thumb|At the Mansion House in 1919 (left to right) - the republican politicians Harry Boland, [[Michael Collins (Irish leader)|Michael Collins and Éamon de Valera.]]
Harry Boland (27 April 1887 – 1 August 1922) was an Irish republican, politician, and revolutionary organiser who played a central role in the Irish separatist movement from the Easter Rising of 1916 through to the outbreak of the Irish Civil War in 1922. Born in Phibsborough, Dublin, into a Fenian family, he became an active member of the Irish Republican Brotherhood, the Irish Volunteers, the Gaelic Athletic Association, and Sinn Féin, and was closely associated with both Éamon de Valera and Michael Collins during the revolutionary period.
Boland took part in the Easter Rising of 1916 as part of the GPO garrison and was subsequently sentenced to ten years' penal servitude, serving time alongside de Valera in English prisons before being released under the general amnesty of June 1917. In the years that followed, he became one of the principal organisers of Sinn Féin's electoral machine, playing a key role in the party's landslide victory at the 1918 general election, in which he was himself elected MP for Roscommon South. He subsequently served as de Valera's special envoy to the United States, spending much of the Irish War of Independence in America organising political support and attempting to procure arms for the Irish Volunteers.
Following a return to Ireland, Boland voted against the Anglo-Irish Treaty in January 1922 and, despite sustained efforts to prevent a split, took up arms on the anti-Treaty side when the Civil War broke out in June 1922. He was shot by National Army soldiers during an attempted arrest at the Grand Hotel, Skerries, Co. Dublin, on 31 July 1922, and died the following day in St. Vincent's Hospital, Dublin. He was 35 years old. His funeral at Glasnevin Cemetery drew vast crowds, and his death was widely mourned on both sides of the Civil War divide. Collins, who had been his closest friend and later his political opponent, was killed three weeks later and was buried in the same cemetery.
Early life
Boland was born on 27 April 1887 at 6 Dalymount Terrace, Phibsborough, Dublin, the third of five children of James Boland, a paving foreman and eventually overseer for Dublin Corporation, and Catherine ('Kate') Boland (née Woods; c.1861–1932). His father, a dedicated Fenian and GAA official and member of the Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB), died from a brain cyst in 1895 at the age of 38, his death ascribed to a confrontation with anti-Parnellites in December 1890 over possession of the office of the United Ireland newspaper. The family was shielded from destitution by public subscriptions raised after the funeral. Kate subsequently secured a tobacconist's shop on Wexford Street, before moving to nearby Lennox Street in 1907, and north to 15 Marino Crescent in 1914.
After a turbulent period with the Christian Brothers at Synge Street CBS, Boland was accepted in about 1902 as a boarder by the De La Salle Brothers at Castletown, County Laois, with the prospect of a noviciate. Lacking both money and a vocation, he left school. He worked briefly in Manchester before becoming a tailor's cutter in Todd, Burns, & Co. of Mary Street, then one of Dublin's largest department stores. He was active in GAA circles, earning a place on the Dublin team for the All-Ireland senior hurling final in 1909, and securing his father's former post as Dublin county chairman in 1911. He also refereed the 1914 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final. He joined the radical Keating branch of the Gaelic League, though his Irish remained rudimentary. By November 1913, when he became a founding member of the Irish Volunteers, Boland was already an influential figure in Dublin's republican underground. He supported the Volunteers' provisional committee when it repudiated the leadership of John Redmond in October 1914, and continued to drill with F Company, 2nd Battalion, Dublin Brigade. He is said to have introduced Collins to the IRB during a visit to London in 1909. In line with all the Sinn Féin MPs elected at that election, he did not represent his constituents at Westminster, but withdrew to sit in the declared independent Dáil Éireann (the First Dáil). He was named by Éamon de Valera as special envoy to the United States, a role his uncle Jack had played 25 years previously.
In America
In February 1919, Boland collaborated with Collins in the rescue of de Valera from Lincoln Gaol. The operation was carried out without bloodshed and relied on improvisation and careful planning. It was widely regarded within republican circles as a significant propaganda success, as well as a practical one.
From June 1919 to December 1920, during de Valera's own time in America, Boland served as his private secretary, tour organiser, and political adviser, managing the practical and logistical demands of the visit. He also took responsibility for an ambitious arms procurement programme, working through the IRB and its American affiliates to source weapons for the Irish Volunteers. This work brought him into repeated conflict with Cathal Brugha, the minister for defence, over questions of funding and supervision, as Boland conducted these operations through the IRB rather than through official governmental channels.
Boland also negotiated a loan of $20,000 from the Irish Republic to the Soviet Republic through the head of the Soviet Bureau, Ludwig Martens, using Russian jewellery as collateral. These jewels were transferred to Ireland on his return.
During the Irish War of Independence, Boland operated alongside Michael Collins, of whom he was a close friend. Boland also coordinated an ambitious programme for procuring arms and smuggling them to Ireland. In June 1921, his reputation as an arms procurer was damaged by the capture in Hoboken of 495 Thompson submachine guns. Boland was also a devoted follower of de Valera.
