Northern Campaign
1942 - 1944 is a term used to describe attacks involving
volunteers of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) during the period
September 1942 - December 1942. It was a plan conceived by the
then IRA Northern Command to launch attacks within the region of
Northern Ireland during the 1942 1944 period. This plan did not
translate into tangible or coordinated action on the part of IRA
units during the timeframe however. The title "Campaign"
can be largely interpreted as having meaning only to the IRA Army
Council of the period and later generations of IRA volunteers and
Irish Republicans wishing to canonise IRA activity of the period.
The Northern Campaign
1942 - 1944 should not be confused with the Border Campaign (IRA)
of the 1950s or the Provisional IRA campaign 1969-1997 which is
also referred to as the "Northern Campaign" in some Republican
circles and histories of the IRA / PIRA.
Context of the
Campaign
February 1941 saw
non-interned members of the IRA's Northern Command meeting at an
IRA Army Conference in Belfast, County Antrim. The IRA Northern
Command controlled IRA operations and issued orders to IRA
volunteers in Counties Antrim, Armagh, Down, Fermanagh, Tyrone,
and County Londonderry, along with major population centres such
as Derry and Belfast. The Chairman of the meeting was Hugh McAteer
then Commanding Officer (CO.) of the IRA in Belfast. McAteer
presided over a meeting involving more than thirty men, with the
most notable figures of IRA Northern Command being:
- Sean Dolan Adjutant
to Hugh McAteer,
- Intelligence officer
(IO.) Gerald O'Reilly,
- Patsy Hicks
Commanding Officer (CO.) of the ARP raid,
- Dan McAllister and,
- Tom Williams Acting
CO. of Belfast IRA C Company.
At this meeting McAteer
took over as CO. of Northern Command with O'Reilly assuming the
role of his Adjutant and John Graham becoming IO. & Director of
Publicity. Discussions at the meeting focused on a campaign
against the Government of Northern Ireland and forces acting under
its control including the British Army. It was hoped that the
promise of a new IRA campaign to end partition would help
galvanise a weakened IRA throughout the entire island.
The meeting saw a
decision whereby IRA Northern Command was to elect a new IRA Army
Executive to oversee this campaign. It was felt that since the
1938 IRA Army Executive had largely been interned, imprisoned upon
conviction, or died, between the period 1938 - 1941, new
leadership was needed- a leadership that would carry on what they
understood to be the "struggle against occupation" in
Ireland.
The Northern Command and
IRA volunteers based in Northern Ireland had been largely more
successful in evading detention and arrest than their counterparts
in Éire, (the region formerly known as the Irish Free State). IRA
volunteers in Northern Ireland had never enjoyed the freedom of
movement and association enjoyed by IRA volunteers in the Irish
Free State between 1922 and 1936. It is also worth mentioning that
these men had not felt contaminated by the actions of disgraced
former IRA Chief of Staff (CS.) Stephen Hayes, the "Hayes Affair"
being an episode widely seen as damaging moral within the IRA.
Hayes was believed at the time to have been an informer on, and
traitor to, the IRA. The IRA Northern Command and units acting
under it had also suffered from detection, arrest and Internment
during the period but had not suffered the problems of enemy
infiltration now endemic to the IRA in Éire.
Strength of the IRA
The IRA was literally
split during the period by those held in places like "K-Lines"
(No.1 Internment camp) Curragh, County Kildare, and those IRA
volunteers still at liberty. Added to this were a series of
political splits pivoting on which the direction the IRA should
take at this juncture. The as yet unannounced, but widely
accepted, failure of the S-Plan campaign, ongoing IRA collusion
with the Abwehr, (German Intelligence), and the landing of United
States troops within Northern Ireland on 26 January 1942 all
combined to form a crisis for the IRA. While the British
Government had decided not to conscript in Northern Ireland
following mass protests in 1941, a large number of citizens from
Northern Ireland & Éire had joined the British Army to fight in
World War II- decreasing the potential recruitment base of the
IRA.
Legislative changes in
both Éire, and Britain circa. 1940 had seen internment and harsher
laws introduced to combat the IRA's activity during the S-Plan
campaign. Internment had been introduced by the Government of
Northern Ireland in 1938. Detentions arising from these moves,
combined with executions of IRA volunteers in Britain and Éire,
had weakened IRA morale and structure. The IRA response, hunger
strikes conducted languishing in prisons in Britain, Northern
Ireland, and Éire, weakened the organization still further. It
fell to IRA volunteers still at liberty to attempt to reorganize
the IRA and any IRA military action that could be mustered.
