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Encyclopedia > Irish Land Acts

Contents


The Irish Question

British Prime Minister William Gladstone had taken up the "Irish Question" in part to win the general election of 1868 by uniting the Liberal Party behind this single issue. The shock of Fenian violence, especially in England , as well as the growing awareness of the potency of nationalist feelings from European politics was a second reason for Gladstone tackling the Irish Question, as well as a sincere desire to bring peace to Ireland. As well as the Irish Land Act, the Liberal government also passed the Irish Church Disestablishment Act and put forward the Irish University Bill that failed to pass both Houses of Parliament. William Ewart Gladstone (December 29, 1809 - May 19, 1898) was a British Liberal politician and Prime Minister (1868-1874, 1880-1885, 1886 and 1892-1894). ... 1868 (MDCCCLXVIII) was a leap year starting on Wednesday (see link for calendar) of the Gregorian calendar or a leap year starting on Friday of the 12-day-slower Julian calendar. ... This article is about the historic Liberal Party. ... Fenian is a term used since the 1850s for Irish nationalists (who oppose British rule in Ireland). ... Motto: (French for God and my right) Anthem: Multiple unofficial anthems Capital London Largest city London Official language(s) English Government Constitutional monarchy  - Queen Queen Elizabeth II  - Prime Minister Tony Blair MP Unification    - by Athelstan 927  Area    - Total 130,395 km² (1st in UK)   50,346 sq mi   - Water (%) Population... Nationalism is an ideology that creates and sustains a nation as a concept of a common identity for groups of humans. ... The Irish Church Disestablishment Act was the United Kingdom legislation whereby William Gladstones administration disestablished the Church of Ireland, disassociating it from the state and as such removing the rule that tithes had to be paid to a church that commanded the adherence of a minority of the population... The Irish University Bill forms part of the panorama of initiatives to provide more adequate provision of university education in Ireland in the 19th and 20th centuries. ... This may refer to the: British Houses of Parliament. ...


Background to First Irish Land Act: 1870

This Act was partly the work of Chichester Fortescue and John Bright. The Irish situation was favourable, with agriculture improving and pressure on the land decreasing since the Irish potato famine. The Encumbered Estates Act (1849) had led to the sale of estates by debt-ridden mainly absentee landlords; research suggest that the new landlords, who were more often resident did not in general charge excessive rents - with some exceptions - and invested capital into their property. Gladstone's Liberal government had no explicit mandate for the Act, unlike the 1869 Disestablishment Act, and so could expect some opposition from the English Landlord Class in the House of Lords, fearful for the implications of property rights in England - many of whom were Whigs that Gladstone relied on for support in Parliament. Partly for this reason, Gladstone's approach was cautious, even conservative and partly for his own views, since he was dedicated to maintaining the landlord class whose "social and moral influence", he said in 1863, was "absolutely essential to the welfare of the country." Furthermore, Gladstone met resistance from Whigs in his Cabinet itself, especially Robert Lowe, and the resulting compromise measure was so weak that it had little difficulty in passing both Houses of Parliament, with one significant amendment. Chichester Parkinson-Fortescue, 1st Baron Carlingford (January 18, 1823– January 30, 1898) was a British statesman and Liberal politician of the nineteenth century. ... John Bright John Bright (November 16, 1811–March 27, 1889), was a British Radical and Liberal statesman, associated with Richard Cobden in the formation of the Anti-Corn Law League. ... Starvation during the famine The Irish Potato Famine, also called The Great Famine or The Great Hunger (Irish: An Gorta Mór), is the name given to a famine which struck Ireland between 1846 and 1849. ... 1849 was a common year starting on Monday (see link for calendar). ... Absentee landlord is an economic term for a person who owns and rents out a profit-earning property, but does not live within the propertys local economic region. ... See also civil religion. ... This article is about the British House of Lords. ... While the Whigs (along with the Tories) are often described as one of the two political parties in late 17th to mid 19th century Great Britain, it is more accurate to describe them as loose political groupings or tendencies. ... Conservatism or political conservatism is any of several historically related political philosophies or political ideologies. ... A sketch portrait of Robert Lowe Robert Lowe, 1st Viscount Sherbrooke (December 4, 1811 - July 27, 1892), British statesman, was born at Bingham, Nottinghamshire, where his father was the rector. ...


