Members of the 1st Dáil

The members of the First Dáil, known as Teachtaí Dála (TDs), were the 101[lower-alpha 1] Members of Parliament (MPs) returned from constituencies in Ireland at the 1918 United Kingdom general election. In its first general election, Sinn Féin won 73[lower-alpha 1] seats and viewed the result as a mandate for independence; in accordance with its declared policy of abstentionism, its 69[lower-alpha 1] MPs refused to attend the British House of Commons in Westminster, and established a revolutionary parliament known as Dáil Éireann. The other Irish MPs — 26 unionists and six[lower-alpha 2] from the Irish Parliamentary Party (IPP) — sat at Westminster and for the most part ignored the invitation to attend the Dáil. Thomas Harbison, IPP MP for North East Tyrone, did acknowledge the invitation, but "stated he should decline for obvious reasons".[1] The Dáil met for the first time on 21 January 1919 in Mansion House in Dublin. Only 27 members attended; most of the other Sinn Féin TDs were imprisoned by the British authorities, or in hiding under threat of arrest. All 101 MPs were considered TDs, and their names were called out on the roll of membership, though there was some laughter when Irish Unionist Alliance leader Edward Carson was described as as láthair ("absent").[2] The database of members of the Oireachtas (Irish parliament) includes for the First Dáil only those elected for Sinn Féin.[3]

1st Dáil Éireann
2nd Dáil
24 of the 27 TDs present at the first Dáil meeting on 21 January 1919, photographed afterwards on the steps of the Mansion House. The caption gives names in Irish.
Overview
Legislative bodyDáil Éireann
JurisdictionIrish Republic
Meeting placeMansion House
UCD (Earlsfort Terrace)
Term21 January 1919 – 16 August 1921
Election1918 general election
Government1st Dáil Ministry until 22 January 1919
2nd Dáil Ministry1919–22
Members105[lower-alpha 1]
Ceann ComhairleSeán T. O'Kelly
Count Plunkett
22 January 1919
Cathal Brugha
until 22 January 1919
President of Dáil ÉireannÉamon de Valera
Cathal Brugha
until 1 April 1919

Elected in general election

PartySeats
Sinn Féin 73[lower-alpha 1]
Irish Unionist 22
Irish Parliamentary 6[lower-alpha 2]
Labour Unionist 3
Independent Unionist 1