Bowyer Bell, in his
history of the IRA, states that at the beginning of 1942 there
were over 300 IRA volunteers in four companies constituting the
Belfast unit. These men were lead by the small group calling
itself Northern Command. Compared to the IRA that remained
active/available in population centers such as Dublin, the
Northern Command was by far the strongest remaining hub of IRA
volunteers left at liberty in Ireland. In attempting to organize
the "Northern Campaign", the Northern Command enlisted the
help of Patrick Dermody, CO. of IRA Eastern Command, the CO. of
IRA Western Command, Tommy Farrell, and the remaining productive
elements of IRA Dublin centre including Charlie Kerins and Mick
Quill.
IRA arms caches did
still exist. They were largely scattered throughout inaccessible,
rural areas of Ireland, and usually only known to only one or two
volunteers from the surrounding area. Many IRA units in rural
areas had received little attention from the General Headquarters
of the IRA, (GHQ), in sometime and they had also not seen active
duty in over a decade. After election in April 1942, the new IRA
Army Council began to make attempts to reach out to them and to
gather up the arms they watched over.
The basic plan of the
IRA Army Council, as explained by Bowyer Bell, was to:
"collect the contents
of the Twenty-six County [Éire] dumps, move the stuff close to
the border [with Northern Ireland], and then just before
operations were initiated, smuggle it over".
By August this movement
of arms had taken place, Tommy Farrell and Patrick Dermody
reported that combined, they had accumulated a total of over
twelve tons of arms, munitions, and explosives, without alerting
the authorities in Éire or Northern Ireland.
The campaign plan
envisioned that once the arms were assembled and smuggled into
Northern Ireland they would be distributed to waiting IRA units
described as:
..."commando-type
units, forty or fifty men all told, striking up from the South
across the border to open up operations.
This tactic, (the IRA
flying column), was still to be found in use 20 years later during
the Border Campaign when it was discovered in a captured copy of
the IRA's training manual The Green Book.
Chronology of the
"Northern Campaign"
1942
Easter Rising
commemoration weekend April - the IRA had three clashes with their
enemies in Northern Ireland and Éire. In Belfast the Northern
Command authorized a "diversion" in the Belfast C company area by
which the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) would be distracted
enough to allow a large meeting of the Command to take place. The
operation went wrong and in the ensuring gun battle at Cawnpore
Street in Belfast, 1 RUC member was killed and the entire IRA unit
of 6 men were captured. The captured unit included Joe Cahill. All
6 were put on trial for murder but 5 later had their sentences
commuted to life, leaving Tom Williams facing the hangman.
- In Dublin, Irish
Special Branch attempted to arrest Lasarian Mangan and Brendan
Behan. When Mangan seemed to hesitate in using his gun, Behan
was heard to shout:
"Use it, use it. Give
it to me and I will shoot the bastards."
Behan was later arrested
in Dublin and received fourteen years in prison.
The third incident in
the timeline involved Frank Morris, who began shooting when
detained at a RUC border checkpoint in Strabane. He was captured
10 hours later that day, found hiding, immersed up to his neck in
river water.
- 20 April - A new IRA
Army Council was elected in the wake of these incidents. At this
time it is known that Eoin McNamee in his capacity as Adjutant
General met with German agent Günther Schütz shortly before
this.
- 19 July - Hugh
McAteer is confirmed by the IRA Army Council as new CS. with
Kerins as the new Deputy CS. With McAteer already presiding as
CO. of Northern Command, his newest appointment further
increased his power within the organisation. It marked a shift
of Executive power within what remained of the IRA, from Dublin
to Belfast.
- 15 August - IRA Army
Council meets to confirm the details of the Northern Campaign
and to draw up a Campaign Proclamation. By this stage the arms
and munitions from the IRA's Western and Eastern Command areas
had been assembled on the border ready for transport into
Northern Ireland.
- 30 August - IRA GHQ
sends word to waiting units to begin the transfer of arms into
Northern Ireland. That night three tons of material were
transported over the border into Newry, County Down. Two lorries
were used to transport the material through RUC checkpoints
without incident. The arms were then stored in a barn attached
to McCafferty's farm outside Hannahstown, County Antrim. The
volunteer overseeing the operation on the ground, Jerry
O'Callaghan, reported back to GHQ Belfast in person. His message
was that the operation had been successful, and distribution of
the material could now begin. Unfortunately for the IRA, a
volunteer sent to help O'Callaghan, was followed to the farm by
members of the RUC who proceeded to raid the building. In the
ensuing gun battle O'Callaghan was shot dead and 3 tons of arms
seized. This however, was not the only shipment of arms into
Northern Ireland the IRA had made, and the others were to
remain, as yet, undetected.
