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Douglas Hyde - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Douglas Hyde

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Douglas Hyde
1st President of Ireland
Career
Rank 1st President
Term 25 June 1938 - 24 June 1945
Preceded by post created
Succeeded by Sean T. O'Kelly
Party   all-party nomination
Personal
Date of birth   17 January 1860
Place of birth   Castlerea, County Roscommon
Date of death   12 July 1949
Place of death   Dublin, Ireland
Spouse   Lucy Cometina Kurtz
Profession  UCD professor; Irish language activist
Douglas Hyde, circa 1912
Enlarge
Douglas Hyde, circa 1912

Douglas Hyde (Irish: Dubhghlas de hÍde) (17 January 186012 July 1949) was an Anglo-Irish scholar of the Irish language who served as the first President of Ireland from 1938 to 1945. He founded the Gaelic League, one of the most influential cultural organisations in Ireland.

Contents

[edit] Background

Hyde was born in Castlerea in County Roscommon, where his father, Arthur Hyde, was the local Church of Ireland rector, and raised in neighbouring Frenchpark. While a young man he became fascinated with hearing the old people in the locality speak the Irish language, a language looked down on at the time by many and seen as backward and old-fashioned.

Rejecting family pressure that like past generations of Hydes he follow a career in the Church, Hyde instead became an academic. He entered Trinity College, Dublin where he became fluent in French, Latin, German, Greek and Hebrew. His passion for Irish, already a language in severe decline, led him to found the Gaelic League, or in Irish, Conradh na Gaeilge, in the hope of saving it from extinction.

[edit] Conradh na Gaeilge

Hyde's Irish language movement, initially seen as eccentric, gained a mass following throughout the island. He published a pamphlet called The Necessity for De-Anglicising Ireland, arguing that Ireland should follow her own traditions in language, literature and even in dress. (Hyde began wearing knee-length breeches rather than trousers, in the mistaken belief that they were a traditional Irish outfit.)

Many of the new generation of Irish leaders who played a central role in the fight for Irish independence in the early twentieth century, including Patrick Pearse, Éamon de Valera (who married his Irish teacher Sinéad Flanagan), Michael Collins, and Ernest Blythe first became politicised and passionate about Irish independence through their involvement in Conradh na Gaeilge (Gaelic League).

Hyde himself however felt uncomfortable at the growing politicisation of his movement (which had been infiltrated by the Irish Republican Brotherhood, just like the Irish Volunteers and the Gaelic Athletic Association) and resigned the presidency in 1915; he was replaced by the radical political activist and Irish-language teacher, Patrick Pearse (1879-1916).

[edit] Senator

Hyde had no association with Sinn Féin and the Independence movement. He did however accept appointment to Seanad Éireann, the upper house of the Irish Free State's Oireachtas (parliament) from his friend, the President of the Executive Council W.T. Cosgrave, after the creation of the new state.

However his tenure was shortlived. In November 1925 the house moved from being an appointed to an elected body. Hyde contested the election, which was based on one state-wide constituency, but a smear by a far right-wing organisation, the Catholic Truth Society, based on his supposed support for divorce (in fact he was anti-divorce) and his Protestantism, and promoted by the CTS secretary in the letters column of the Irish Independent, fatally damaged his chances and he lost his seat.

He returned to academia, as Professor of Irish at University College Dublin, where one of his students was future Attorney-General and President of Ireland, Cearbhall Ó Dálaigh.

[edit] President of Ireland

Hyde is notable in that he is the only leader of independent Ireland to be featured on its banknotes, here on a Series C Banknote of IR£50.
Enlarge
Hyde is notable in that he is the only leader of independent Ireland to be featured on its banknotes, here on a Series C Banknote of IR£50.

In April 1938, by now retired from academia, Douglas was plucked from retirement by Taoiseach Éamon de Valera and again appointed to Seanad Éireann. Again his tenure proved short, even shorter than before. But this time it was because, on the suggestion of Fine Gael in inter-party negotiations to choose a first President of Ireland, Hyde had been chosen to take on the office. He was selected for a number of reasons.