Terms of the First Irish Land Act

  1. The Custom of Ulster or any similar custom prevailing elsewhere, was given the force of law where it existed.
  2. Tenants not enjoying this protection (the vast majority) gained increased security by: a) compensation for improvements made to a farm if they surrendered their lease (these had previously been accredited to the landlord, hence no incentive to the tenant); b) compensation for 'disturbance', i.e. damages, for tenants evicted for causes other than non-payment of rent.
  3. The 'Bright Clauses', which Gladstone accepted reluctantly, allowed tenants to borrow from the government two-thirds of the cost of buying their holding, at 5% interest repayable over 35 years, provided the landlord was willing to sell (no compulsory powers).

To prevent eviction by rack-renting, and so avoiding paying compensation to tenants, the Bill said that rents must not be "excessive", leaving this for the courts to define. But the House of Lords in a wrecking amendment substituted "exorbitant" in its place. This in practice enabled landlords to raise rents above what tenants could pay and then evict them for non-payment without giving any compensation. The Custom of Ulster gave tenants of this province of Ireland a reasonable expectation of security of tenure so long as they paid their rent, and also allowed them to sell the right to occupy their holding to another tenant acceptable to the landlord. ...


Consequences of First Irish Land Act

However well-intentioned, the Act was at best irrelevant, at worst counter-productive. Less than 1,000 tenants took up the "Bright Clauses", since the terms were beyond most peasants and many landlords did not wish to sell. Many substantial leasehold farmers, who had led the campaign for land reform, were excluded from the Act because their leases were longer than 31 years. Legal disputes over customary rights and "exorbitant" rents actually worsened landlord-tenant relations. Figures do not indicate any impact of the Act on the rate of eviction, which was at a low level anyway. In the late 1870's when depression struck, evictions for non-payment of rent mounted, tenants had no protection, and 'outrages' and the Land League were the results. Even in 1871, the government had to pass a Coercion Act because of the increase in violence in Ireland; it lost support to the Home Rule Movement, which won 9 out of 14 Irish by-elections (1870-4), mainly formerly Liberal held seats. The Irish painter Henry Jones Thaddeus enlisted the conscience of the propertied classes with the sentimental realism of La retour du bracconier (The Wounded Poacher), exhibited in the Paris Salon of 1881, at the height of the Irish Land War The Irish Land League was an Irish political organization of... Coercion Act is the name given to a number of acts in different jurisdictions throughout history. ... Home Rule flag The Home Rule Movement was formed by Annie Besant and Lokmanya Tilak with the aim of seeking a Dominion status within the British Empire to the Indian Empire in 1917. ... A by-election or bye-election is a special election held to fill a political office when the incumbent has died or resigned. ...


Nevertheless, "Gladstone's Irish legislation, though a long way short of revolutionary, had a symbolic significance far beyond its immediate effects" - Lyons. The Land Act turned the tide of laissez-faire legislation favouring capitalist landlordism, and in principle, if not in practice, was a defeat for the concept of the absolute right of property. For the first time in Ireland tenants now had in law an interest in their holding. Laissez-faire is short for laissez faire, laissez passer, a French phrase meaning to let things alone, let them pass. First used by the eighteenth century Physiocrats as an injunction against government interference with trade, it is now used as a synonym for strict free market economics. ... In economics, a capitalist is someone who owns capital, presumably within the economic system of capitalism. ...


Second Irish Land Act, 1881

Gave tenants real security, though by this time the Irish were demanding proprietorship. This act created the Irish Land Commission. Despite a short term reduction of rents (by about 20% by 1882) this act can generally be seen as economically ineffective. Instead of cutting costs or increasing productivity, Irish farmers increasingly turned to the Irish land courts to cut their rents and jack up their dwindling incomes. The land purchase element can be described as counterproductive because the conditions tenants now enjoyed under this act gave them no incentive to buy, furthermore, some economic historians dispute the effectiveness of land purchase as a solution to the Irish land problem. Land purchase significantly reduced the amount of capital in Ireland that could have been invested to improve efficiency and competitiveness of Irish farms. Therefore some headway is made towards lower rents but this is at the cost of lower rates of productivity growth in Irish farming. The Irish Land Commission was created in 1881 as a rent fixing commission by the Irish Land Act 1881. ...


