1060a. Richard H Beamish c.1910 from Pike’s Contemporary Biographies, 1911 (source: Cork City Library).
Kieran’s Our City, Our Town Article,
Cork Independent, 6 August 2020
Remembering 1920: A Deputation to Westminster
In the midst of curfews being
implemented and Black and Tans patrols across Cork City Centre streets, on 3
August 1920, a large meeting of the professional and commercial, both
Protestant and Roman Catholic merchants, who supported Home Rule was held at the
Imperial Hotel on the South Mall. Their intention was to send a delegation to meet
British Prime Minister Lloyd George.
At the meeting, Alderman Richard
Henrik Beamish was appointed to take the chair. Richard was an experienced and respected
Protestant businessman. In reviewing his contributions in the press over the
previous decade, he was not an overtly political player and was more known for
his brewery and employment connections as well his acute interest in horticulture.
Richard succeeded to the chairmanship of his firm Beamish and
Crawford in 1899. His family held the uninterrupted chairmanship of the firm
from its foundation, in the eighteenth century, up to the early twentieth
century. During his term of office, Richard helped absorb the three firms of
Lane & Company of Cork, Allman & Company of Bandon and
the Bandon and Dungarvan Brewery into Beamish and Crawford.
In his earlier years Richard
studied agriculture in Sweden and back home years later he acted for years as a
Governor of the Munster Institute. He also wrote essays upon the winter feeding
of cows and the water contents ofbutter. His beautiful
gardens at Ashbourne, Glountane were well known throughout Britain as having a
unique collection of rare trees, shrubs and plants gathered by him over many
years from all parts of the world, varying in climates from Lapland to Mexico.
His small home farm included a herd of Kerry cattle, remarkable for their yield
of milk and the purity of their breed.
For years Richard occupied the
position of Alderman of the Old pre 1920 Cork Corporation. He was elected twice
as High Sheriff of the City. He was created a Deputy Lieutenant of the
City and served as Justice of the Peace. In the
year 1918 he was created a Freeman of London. In January 1920, Richard
ran on the city’s commercial panel and topped the poll in the centre ward.
In his opening remarks at the Imperial
Hotel on 3 August 1920, Richard Beamish said that the “unprecedented and serious
state of the country” had caused their meeting assembly to declare their Dominion
Home Rule policy. Richard began by noting that Ireland had never perhaps been
placed in the position of greater agricultural and commercial prosperity than
at that time. He noted: “it is equally clear that the universal feeling and
demand for self-government has never been stronger throughout the country than
it now is. There appears to exist an unwavering determination by the Irish
nation to insist upon the direction of its own affairs, coupled with the desire
to raise and employ the money of our country in accordance with its wishes…A
complete Dominion status, with full powers to raise and disburse the country’s
revenue is our essential demand, and were this granted it will be found that the
income raised and devoted to Ireland, chocked by means of an assembly of Irishmen
of all creeds and classes, would rapidly develop our Irish resources, and raise
the status of our country to a level hitherto unthought of”.
Richard Beamish spoke for over 45
minutes reiterating his key points and then called upon Cork Fine Chemicals
merchant Sir Stanley Harrington to formally propose the resolution to be sent
to Westminster on self-government. Those present unanimously agreed to the
motion plus several wished to send a physical delegation to wait on the Prime
Minster. This was agreed to. The eventual delegation
listed was Alderman Richard H Beamish, Mr J Dinan, Mr Benjamin Haughton, and Mr
Thomas Jennings, all from Cork and neighbourhood, Sir Thomas Callan McArdl from,
Dundalk, Mr James Shanks from Dublin, Professor Trench from Trinity College
Dublin as well as Mr Braham Sutton, Mr Andrew Jameson and Captain Henry
Harrison.
In a very quick
turnaround and travel agenda, the deputation was received the following day on
4 August 1920 by David Lloyd George at Westminster in London, who was
accompanied by the Chief Secretary Sir Henry Greenwood and parliamentary Coalition
leaders. Two hours’ conversation on the Irish position followed, in
which the Dominion solution was pressed on the Government. According to news
agencies in London the deputation say that they were heard with “patience,
courtesy and apparent sympathy”. They felt very satisfied with their interview.
After a prolonged talk the members of the deputation were invited to return at
5pm for a further talk with representatives of the government. They were met
by, Chief Secretary of Ireland Mr Hamar Greenwood, who was Home Rule
sympathiser but was also trying to maintain control of his Black and Tan soldier
unit.
At the close of these discussions Mr
Lloyd George made a public statement and stated that he was open to other
delegations calling for resolutions and for peace. The Cork deputation in
their own way created an early stepping stone in a long path to a truce in the
Irish War of Independence. A further meeting on 24 August was attended by commercial
and industrial representatives from all parts of Ireland.
Kieran’s new book Witness to Murder, The Inquest of Tomás MacCurtain
is now available to purchase online (co-authored with John O’Mahony 2020, Irish
Examiner/www.examiner.ie).
Captions:
1060a. Richard H Beamish c.1910 from Pike’s Contemporary
Biographies, 1911 (source: Cork City Library).
1060b. Hamar Greenwood, Chief Secretary of Ireland,
1920 (source: Library of Congress, USA).
1060b. Hamar Greenwood, Chief Secretary of Ireland, 1920 (source: Library of Congress, USA).