- 1 September - The
Army Council issued a General Army Order that in the event of
the execution of Tommy Williams, all CO's were to take
aggressive action.
- 2 September - Tom
Williams' execution that morning, a first attack of the campaign
was scheduled to take place against a British Army barracls in
Crossmaglen, County Armagh. Twenty IRA volunteers were lead by
Patrick Demody in a commandeered lorry and accompanying car.
According to IRA member Harry White, who wrote about the raid in
his book of memoirs "Harry", they hoped to capture a British
officer and hang him - as the Irgun was to do in similar
circumstances in Palestine, a few years later.
- Unfortunately for the
IRA, a passing RUC patrol noticed the convoy as it moved past
Cullaville, Co. Armagh. In the ensuing gun battle, one volunteer
was injured along with one RUC member. Conflicting accounts
exist of the outcome. It was claimed that the IRA unit
surrendered and was released, all survivors being allowed to
return to Dublin; however, the aforementioned White claims that
it was the RUC men (there were only two of them) who surrnedered
to the IRA and were later released. In any case, the element of
surprise was lost and the intention to attack the barracks was
abandoned.
- The raid caused alarm
for the authorities in Éire, who up until then had believed the
IRA was crushed south of the border and incapable of preparing
or launching attacks of this scale. Volunteers Liam Cotter and
Jerry Mahoney, both from Listowel, Co. Kerry were arrested by
Irish police.
- There was no
declaration of war as for the S-Plan Campaign. The IRA was much
more muted when they issued a "special manifesto". The
contents of this manifesto were reported in "The Times"
as:
"The present moment
is opportune to declare the attitude of the IRA to the present
world situation. The IRA cannot recognize the right of England
or and other Power to maintain her forces in or base them on
any part of the Irish territory without the free consent of
the Irish people. The IRA therefore reserves the right to use
whatever measures present themselves to clear this territory
of such forces."
- The Times goes on to
say that the manifesto indicated the IRA's intention to, "avail
themselves of the darkest moment in England's history to
strike," and continues:
"It will be
undoubtedly part of Britain's tactics to provoke conflict
between American troops and Irish guerrilla forces. If in the
event of a resumption of hostilities between Great Britain and
the Irish Republic the American troops are drawn into conflict
with Irish soldiers, the responsibility must rest with those who
presumed to use north-east Ireland as a military base without
the free consent of the Irish people."
- 3 September - The
front of police barracks in Randalstown, Co. Antrim, was
demolished by a mine and a RUC sergeant was injured.
- 4 September - The
ambush of a patrol in Belfast resulted in volunteer James Bannon
being wounded. The same day a mine failed to detonated during
the attack on Belleek, RUC barracks, Co. Fermanagh.
- 5 September - Two RUC
were killed in Clady, County Tyrone. While a failed attack in
Belfast saw volunteer Gerry Adams Sr. wounded by the RUC.
- 9 September -
Sergeant Dennis O'Brien, a serving Irish Special Branch officer
and himslef a former IRA member, was shot dead by 3 IRA
volunteers outside his home in Ballyboden, Rathfarnham, County
Dublin. This action was directly against IRA Army Council orders
which forbade any operations of a military nature in
Éire. Notice of a five thousand pound reward was issued for
information leading to the apprehension of O'Brien's killers
along with a list of men wanted in connection with the incident.
Michael Quill was later apprehended by the RUC and turned over
to Irish Special Branch in connection with the incident. This
lead to his internment in January 1943.
Following the initial
raid in September, the RUC and Irish Special Branch stepped up
their efforts against the IRA. A series of arms finds and arrests
were made.
- 10 September -
Belfast IRA lost two volunteers when they were surrounded in a
house and captured.
- 30 September -
Patrick Dermody was killed by Irish Special Branch following a
gun battle in County Cavan. A member of Garda Síochána (Irish
Police) also died due to friendly fire from his colleagues.
- 12 October - McAteer
and his Director of Intelligence, O'Reilly, were arrested in
Northern Ireland by the RUC Criminal Investigation Department
(CID). McAteer was later sentenced to 15 years for treason.
McAteer was later sentenced to 15 years imprisonment for
treason. His position of responsibility within the IRA as OC.
Northern Command was immediately aussumed by Kerins, who was
later relieved by Harry White in late October.
