireland. As Northern
Ireland marks its centenary, BBC News NI looks back at the earliest days of the
Irish border and how its controversial 310-mile (500km) route was decided.
Why did partition happen? Partition
was viewed by the British government as a compromise solution. Nationalists
had campaigned for "Home Rule" for decades, seeking a devolved
parliament in Dublin. But unionists, who were mainly Protestant, did not
want to be ruled from Dublin. Unionists held a majority in the province
of Ulster in the north-east, but in Ireland as a whole they were greatly
outnumbered by nationalists, who were mainly Catholic. In 1916, when
Britain was distracted by World War One, it was caught off guard in Ireland
when nationalists staged a brief but violent rebellion - the Easter Rising. The
insurrection was defeated within days, but Britain's execution of many of the
rebel leaders drew sympathy and support for the nationalist cause. The
Easter Rising is widely viewed as the catalyst for the later Irish War of
Independence, which began in 1919. The following year, the British
government decided to partition Ireland, offering nationalists a parliament in
Dublin and giving Ulster unionists their own parliament in Belfast.
Why was the border drawn where
it was?
(Map of Northern Ireland)
The province of Ulster consists
of nine counties, but only six of them were included within the legal boundary
of Northern Ireland. That was because unionist leaders were worried about
nationalist opposition to partition and believed they needed a built-in
majority to stay in power. The Ulster Unionist Council came to accept that
would mean sacrificing counties Donegal, Cavan and Monaghan, which each had
Catholic majorities, most of whom traditionally voted for nationalists.
(Sir James Craig was Northern
Ireland's first prime minister, a post he held for almost 20 years)
The 1920 Government of Ireland
Act had paved the way for Sir James Craig to lead a new unionist-controlled
parliament in Belfast and he was elected as Northern Ireland's first prime
minister. Crucially, the Act delineated the border, stating: "Northern
Ireland shall consist of the parliamentary counties of Antrim, Armagh, Down,
Fermanagh, Londonderry and Tyrone, and the parliamentary boroughs of Belfast
and Londonderry." The same Act also legislated for a separate parliament
in Dublin, but by that stage, British-sanctioned Home Rule was no longer enough
for Ireland's revolutionary leaders. By early 1919, they had set up their own
parliament and were fighting a war for full independence.
How did people feel about the
border? Nationalists, north and south of the border, were infuriated by
partition and continued to campaign for independence for the whole island. Many
unionists were also bitterly disappointed, especially those who lived on the
southern side and woke up to a very uncertain future on 3 May 1921. Craig's
six-county compromise infuriated many of his unionist supporters, according to
historian Cormac Moore. "The unionists and Protestants of counties
Monaghan, Cavan and Donegal were disgusted with the decision of the Ulster
Unionist Council to abandon them, as they saw it, and many left the Ulster
Unionist Council as a result."
Was the border frontier permanently fixed? No. When the border was first imposed, it was not clear how long it would stay in place, or if its position would shift in the favour of unionists or nationalists. In fact, six months after partition, the route the Irish border had taken was put up for negotiation. That negotiation took the form of the Boundary Commission, a three-man panel, appointed to review the borderline and decide if it was in the appropriate plac Of course, for nationalists there was no acceptable border anywhere in Ireland, but some Irish leaders saw opportunity in the commission to gain more territory for the Irish Free State. The Boundary Commission was the product of a peace treaty that ended the Irish War of Independence in 1921.
(Arthur Griffith (far left) and
Michael Collins (seated middle) at the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty in
London on 6 December 1921)
Article 12 of the treaty provided
for a Boundary Commission to review the existing frontier. The Irish delegation
"naively believed this was going to lead to huge chunks of land coming
over to the Free State," says Cormac Moore.
Why did changes to the border
not happen?