  • Both wanted to purge the humiliation that had occurred when he had lost his Senate seat in 1925;
  • Both wanted a president who would prove that there was no danger that the new president would become an authoritarian dictator in Ireland, a widespread fear when the new constitution was being discussed in 1937;
  • Both wanted to pay tribute to Hyde's Conradh na Gaeilge role in achieving Irish independence.
  • Both wanted to choose a non-Catholic to disprove the assertion that the State was a "confessional state".[1]

Hyde was inaugurated as the first President of Ireland in June 1938 and moved into the long vacant Viceregal Lodge. Hyde's recitation of the Presidential Declaration of Office in his native Roscommon Irish dialect, remains one of the few recordings of a dialect that has long disappeared and of which Hyde himself was one of the last users.

[edit] "Fine and scholarly old gentleman" says F.D.R.

Hyde, with his handlebar moustache and warm personality was a popular president. United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt called President Hyde a "fine and scholarly old gentleman", while President Hyde and King George VI (who still was legally King of Ireland and would remain so until 1 April 1949) corresponded about stamp collecting.

However in April 1940 he suffered a massive stroke. Plans were made for his lying-in-state and state funeral, but to the surprise of everyone he survived, albeit paralysed and having to use a wheelchair.

[edit] Senility rumours

Although he remained mentally alert and capable during his remaining five years in office, he retired from public gaze. Rumours spread suggesting that Hyde was now senile, and that he had developed an eye for the ladies, including the household staff and specifically his young nurse (whom he was said to have asked him to marry him, his wife having died early in his term). Though untrue, the rumours reached such a level that Myles Na Gopaleen, the famed satirist, wrote an obscene limerick about the President's rumoured condition:

There once was a man called an t-Uachtaráin[2]
who lived in Áras an Uachtaráin,
He was fond of his nookie,
he had a go at the cookie,
And there is the couch that he f-uchtaráin. (pronounced 'fucked her on.')

Though not one of Na nGopaleen's best limericks, it gained widespread currency, adding to rumours about the mental and physical state of the elderly, wheelchair-bound president. In fact all the documentary evidence in the archives suggests that Hyde was not senile (and, confined to a wheelchair, was hardly likely, even if he wanted to, to be engaging in sexual activity with staff).

[edit] Decisions as President

Although the role of President of Ireland was, and is, largely ceremonial, Hyde did have a small number important decisions to make during his presidency.

He was confronted with a crisis in 1944 when de Valera's government unexpectedly collapsed in a vote on the Transport Bill and the President had to decide whether or not to grant an election to de Valera.[3] (He granted the election.)

President Hyde also twice used his power under Article 26 of the Constitution, having consulted the Council of State, to refer a Bill or part of a Bill to the Supreme Court, for the court's decision on whether the Bill or part referred is repugnant to the Constitution (so that the Bill in question cannot be signed into law).

On the first occasion, the court held that the Bill referred - Offences Against the State (Amendment) Bill, 1940- was not repugnant to the Constitution. [4] In response to the second reference, the Court decided that the particular provision referred - section 4 of the School Attendance Bill, 1942 - was repugnant to the Constitution.[5]

Because of Article 34.3.3° of the Constitution, the constitutional validity of the Offences Against the State (Amendment) Act, 1940 [2] cannot be challenged in any court, since the Bill which became that Act was found by the Supreme Court not to be repugnant in the context of an Article 26 reference.

[edit] Retirement and death

Hyde left office on 25 June 1945. Due to his ill-health he did not return to his Roscommon home Ratra, which had lain empty since the death of his wife early in his term. Instead he was moved into the former Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant's residence in the grounds of Áras an Uachtaráin, which he renamed Little Ratra and where he lived out the remaining four years of his life. He died quietly at 10pm on 12 July 1949, aged 89.

[edit] State funeral

Memorial to Douglas Hyde in St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin.
Enlarge
Memorial to Douglas Hyde in St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin.

