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Activities wise and otherwise : the career of Sir Henry Augustus Robinson, 1898-1922 / Brendan O Donoghue.

By: Publisher: Sallins, Co. Kildare : Irish Academic Press, 2015Description: xiii, 466 pp., 12 unnumbered pp. of plates : ill. (some color), map ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9780716532996
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 941.5 23
LOC classification:
  • DA965.R6 O66 2015
Contents:
PART I – Activities wise: the official Robinson -- 1. Family background and early career -- 2. Planning the Local Government (Ireland) Act 1898 -- 3. Implementing the Act – A Triumph for the Local Government Board -- 4. A Remarkably Harmonious Working Relationship with the Local Councils -- 5. A focus on ensuring efficient administration rather improving local services? -- 6. Was the LGB the Fountainhead of Corruption in Ireland? -- 7. ‘We never were Subordinate, except to Parliament’ -- PART II – Activities otherwise: the other Robinson -- 8. Home Rule: ‘you will find that the Ulstermen’s minimum will be six entire counties, and no option’ -- 9. Booting out a Weak and Incompetent lot -- 10. The World War: the War to unite us all? -- 11. The Easter Rising: was there a living soul … who was prepared for what was to follow? -- 12. Sheer Madness to Attempt Conscription -- 13. ‘A fair and square fight … as to who is going to govern the country’ -- 14. Supporting the chaotic administration of Lord French -- 15. The Sinn Féin takeover of local government and the Government’s response -- 16. ‘It was difficult to say who really was safe in those days’ -- 17. Drafting and implementing the Government of Ireland Act -- 18. ‘The surrender of the Government to Sinn Féin’ -- 19. Family matters and final years, 1922–27 -- Conclusions
Summary: This is the first biography of Sir Henry Augustus Robinson, who in addition to his duties as a senior civil servant in Dublin’s Custom House between 1898 and 1922, acted as unofficial adviser to British ministers on many of the major political issues of the day. A consummate administrator, Robinson was responsible for planning and implementing a new and democratic local government system in 1898–99, and for supervising infrastructural, health and social services in the proceeding twenty years. Yet, in defiance of civil service norms, he became a figure who had a significant influence on major political issues and the administration of Ireland during the critical years of 1912 to 1922. Brendan O Donoghue uncovers Robinson’s official and unofficial life and work, including his role in the Home Rule controversy, the Conscription Crisis, the release of political prisoners and the decision to agree a truce in 1921. Emerging as a man who loved Ireland but whose unionist status was never in doubt, he was critical of the ‘die-hard’ group who, even in 1918, could not accept that some form of Home Rule was inevitable. He was concerned, however, to avert any solution which would entail complete separation from the Empire or partition. This remarkable biography justifies Robinson’s critical role at a time of momentous events in the last pre-independence decade. -- Publisher.
List(s) this item appears in: New Acquisitions Summer 2021
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Loanable Book Library Irish Collection 920 ROB (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 000437609

Includes bibliographical references and index.

PART I – Activities wise: the official Robinson -- 1. Family background and early career -- 2. Planning the Local Government (Ireland) Act 1898 -- 3. Implementing the Act – A Triumph for the Local Government Board -- 4. A Remarkably Harmonious Working Relationship with the Local Councils -- 5. A focus on ensuring efficient administration rather improving local services? -- 6. Was the LGB the Fountainhead of Corruption in Ireland? -- 7. ‘We never were Subordinate, except to Parliament’ -- PART II – Activities otherwise: the other Robinson -- 8. Home Rule: ‘you will find that the Ulstermen’s minimum will be six entire counties, and no option’ -- 9. Booting out a Weak and Incompetent lot -- 10. The World War: the War to unite us all? -- 11. The Easter Rising: was there a living soul … who was prepared for what was to follow? -- 12. Sheer Madness to Attempt Conscription -- 13. ‘A fair and square fight … as to who is going to govern the country’ -- 14. Supporting the chaotic administration of Lord French -- 15. The Sinn Féin takeover of local government and the Government’s response -- 16. ‘It was difficult to say who really was safe in those days’ -- 17. Drafting and implementing the Government of Ireland Act -- 18. ‘The surrender of the Government to Sinn Féin’ -- 19. Family matters and final years, 1922–27 -- Conclusions

This is the first biography of Sir Henry Augustus Robinson, who in addition to his duties as a senior civil servant in Dublin’s Custom House between 1898 and 1922, acted as unofficial adviser to British ministers on many of the major political issues of the day. A consummate administrator, Robinson was responsible for planning and implementing a new and democratic local government system in 1898–99, and for supervising infrastructural, health and social services in the proceeding twenty years. Yet, in defiance of civil service norms, he became a figure who had a significant influence on major political issues and the administration of Ireland during the critical years of 1912 to 1922.

Brendan O Donoghue uncovers Robinson’s official and unofficial life and work, including his role in the Home Rule controversy, the Conscription Crisis, the release of political prisoners and the decision to agree a truce in 1921. Emerging as a man who loved Ireland but whose unionist status was never in doubt, he was critical of the ‘die-hard’ group who, even in 1918, could not accept that some form of Home Rule was inevitable. He was concerned, however, to avert any solution which would entail complete separation from the Empire or partition. This remarkable biography justifies Robinson’s critical role at a time of momentous events in the last pre-independence decade.

-- Publisher.

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