- 19 October - Maurice
O'Neill, was captured by Garda Síochána during a raid on a safe
house in Holly Road, Donnycarney, County Dublin. 1 detective
died during the raid. Harry White escaped and traveled to
Belfast to take over as OC. for Northern Command. During his
trial by Military Tribunal in Éire, O'Neill was represented by
Seán MacBride. MacBride failed however, to win O'Neill a
reprieve and he was executed on 12 November 1942.
- October - 1 RUC
killed in an IRA attack on Donegall Pass, RUC station in
Belfast.
Despite increased
pressure on the IRA, Bowyer-Bell reports a total of 60 armed
attacks by the IRA in the 3 months up to December 1942. He
estimates that these attacks would've been carried out by the
remaining fifty to sixty IRA volunteers that still remained at
large in Northern Ireland. Units in South Londonderry, and South
Armagh that previously could be relied on to engage in operations
were no longer able to function as IRA GHQ required. IRA GHQ also
began to lose contact with units in Counties Cavan and Monaghan
and within the Western Command area. Bowyer-Bell states of the
late-1943 to mid-1943 period:
"The local C/Os had no
intention of risking arrest to keep up a good front. Even the
relatively innocuous Republican "political" activity that had
been tolerated in the past now might lead to the Curragh.
Parades ended. Training ended. Often even meetings of the IRA
people ended. The intricate and long-lived infrastructure of the
IRA in the country began to fray and break. The leaders and the
best men were in prison."
1943
- 15 January - along
with Patrick Donnelly, Ned Maguire and Jimmy Steele, Hugh
McAteer escaped over the wall of Crumlin Road Prison, Belfast.
- 14 February - IRA
Army Council meets to assess the progress of the organization
despite it being clear that the IRA had lost the means and most
importantly the will to conduct further operations under the
auspices of the "Northern Campaign". The order forbidding
all operations of a military nature in Éire was continued and
although no order to abandon the Northern Campaign was made, the
Army Council did make 1 important resolution which was to
resurface within the strategy of the IRA after World War II
ended. The resolution called for:
"A political arm be
formed representative of the whole country, whose constitution
shall be based on the Constitution of the Republic proclaimed in
arms in 1916 and ratified by the free vote of the Irish people
in 1918."
This indicated a growing
realization within the then IRA Army Council that the failure of
campaigns like the 1939 - 1940 S-Plan, and the ongoing
"Northern Campaign" could not be sustained without political
support from the IRA's base- the people. This view was to fully
mature within the IRA during the period 1948 - 1950.
- 21 March - 21 IRA
prisoners escape from Magilligan Prison in Londonderry. Jim
Toner from Tyrone and his adjutant Joe Carant were put in charge
of moving the escapees out of Northern Ireland. Notice of a 3000
pounds (sterling) reward was issued for information on the
whereabouts' of the escapees.
- 24 April 1943-
McAteer was personally involved when the IRA took over the
Broadway cinema, Falls Road, Belfast, (a strongly republican
area), as part of their Easter Rising commemorations. A
Proclamation of the 1916 Easter Rising was read out to the
audience along with the IRA Army Council's annual statement. The
statement denounced the American military presence in Northern
Ireland as an:
"..invasion of our
rights..."
and warned that US
troops could expect to be targeted in any,
"..resumption of
hostilities between the Irish Republic [as invested in the IRA]
and Great Britain."
The statement hints at a
"lack" of hostilities between the IRA and British Forces at
the time. In fact, the IRA had declared war on Britain in 1939 via
the S-Plan Campaign, only to see it peter out after 15 months.
Then the IRA decided on the "Northern Campaign" in 1942.
Both campaigns appear to have ground to a halt by the time this
statement was issued. However, no declaration of ceasefire or the
campaigns ending had yet been made. From this it could appear that
the IRA Army Council was not able to accept the reality of the
situation- the total collapse of the IRA throughout the island,
and the utter failure of both campaigns. The statement continued
in optimistic manner:
"Ireland is being held
within the Empire by sheer force and by force alone can she free
herself. Now with Britain engaged in a struggle for her very
existence, we are presented with a glorious opportunity."
- May - IRA GHQ members
who had escaped from Magilligan Prison were re-arrested. Jimmy
Steele, then Burke.
- October - McAteer
arrested again. Kerins assumed command again.
- 4 July - Jackie
Griffith shot dead in Dublin by Garda Síochána detectives.
- unknown date - 1 RUC
shot dead by during an attempted robbery at Ross's Mill,
Clonard. Belfast.