(A truck returning from Northern
Ireland is stopped at the border by Irish Free State customs officers - 1925)
The appointment of the Boundary
Commission was delayed until 1924, partly due to outbreak of the the Irish
Civil War. That three-year delay had consequences for nationalism - it allowed
time for the existing border to bed in and the two economies began to diverge. But
the action that "cemented partition" according to Cormac Moore, was
the decision by the Free State government to erect customs posts along the
border in 1923. He argues that this led to "a more tangible
partition". "It affected people more on a day-to-day basis than
anything that had happened previously to it, and yes, it did solidify the
border in many respects." The three-man commission was supposed to have a
British chair, Richard Feetham, and one appointee each from Belfast and
Dublin's governments. But Belfast refused to nominate its commissioner, so the
British government appointed a prominent unionist to represent Northern
Ireland's interests.
How did Boundary Commission
make its decisions? The panel toured border areas and consulted residents,
but several historians agree the ambiguous wording of the Anglo-Irish Treaty
allowed its British chairman to interpret his task however he saw fit. Article
12 of the treaty states the commission "shall determine in accordance with
the wishes of the inhabitants, so far as may be compatible with economic and
geographic conditions, the boundaries between Northern Ireland and the rest of
Ireland". Nationalists believed "wishes of the
inhabitants" meant at the very least, mainly nationalist areas along the
border would transfer to the Free State, according to political geographer
Kieran Rankin. He adds unionists "preferred to concentrate on the
qualifying phrase 'in accordance with economic and geographic conditions'"
in the belief this would help keep Northern Ireland largely intact. The
commission clearly favoured economic factors, especially when considering large
towns with nationalist majorities, such as Newry, County Down. Newry was
then a significant town for trade and transport, and "approximately
three-quarters of its population was reported to be in favour of transfer to
the Free State," according to Rankin. The commission considered
Newry's port revenues, coal supply infrastructure, and decided the town was too
important to Northern Ireland's linen industry to transfer south. "This
was the archetypal case study of economic and geographic conditions overriding
the wishes of the inhabitants," Rankin argues. Only a small number
of border villages, including Crossmaglen, Forkhill and Jonesborough in County
Armagh, were recommended for transfer to the Free State. But none of the
larger towns made the transfer list, dashing hopes of Catholic majorities in
places like Strabane, County Tyrone.
What was reaction to Boundary
Commission proposals?
(Map illustrating Boundary
Commission proposals for a redrawn Irish border in 1925)
Under the Boundary Commission's
actual recommendations, the Free State would have gained 282 square miles of
territory. But it would also surrender 78 square miles to Northern Ireland,
mainly around east Donegal. Unionists welcomed the outcome, but the Irish
government was horrified. Under a new boundary agreement signed in December
1925, the three governments agreed to revoke the commission's powers and keep
the border exactly where it was. The commission's report was shelved and was
not made public until 1969.
What is the position of the
border today?
(The once heavily-fortified
frontier is now an open border - in many places it is only visible because of
the change in road markings)
A century after the boundary of
Northern Ireland was defined in the Government of Ireland Act, the route of the
border remains unchanged. However, the area around the border has seen many
changes. In the later part of the 20th century, it became a heavily-militarised
zone during the Troubles in Northern Ireland During more than 30 years of
violence, the border became studded with British Army checkpoints and was the
scene of regular IRA attacks. In 1993, customs posts were removed as the
European Single Market came into effect. After the 1998 Good Friday Agreement
Army checkpoints were gradually dismantled, with the last military watchtowers
coming down in 2006.
When the UK left the European
Union on 31 January 2020, the Irish border became the UK's only land border
with the EU. In order to avoid re-imposing a "hard border" with
customs posts on the island of Ireland, the British government agreed to the
Irish Sea border instead. The Brexit debate has galvanised nationalist calls
for a referendum on the reunification of Ireland - but the power to call a
border poll rests with the UK's secretary of state for Northern Ireland. Unionists
oppose any such move and Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he could not see any
Northern Ireland secretary considering a border poll for a "very, very
long time to come". The Taoiseach (Irish Prime Minister), Micheál Martin,
is also opposed to a border poll in the immediate future, saying it would be
"far too divisive" at this stage in the peace process. As things
stand, opinion polls do not suggest that a majority of people in Northern
Ireland support the removal of the border that came into being a century ago.
^ This is an interesting historical
article about Partition and all the troubles and issues that caused and
continues to cause. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-northern-ireland-56806404
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