Overview

The flawed economics that lay behind these acts exposes a political aim on Gladstone's behalf, to destroy the raison d'étre of the Land League (following the recent Land War). Although the second land act ushered in a period of tentative calm, it became clear further reforms were necessary. It is widely accepted by historians that Gladstone was addressing the wrong crowd in seeking to calm the nationalist movement by land reform as the driving force behind this sentiment was an emerging Irish cultural identity following the years of comparative prosperity in the 1850s and 1860s. The Land War in Irish History was a period of agrarian agitation in rural Ireland in the 1870s, 1880s and 1890s. ...


The Act successfully undermined the Land League by granting fair-rent control, fixity of tenure on leases, and freedom of sale: all to be overseen by the new Irish Land Commission. Thus the 1881 Act also tentatively conceded the need for state participation in the redistribution of land-ownership.


A symbolic significance of these land acts are how far Gladstone had come from his starting point. Judicial control of rent levels and the establishment of many land courts is a world away from Gladstone's policy of 'retrenchment' and his commitment to Free markets.


Third Land (Purchase) Act 1903

Contined land agitations throghout the 1880s and 1890s culminated in the revolutionary Local Government (Ireland) Act 1898 which in turn contributed to the success of the United Irish League (UIL) in the 1900 general election, laying the foundation to a lasting solution in the land question. Under government, UIL and IPP pressure the Chief Secretary for Ireland - George Wyndham gave his backing to a Land Conference in December 1902 comprising four landlord representatives and four tenant representatives led by William O'Brien . They worked out a new scheme for tenant land purchase based on the government paying the difference between the price offered by tenants and that demanded by landlords. The Local Government (Ireland) Act 1898 a piece of legislation passed as an Act of Parliament by the Parliament of the United Kingdom in 1898, to establish a system of local government in Ireland on lines similar that had been recently created in Great Britain at the time. ... The United Irish League (UIL) was a nationalist political party in Ireland. ... The Chief Secretary was the most important position for determining British policy in Ireland after the Lord Lieutenant, and was frequently a cabinet level position in the 19th and early twentieth centuries. ... George Wyndham (1863 - 1913) was a significant English political figure. ... William OBrien (2 October 1852–25 February 1928) was an Irish journalist, writer and politician, particularly associated with campaigns for land reform in Ireland during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. ...


This was the basis of the Wyndham Land Purchase (Ireland) Act (1903) which O’Brien orchestrated through parliament. It differed from earlier legislation which initially advanced to tenants the sum necessary to purchase their holdings, repayable over a period of years on terms determined by an independent commission, while the Wyndham Act finished off landlordism control over tenants and made it easier for tenants to purchase land, facilitating the transfer of about 9 million acres up to 1914. By then 75% of occupiers were buying out their landlords under the 1903 Act and the later 1909 Act which introduced compulsory purchase. Munster tenants availed of land purchase in exceptionally high numbers, encouraged by their Irish Land and Labour Association’s leader D.D. Sheehan. O’Brien exalted in the triumph of successfully combining the "doctrine of conciliation" with "conference plus business", to finally settling the Irish land question. Absentee landlord is an economic term for a person who owns and rents out a profit-earning property, but does not live within the propertys local economic region. ... Statistics Area: 24,607. ... The Irish Land and Labour Association (ILLA) was a progressive movement founded in the early 1890s in Munster, to organise and pursue political agitation for small tenant farmer’s and rural labourer’s rights. ... Daniel Desmond Sheehan, usually known as D.D. Sheehan (28 May 1873 – 28 November 1948) was an Irish journalist, labour leader, barrister, and author. ...


  Results from FactBites:
 
Irish Land Acts - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1243 words)
The Irish situation was favourable, with agriculture improving and pressure on the land decreasing since the Irish potato famine.
The Land Act turned the tide of laissez-faire legislation favouring capitalist landlordism, and in principle, if not in practice, was a defeat for the concept of the absolute right of property.
Contined land agitations throghout the 1880s and 1890s culminated in the revolutionary Local Government (Ireland) Act 1898 which in turn contributed to the success of the United Irish League (UIL) in the 1900 general election, laying the foundation to a lasting solution in the land question.
Irish Land Commission - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (234 words)
The Irish Land Commission (or simply Land Commission) was created in 1881 as a rent fixing commission by the Irish Land Act 1881 for Ireland.
In 1983 the commission ceased acquiring land, this signified the start of the end of the commissions reform of Irish land ownership.
The commission was dissolved on March 31, 1999 by the Irish Land Commission (Dissolution) Act, 1992 and most of the remaining liabilities and assets were transferred to the Minister for Agriculture and Food, many historical records are held by the National Archives of Ireland.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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