28 May 1929: The death of the Irish Historian Alice Stopford
Green on this day. Her father was the Rector of Kells Co Meath where she was born in 1847. Despite
the terrible conditions in the Country at the time Alice was raised in some
comfort and educated herself through the use of her fathers extensive Library
in Greek, German and metaphysics. At about the age of sixteen she was attacked
by an eye ailment, rendering her temporarily blind. In 1873 her family moved to
Dublin and there, hungry for knowledge, she started to attend lectures in
physics at the College of Sciences.
After her father’s death she moved with her mother and
sisters to London, where she was noticed by an emerging Oxford historian, John
Richard Green. In 1877 they were married. He made his name through the
publication of a work called A short history of the English people which sold
well. She acted as his secretary and assistant and things seemed to be going
well. However in 1883 her husband suddenly died and she was on her own. Undeterred
she set out to make a name for herself as an Historian in her own right and as
a Woman of Letters. She had a formidable list of correspondents in the English
speaking World. Her early works—a life of Henry II and a long two-volume study
of Town life in the fifteenth century—confirmed her abilities as someone
capable of producing serious works of History.
Though mildly interested in Irish affairs she resided in
London and took a keen interest in Africa. Green found her niche editing the
‘Journal of the African Society’, which she did until 1906 and was of the
opinion that Black Africans had their own cultures and traditions that should
be highlighted and respected. The Boer War was something of a catalyst in how
she viewed the Empire and she visited the prison camp on the island of St
Helena where Boer prisoners-of-war were being held. In October 1900, returning
to England aboard a steamship, she wrote to John Holt: I am certain if this
Empire is to be held together at all that Englishmen will have to think more of
knowledge v intelligence, & trust less to the argument.
With the growth of the Irish Revival at home and a renewed
interest in Old Irish History she set about the study of it. Much influenced by
her late husband’s focus on social and economic aspects of historical change
she came out in 1908 with her seminal work The Making of Ireland and its
Undoing 1200-1600. This was a bit of a shocker in the stuffy world of Irish
Historiography and it seems ruffled quite a few feathers! But it did establish
her as a prominent Irish historian as opposed to a British one.
With the growth of the Home Rule Crises in 1912 and the
arming of the Northern Loyalists she became convinced that Nationalist Ireland
had to reciprocate and helped along with Sir Roger Casement and others to land
guns in Ireland to counter any attempt to Partition the Country. However it was
only in 1918 that she moved to Dublin where she took up residence at 30 St
Stephen’s Green where her house became a hub of social and political interaction.
While she was an Irish historian and patriot she was not one of violent
persuasion.
When the Treaty was signed in 1921 she fully supported it.
In 1922 she won a seat in Seanad Éireann
as a Senator of the new Irish Free State. She remained as a member until
her death. Her final major work was History of the Irish State to 1014. Again
in this volume she attempted to lay out the cultural, social and legal
framework of Ireland and the National character and culture of the People up
until that date and steered away from a political history of the period.
Alice Stopford Green died on this day in 1929 - just two
days short of her 82nd birthday. She is buried in Deans Grange cemetery Co
Dublin.
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