As a former President of Ireland he was accorded a state funeral. One protocol problem arose; as an Anglican his funeral service took place in Dublin's Church of Ireland St. Patrick's Cathedral. However, contemporary religious rules prohibited Roman Catholics from attending services in Protestant churches. As a result all but one member of the Catholic cabinet, Dr. Noel Browne, remained outside the cathedral while Hyde's funeral took place. They then joined the cortège when his coffin left the cathedral. Éamon de Valera, by now Leader of the Opposition, was represented by a senior Fianna Fáil figure who was a member of the Church of Ireland, Erskine Childers, a future President of Ireland himself.

[edit] Hyde Museum in Roscommon

Hyde was buried in his native Roscommon. His father's old church is now a museum dedicated to showing memorabilia about Douglas Hyde, the Anglican squire who took up the cause of the Irish language and ended up as the first President of Ireland.

[edit] Coláiste de hÍde, Tamhlacht

Coláiste de hÍde, a Gaelcholásite (all-Irish secondary level college) was founded in 1993 in Tallaght, South Dublin in his honour. A picture as well as a collection of his books originally written in Irish are on display in the school's new building in Tymon North Park, Tallaght. [3]

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Critics accused de Valera of introducing a "Catholic constitution" that discriminated against non-Catholics. In fact his constitution gave Catholicism a technically meaningless "special position" while recognising the Church of Ireland, the Presbyterian Church, the Methodist Church and others, including Irish Jews.
    This recognition and the failure of de Valera to make Roman Catholicism in Ireland the "established church" (akin to the Church of England in England) infuriated right-wing Catholic groups, such as Maria Duce, specifically those who had hounded Hyde in 1925. Even de Valera's controversial ban on divorce was publicly applauded by the Church of Ireland hierarchy.
  2. ^ An tUachtarán means simply "The President" in Irish.
  3. ^ Under the Constitution the President of Ireland may grant or refuse a dissolution to a Taoiseach who has "ceased to retain the support of a majority in Dáil Éireann". If a dissolution is granted, a general election is proclaimed to fill the seats now vacated by the dissolution. However this means that for four to six weeks, until the new Dáil assembles, there is no Dáil to speak of. Fearing that this gap might facilitate a German invasion during World War II (called The Emergency in Ireland), as they would have known that no parliament could be called to deal with the invasion, the Oireachtas enacted emergency legislation (under Article 28.3.3°) - the General Elections (Emergency Powers) Act 1943 [1] - which allowed an election to be called separate from a dissolution, with the Dáil only being dissolved just before new Dáil would assemble, so ensuring the gap between Dála (plural of Dáil) would be too short to facilitate an invasion. Under the Act the President could "refuse to proclaim a general election on the advice of a Taoiseach who had ceased to retain the support of a majority in Dáil Éireann". Hyde had that option, but after considering it with his senior advisor, Michael McDunphy, he opted to grant de Valera his election request.
  4. ^ Re Article 26 of the Constitution and the Offences Against the State (Amendment) Bill, 1940 [1940] IR 470.
  5. ^ Re Article 26 of the Constitution and the School Attendance Bill, 1942 [1943] IR 334.

[edit] External links


Preceded by:
Presidential Commission
President of Ireland
1938 – 1945
Succeeded by:
Seán T. O'Kelly
Preceded by:
The Right Hon. Lord Glenavy
President of the College Historical Society
1931 – 1949
Succeeded by:
Sir Robert W. Tate
Presidents of Ireland
Uachtaráin na hÉireann
Government of Ireland

Douglas Hyde | Seán T. O'Kelly | Éamon de Valera | Erskine H. Childers | Cearbhall Ó Dálaigh |
Patrick Hillery | Mary Robinson | Mary McAleese


See also Áras an Uachtaráin | Blue Hussars | Constitution of Ireland | Council of State | DeV's car | External Relations Act | Governor-General |
Lord Lieutenant of Ireland | Official Seal | Presidential Inauguration | Presidential Standard | Republic of Ireland Act | Secretary-General to the President | Presidential Commission | Viceregal throne

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