Members by constituency

Members of the 1st Dáil[4]
Constituency Name Party
Antrim East Robert McCalmont Irish Unionist
Antrim Mid Hugh O'Neill Irish Unionist
Antrim North Peter Kerr-Smiley Irish Unionist
Antrim South Charles Curtis Craig Irish Unionist
Armagh Mid James Rolston Lonsdale Irish Unionist
Armagh North William Allen Irish Unionist
Armagh South Patrick Donnelly Irish Parliamentary
Belfast Cromac William Arthur Lindsay Irish Unionist
Belfast Duncairn Edward Carson Irish Unionist
Belfast Falls Joseph Devlin Irish Parliamentary
Belfast Ormeau Thomas Moles Irish Unionist
Belfast Pottinger Herbert Dixon Irish Unionist
Belfast St Anne's Thomas Henry Burn Labour Unionist
Belfast Shankill Samuel McGuffin Labour Unionist
Belfast Victoria Thompson Donald Labour Unionist
Belfast Woodvale Robert Lynn Irish Unionist
Carlow James Lennon Sinn Féin
Cavan East Arthur Griffith[lower-alpha 3] Sinn Féin
Cavan West Paul Galligan Sinn Féin
Clare East Éamon de Valera[lower-alpha 4] Sinn Féin
Clare West Brian O'Higgins Sinn Féin
Cork City Liam de Róiste Sinn Féin
Cork City James J. Walsh[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Cork East David Kent Sinn Féin
Cork Mid Terence MacSwiney Sinn Féin
Cork North Patrick O'Keeffe Sinn Féin
Cork North East Thomas Hunter Sinn Féin
Cork South Michael Collins Sinn Féin
Cork South East Diarmuid Lynch Sinn Féin
Cork West Seán Hayes[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Donegal East Edward Kelly Irish Parliamentary
Donegal North Joseph O'Doherty[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Donegal South Peter Ward[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Donegal West Joseph Sweeney[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Down East David Reid Irish Unionist
Down Mid James Craig Irish Unionist
Down North Thomas Watters Brown Irish Unionist
Down South Jeremiah McVeagh Irish Parliamentary
Down West Daniel M. Wilson Irish Unionist
Dublin Clontarf Richard Mulcahy[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Dublin College Green Seán T. O'Kelly[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Dublin Harbour Philip Shanahan[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Dublin North Frank Lawless Sinn Féin
Dublin Pembroke Desmond FitzGerald Sinn Féin
Dublin Rathmines Maurice Dockrell Irish Unionist
Dublin South George Gavan Duffy[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Dublin St James's Joseph McGrath Sinn Féin
Dublin St Michan's Michael Staines[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Dublin St Patrick's Constance Markievicz Sinn Féin
Dublin St Stephen's Green Thomas Kelly[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Dublin University Arthur Samuels Irish Unionist
Dublin University Robert Woods Independent Unionist
Fermanagh North Edward Archdale Irish Unionist
Fermanagh South Seán O'Mahony Sinn Féin
Galway Connemara Pádraic Ó Máille[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Galway East Liam Mellows[lower-alpha 6] Sinn Féin
Galway North Bryan Cusack Sinn Féin
Galway South Frank Fahy Sinn Féin
Kerry East Piaras Béaslaí[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Kerry North James Crowley Sinn Féin
Kerry South Fionán Lynch Sinn Féin
Kerry West Austin Stack Sinn Féin
Kildare North Domhnall Ua Buachalla[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Kildare South Art O'Connor Sinn Féin
Kilkenny North W. T. Cosgrave Sinn Féin
Kilkenny South James O'Mara Sinn Féin
King's County Patrick McCartan Sinn Féin
Leitrim James Dolan Sinn Féin
Limerick City Michael Colivet Sinn Féin
Limerick East Richard Hayes Sinn Féin
Limerick West Con Collins[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Londonderry City Eoin MacNeill[lower-alpha 5][lower-alpha 7] Sinn Féin
Londonderry North Hugh Anderson Irish Unionist
Londonderry South Denis Henry Irish Unionist
Longford Joseph McGuinness Sinn Féin
Louth John J. O'Kelly[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Mayo East Éamon de Valera[lower-alpha 4] Sinn Féin
Mayo North John Crowley[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Mayo South William Sears Sinn Féin
Mayo West Joseph MacBride Sinn Féin
Meath North Liam Mellows[lower-alpha 6] Sinn Féin
Meath South Eamonn Duggan[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Monaghan North Ernest Blythe Sinn Féin
Monaghan South Seán MacEntee Sinn Féin
National University of Ireland Eoin MacNeill[lower-alpha 5][lower-alpha 7] Sinn Féin
Queen's County Kevin O'Higgins[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Roscommon North George Noble Plunkett[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Roscommon South Harry Boland Sinn Féin
Queen's University of Belfast William Whitla Irish Unionist
Sligo North J. J. Clancy Sinn Féin
Sligo South Alexander McCabe Sinn Féin
Tipperary East Pierce McCan Sinn Féin
Tipperary Mid Séamus Burke[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Tipperary North Joseph MacDonagh Sinn Féin
Tipperary South P. J. Moloney[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Tyrone North East Thomas Harbison Irish Parliamentary
Tyrone North West Arthur Griffith[lower-alpha 3] Sinn Féin
Tyrone South William Coote Irish Unionist
Waterford City William Redmond Irish Parliamentary
Waterford County Cathal Brugha[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Westmeath Laurence Ginnell Sinn Féin
Wexford North Roger Sweetman[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Wexford South James Ryan[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Wicklow East Seán Etchingham Sinn Féin
Wicklow West Robert Barton[lower-alpha 5] Sinn Féin
Photograph of members of the First Dáil of the Irish Republic, taken on the steps of the Mansion House in Dublin on 9 April 1919.

