Fergus Campbell
Newcastle University
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Archive | 2009
Fergus Campbell
Introduction 1. Land 2. Administration 3. Policing 4. Politics 5. Business 6. Religion Conclusion
The Historical Journal | 2002
Fergus Campbell
A B S T R ACT. The Wyndham Land Act was the most important land reform introduced by any British government during the period of the Act of Union (1801–1922) ; and this article provides a new interpretation of the origins of this revolutionary legislation. Whereas previous accounts attribute the Act to the initiative of the Irish chief secretary, George Wyndham, this article locates the legislation in the wider context of both popular and ‘high ’ politics. The state of the land question in fin de siècle Ireland is examined, as is the United Irish League’s extensive agitation for compulsory land purchase between 1901 and 1903. Finally, the impact of the agitation on the British government is considered, and the article demonstrates that the Wyndham Land Act was introduced as a result of the United Irish League’s campaign for land reform.
The Historical Journal | 2007
Fergus Campbell
In an influential monograph, The greening of Dublin Castle (1991), Lawrence McBride argued that the Irish administration was in a rapid state of transformation between 1892 and 1922. Broadly speaking, he argued that the Protestant and unionist senior administrators were gradually replaced by Catholic and nationalist civil servants during this period. However, a significant body of evidence suggests that McBride may have overstated the changes taking place in the Irish civil service. Using a prosopographical study of the senior civil servants in Ireland in 1891 and 1911, this article suggests that there was significantly less ‘greening’ than McBride claimed. The British state appears to have regarded Irish-born Catholics as potentially disloyal, and to have implemented a subtle system of ethnic discrimination at the upper levels of the Irish civil service. It is argued that the existence of this glass ceiling provided young educated Catholic professionals with a powerful motive for participation in the Irish revolution (1916–23).
Irish Studies Review | 2013
Fergus Campbell
This article explores the way in which episodes that took place during the “long” land war of 1879–1909 have been remembered or forgotten in Craughwell, Co. Galway, between 1881 and 2013. By exploring those episodes and individuals that are remembered locally in monuments, published oral histories and in oral histories conducted by the author, this article explores the complex patterns of remembering in rural Irish communities. The article concludes by reflecting on the implications of this study for how we interpret oral histories, and on how a culture of remembering and not remembering might have affected twentieth-century Irish society.
Archive | 2005
Fergus Campbell
Archive | 2005
Fergus Campbell
Archivium Hibernicum | 2003
Fergus Campbell; Kevin O'Shiel
Archive | 2013
Fergus Campbell; Tony Varley
Past & Present | 2004
Fergus Campbell
Archive | 2013
Fergus Campbell; Tony Varley