Civil War and Death
Boland opposed the Anglo-Irish Treaty. He reached Dublin on 5 January 1922 in time to vote with the minority of deputies against the treaty. On 7 January 1922, just before the crucial vote, Boland addressed the assembly in opposition to the Treaty. He objected to its requirement for an oath of allegiance to King George V, which he viewed as a voluntary submission to British authority, and criticised its acceptance of partition through the exclusion of six Ulster counties from the Republic. During the debates, Boland stated: "I vote against this Treaty because I am a Republican; I was elected on the Republican ticket; I came here and took the oath to the Republican Government, and I am not going now to destroy that Government".
He subsequently worked to negotiate an electoral pact between the pro- and anti-Treaty Sinn Féin factions in advance of the 1922 general election, which he later described as his proudest achievement. In the 1922 general election, he was re-elected to the Dáil representing Mayo South–Roscommon South. In the ensuing Irish Civil War, he sided with the Anti-Treaty IRA, which brought him into open disagreement with Collins. Prior to the outbreak of violence, he said: "It's going to be war, and I'm not going to fire on Mick. So I can't fire on any of Mick's men."
Despite his efforts in the preceding months to broker a reconciliation between Collins and de Valera, he accepted a military role as quartermaster-general for the IRA's Eastern Command. In July 1922, Boland was prominent in the occupation and subsequent abandonment of Blessington, Co. Wicklow, one of the early engagements of the Civil War in the Dublin area. The anti-Treaty IRA's capacity to resist Free State forces in the region proved limited, and Blessington was given up without sustained fighting. Following this, Boland went on the run in Dublin. Two officers entered his room and Boland, who was unarmed, was shot and mortally wounded during a struggle. According to historian Andrew Brasier and John Kelly, "Reports of how and why he was shot vary and it is hard to establish an accurate historical reason, given the highly partisan views of the parties involved in the civil war conflict of brothers."
He died the following day in St. Vincent's Hospital on 1 August 1922. As he lay dying, he told his sister Kathleen that the man who had shot him was a former comrade with whom he had shared imprisonment after the Easter Rising, but refused to give the name. He was buried at Glasnevin Cemetery. The service took place from the Whitefriar Street Carmelite Church. The hearse was followed by Cumann na mBan, Clan na Gael, and the Irish Citizen Army women's section. His funeral procession attracted vast crowds. The artist Jack B. Yeats, depicting the event in two paintings, conveyed what contemporaries described as a widespread sense of public dismay.
According to historian David Fitzpatrick, Boland was "surely the most versatile of Irish revolutionaries" and that "while others specialised in fighting or speech-making, conspiracy or diplomacy, he tried his hand in every department."
Personal life
Boland was known among contemporaries as a gregarious and charismatic figure, described by those who knew him as hearty, good-humoured, and socially at ease across a wide range of company. He was noted for his fashionable dress, his singing, and his storytelling. Following his release from prison in 1917, he used his standing as a freedom fighter to considerable personal effect, and was pursued by and pursued a succession of women during the years of the revolutionary period.
The most significant of Boland's romantic entanglements involved Kitty Kiernan of Granard, Co. Longford, whom both Boland and Michael Collins pursued from 1917 onwards. The rivalry over Kiernan ran alongside, and to some extent mirrored, the broader political and personal dynamic between the two men. Boland and Collins were exceptionally close during the years of the revolution, sharing fraternal bonds through the IRB, collaborating on operations including the rescue of de Valera from Lincoln Gaol in 1919, and socialising extensively while on the run. Boland is said to have introduced Collins to the IRB as early as 1909. Collins, however, generally held the upper hand in both their political and personal dealings, and during Boland's long absences in America, Collins consolidated his position within the republican movement and his relationship with Kiernan, whom he became engaged to. Kiernan chose Collins, and the romantic rivalry, combined with their opposing stances on the Anglo-Irish Treaty, permanently fractured a friendship that had been one of the closest in the revolutionary movement. Boland reportedly wrote to Kiernan proposing that they begin a new life together in the United States, but she declined.
He also had a sister, Kathleen, who was entrusted, with her mother, with the safekeeping of jewels received from Russian diplomats as collateral for a loan made by the provisional government to the new Russian state in April 1920.
In popular culture
In the 1991 TV movie The Treaty, Boland was portrayed by Malcolm Douglas.
In the 1996 film Michael Collins, Boland was portrayed by Irish-American actor Aidan Quinn. The film was criticised for fictionalising both Boland's death and aspects of Collins' life.
See also
- Families in the Oireachtas
Biographies
- Brasier, Andrew and Kelly, John, Harry Boland: A Man Divided, (Dublin 2000)
- Fitzpatrick, David Harry Boland's Irish Revolution, (Cork 2003)
- Maher, Jim Harry Boland: A Biography, (Cork 1998)
Sources
- Ancient Order of Hibernians – Biography
- Contemporary account of Harry Boland's death – New York Times, 2 August 1922
