Thomas O'Donnell (MP)
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Thomas O’Donnell (30 November 1871 – 11 June 1943), was a constitutional Irish Nationalist, MP in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland as member of the Irish Parliamentary Party represented West Kerry during the period 1900-1918. He was an active promoter of agrarian reform[1]. M.A. (R.U.I.). Chairman of the Tralee and Dingle Railway[2]. Became a prominent Irish Judge.
Son of Michael O’Donnell and Ellen Rohan, he came from a Gaelic-speaking family in Liscarney, Ballyduff, on the Dingle Peninsula, but his family were evicted during the Irish Land League's Land War in 1880, and lived in a small cabin for the next seven years. He became a national teacher after qualifying in Marlborough Street Training College, teaching in a boys’ school in Killorglin from 1892 until 1900.
Early in life he allied himself with the Home Rule movement, while concerning himself with the land issue, and in 1898 formalised that committment by joining with William O'Brien in the United Irish League. This organisation pursued the breaking up of large farms, and O'Donnell was to prove himself a tenacious fighter for tenant rights. Even at the end of the 20th century, his efforts at at a local level are recalled.
He was a close associate of Maurice Moynihan (died 1915), leader of the Irish Republican Brotherhood in Kerry, as well as founder of the Gaelic Athletic Association club in Kerry in 1885, father of Maurice Gerard Moynihan, and in 1900 chairman of O’Donnell’s election campaign committee. O'Donnell was involved with the Gaelic League from 1893 and was instrumental in having the Irish Party force a debate in the House of Commons on the use of Gaelic in national schools. Despite his roots, he wasn't a fervent nationalist and shunned the Fenian tendancies of many of his more strident contemporaries.
In the general election 1900, O'Donnell was returned as MP for West Kerry. After he took his seat in Westminster, he rose on 19 February 1901 in the House and began his address in Gaelic (Irish), only to be ruled out of order. It was the only time that Gaelic was used in a speech in the House of Commons in London, and this rapidly made him a celebrity for the Gaelic Revival.
Over the years he became a staunch follower of John Redmond as well as his Party's Home Rule Act, but despite some flirtations with seperatism and with William O'Brien he was seen as one of the Irish Party's rising stars, and possible member of a home rule government. Even before the outbreak of World War I he was a passionate supporter of Redmond's Irish Volunteers, then to become a vigorous promoter of recruitment for Irish regiments during 1914-1916 [3], and was criticised for not joining himself, but had a large family.
He was bitterly opposed to Sinn Féin, later after the founding of the Irish Free State he attacked W. T. Cosgrave and his Cumann na nGaedhael government as well. O'Donnell then co-founded the National League Party together with William Redmond, its aim to unite the county peacefully after the Civil War. Following the Irish general election, June 1927 in which the party returned eight deputies (O'Donnell was not returned), the party along with the Fianna Fáil and Labour parties, planned to replace the Cumann na nGaedhael government, but were foiled by their deputy John Jinks being absent for the crucial vote. When the National League Party finally dissolved in 1931, O'Donnell joined the Fianna Fáil party and became one of their chief advisors and a tireless campaigner for the party. Eamon de Valera frequently consulted him.
O'Donnell was called to the King's Inns Bar as barrister in 1905, and practised as a barrister for many years. He was called to the inner bar in 1932, and was appointed judge in the Circuit Court for Counties Clare, Kerry and Limerick in 1941.
He married Nora Ryan on January 26, 1897. They had ten children.
[edit] Trivia
Throughout his varied life he followed opportunity when ever it came his way and kept a boyish sense of humour. His grandson Kevin Kinlen fondly recalls that when he was a boy and his aunts were doting on him, his grandfather encouraged him to tell them to go to hell. He did so and the aunts were shocked. Tom O'Donnell thought it was funny.
[edit] References
- ^ A Political Odyssey – Thomas O’Donnell, M.P. by the Very Rev. John Anthony Gaughan, P.P., published by Kingdom Books, Dublin, Ireland, 1983 (ISBN 0-9506015-4-3)
- ^ Thom's Directory, 1914
- ^ Maume, Patrick, The long Gestation, Irish Nationalist Life 1891-1918, pp. 238-9 "Who's Who", Gill & Macmillan (1999) ISBN 0-7171-2744-3