Changes

Vacancies

When the Sinn Féin executive met on 1 January 1919 to plan for the Dáil's inaugural meeting, it considered appointing substitutes for the imprisoned Sinn Féin TDs who would be unable to attend, but decided against this.[5] When Pierce McCan died on 6 March 1919, his East Tipperary seat was left vacant at Westminster. In April 1919 a Dáil committee considering how to fill the vacancy considered allowing nomination by the Labour Party (which had stood aside in the 1918 election to avoid splitting the nationalist vote)[6] before recommending that the Sinn Féin constituency organisation should nominate.[7] However, in June 1919 the Dáil decided that "it was due to the memory of the late Pierce McCann that his place should not be filled at present".[8] Later vacancies were also left unfilled; when Diarmuid Lynch resigned his seat in 1920, Arthur Griffith said "as the letter of resignation was addressed to the people of South-East Cork, the next step in the matter lay with the South-East Cork Executive of Sinn Fein".[9]

Four TDs represented two separate constituencies: Éamon de Valera, Arthur Griffith, Eoin MacNeill and Liam Mellowes. Ordinarily, this would prompt them to choose one constituency to represent, and to move a writ for a by-election in the other constituency.

Constituency Outgoing TD Party Reason for vacancy Date of vacancy Ref
Tipperary East Pierce McCan Sinn Féin Death in prison 6 March 1919 [5]
Cork South East Diarmuid Lynch Sinn Féin Resignation 6 August 1920 [9]
Cork Mid Terence MacSwiney Sinn Féin Death from hunger strike 25 October 1920 [5]
North Wexford Roger Sweetman Sinn Féin Resignation 27 January 1921 [10]

By-elections

The following Westminster by-elections to Irish seats were filled by Unionists who sat at Westminster.

Winner Party Constituency Date Outgoing Party Reason for vacancy Notes
Hugh T. Barrie Irish Unionist North Londonderry 4 March 1919 Hugh Anderson Irish Unionist Resignation The only by-election contested by Sinn Féin, Patrick McGilligan losing.[11]
George Hanna Independent Unionist East Antrim 27 May 1919 Robert McCalmont Irish Unionist Appointed commander of the Irish Guards
William Jellett Irish Unionist University of Dublin 28 July 1919 Arthur Samuels Irish Unionist Appointed to the High Court of Justice in Ireland

Notes

  1. Sinn Féin won 73 of 105 constituencies but four were each elected for two constituencies, so there were 69 Sinn Féin MPs from a total of 101.
  2. A seventh IPP MP, T. P. O'Connor, was elected for the English constituency of Liverpool Scotland.
  3. Arthur Griffith was elected for two constituencies: Cavan East and Tyrone North West.
  4. Éamon de Valera was elected for two constituencies: Clare East and Mayo East.
  5. Attended the opening session of the First Dáil on 21 January 1919.
  6. Liam Mellows was elected for two constituencies: Galway East and Meath North.
  7. Eoin MacNeill was elected for two constituencies: Londonderry City and National University of Ireland.

See also

References

  1. "Roll Call". Dáil Éireann (1st Dáil) debates. Houses of the Oireachtas. 22 January 1919. Retrieved 28 August 2018.
  2. "Irish Republican 'Parliament'". The Irish Times. 22 January 1919. p. 6. Retrieved 9 September 2020.; Fallon, Donal (21 January 2019). "Opinion: The Democratic Programme of the First Dáil was a radical socialist document". TheJournal.ie. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
  3. "TDs & Senators". Houses of the Oireachtas. Retrieved 28 August 2018.
  4. "3. AN ROLLA". Houses of the Oireachtas. 21 January 1919. Retrieved 28 August 2018.
  5. "Timeline". Dáil 100. Houses of the Oireachtas. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
  6. Mitchell, Arthur (1995). Revolutionary Government in Ireland: Dáil Éireann, 1919-22. Gill & MacMillan. p. 24. ISBN 9780717114818.
  7. "East Tipperary Vacancy". Dáil Éireann debate. Oireachtas. 17 June 1919. Retrieved 18 August 2018.
  8. "Report of Select Committee on East Tipperary Vacancy – Dáil Éireann (1st Dáil) – Wednesday, 18 June 1919". Oireachtas. 17 June 1919. Retrieved 22 July 2020.
  9. "Resignation Of Deputy For South-East Cork". Dáil Éireann debate. Oireachtas. 6 August 1920. Retrieved 13 August 2018.
  10. Sweetman, R. M. (28 January 1921). "Mr. Roger Sweetman's Position". The Irish Times. p. 4. Retrieved 10 September 2020.
  11. Laffan, Michael (1999). The Resurrection of Ireland: The Sinn Féin Party, 1916–1923. Cambridge University Press. p. 309. ISBN 9781139426299. Retrieved 13 August 2018.
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