1944
- 11 February - Seamus
"Rocky" Burns was mortally wounded during a gun battle
with RUC in Derry city.
- 15 June - Kerins was
arrested at 50 Rathmines Road in Dublin. He was tried by
Military Tribunal in Éire and found guilty on 9 October 1944 of
involvement in the death of Detective O'Brien on 9 September
1942. Kerins was hanged on 1 December 1944.
1945
- 1 March - The last
elected IRA Army Executive had been the one chosen by the 1938
Army Convention at the time of Seán Russell's takeover in 1938.
In 1945, only five men from this Executive remained alive,
(listed below with the area they represented in brackets);
- Ned Carrington (Clonmel
& Tipperary),
- Ted Moore (Mooncin &
Kilkenny),
- Charlie Dolan (Sligo),
- Larry Grogan
(Drogheda) and,
- Peadar O'Flaherty.
- This body now moved
in an attempt to resurrect the IRA. The new Army Executive
appointed an Army Council, which included:
- Michael Conway,
-
Charlie McGuinness,
- Seán Ashe, and
- Mick McCarthy.
- The new council
appointed Patrick Fleming, (more commonly called 'Paddy'), as
Chief of Staff.
- 10 March - Paddy
Fleming orders a ceasefire with Britain, ending the S-Plan
campaign and terminating the IRA's 1939 declaration of war. No
mention was made of the episode dubbed the "Northern
Campaign."
Significance of the IRA's
activities in the period
The events labeled the
Northern Campaign 1942-1944 can only be called a 'campaign' within
the context of a republican interpretation of the IRA's
activities. The statements emanating from the IRA Army Council
during the period seek to portray the IRA as protector of the
Irish Republic from 1922 onwards. In the mind of IRA volunteers
the Irish Republic is yet to be established. The IRA would use
this reasoning to justify future efforts to destabilize and launch
attacks within Britain and Northern Ireland.
With the death of Kerins
in June 1944, the IRA no longer had a Chief of Staff, there was no
longer a GHQ, or even an IRA Army Council, there wasn't even a
band of men to lead and call the IRA. Internment by the Government
of Éire had almost wiped out the organization both as an effective
fighting force, and as an organization willing & able to fight.
The IRA was to come to see this as a bitter betrayal by their
fellow countrymen.
The Irish Minister of
Justice, Gerald Boland, was heard to boast during the period that,
"the IRA was dead and
he had killed it"
Naturally the IRA had
assisted in its own near extinction- as late as 1947, twenty-five
IRA "lifers", (prisoners serving life sentences), remained in
British prisons. Until 1950, twelve IRA volunteers remained in
Crumlin Road Prison, Belfast, serving sentences for IRA
involvement, and it wasn't until the change of Government in Éire
in 1948 that the last IRA internee's were released from Portlaoise
Prison.
Under this climate of
fierce scrutiny by the authorities, and without increases in IRA
recruitment to offset losses, the series of attacks labeled the
Northern Campaign died in the winter of 1942 within 3 months of it
beginning. The first attack, a failure even before reaching the
objective, had not been followed up with anything substantive or
spectacular. IRA units along the border who were meant to wage a
series of sporadic attacks against border targets found they could
no longer operate. The IRA Army Council, lacking imagination and
room for manoeuvre, found itself isolated from its base community
and volunteers. The IRA was entirely crippled.
IRA involvement with German
Intelligence Abwehr
The minutes of the IRA
army Council's meeting on 20 April 1942 made it clear that they
were convinced the Government of Nazi Germany would be prepared to
install the IRA into Government should the Nazis win the war. This
Army Council, nearly comprised entirely of IRA Northern Command,
seemed unaware to the full extent of IRA contact with the German
Government via Abwehr and Foreign Ministry agents since before
1938. A resolution captured in the minutes states the objective:
"That as a prelude to
any co-operation between Óglaigh Na hÉireann [the IRA] and the
German Government, the German government explicitly declare its
intention of recognizing the Provisional Government of the Irish
Republic as the Government of Ireland in all post-war
negotiations affecting Ireland."
The minutes go on to say
that GHQ assumes the authority:
"..to give military
information to powers at war with England, which would not
endanger civilian lives, even before any definite contacts have
been established with these powers."
Despite the rhetoric,
the IRA during the period, while capable of keeping links with
German Intelligence alive was incapable of doing much about any
plans they or the German government may have wished them to
undertake. The Abwehr and Foreign Ministry had appeared to realise
the same fact by late 1943.