4 June 1820 - Henry Grattan, the moving force behind the
Irish Parliament at College Green Dublin before it was dissolved by the Act of
Union, died on this day in London.
Grattan was born at Fishamble Street, Dublin, in 1746, and
baptised in the nearby church of St. John the Evangelist. A member of the
Anglo-Irish elite of Protestant background, Grattan was the son of James
Grattan MP, of Belcamp Park, County Dublin and Mary youngest daughter of Sir
Thomas Marlay, Attorney-General of Ireland, Chief Baron of the Exchequer and
finally Lord Chief Justice of the Court of King's Bench (Ireland). He thus came
from a very privileged and aristocratic background.
Grattan was a distinguished student at Trinity College,
Dublin where he began a lifelong study of classical literature, and was
especially interested in the great orators of antiquity.
He entered the Parliament of Ireland in 1775, sponsored by
Lord Charlemont. He quickly established a reputation as a brilliant speaker and
one who was determined to press the Crown for Legislative Independence for
Ireland. With Britain bogged down in the trying to suppress the American
Revolutionaries he saw his chance to make his case. In this he was able to rely
on the Anglo-Irish Volunteers who organised a Volunteer Army to 'Guard' the
Country as more British troops were sent out of Ireland to fight in America. As
a result of such agitation in 1782 the restrictions on Ireland having to submit
legislation to the English Privy Council for prior approval or rejection was
removed. It was to be Grattan's greatest Triumph.
For his efforts in securing Legislative Independence he was
awarded £50,000 by the House of Commons in Dublin 'in testimony of the
gratitude of this nation for his eminent and unequalled services to this
kingdom'. The money allowed him to by a house in Tinnehinch, co. Wicklow, and
an estate at Moyanna in Queen's county (County Laois) .
However the subsequent operation of 'Grattan's Parliament'
was limited by its restrictive nature, its members being confined to those of
the Established Church, and thus the exclusion of Catholics and Presbyterians
from its benches. Crucially it had no independent Executive, all Ministers
being in the gift of the Crown.
Grattan, in the aftermath of the outbreak of the French
Revolutionary Wars in 1792, was able to achieve one more success by helping to
bring in legislation that gave a limited franchise to Catholics in a 'Catholic
Relief Act'. The expectation was that the logical conclusion to such a move was
that Catholic Emancipation (the right of Catholics to sit in Parliament) must
come about sooner rather than later.
In this Grattan and his supporters were to be disappointed,
especially in 1795 in the quick recall of the new Lord Lieutenant Fitzwilliam.
He had privately asked Grattan to propose a Bill for Catholic emancipation,
promising the support of Pitt the British Prime Minister. But finally it
appeared that the he had either misunderstood or exceeded his instructions; and
on 19 February 1795 Fitzwilliam was recalled to London as the forces of
Reaction had undermined him.
While Grattan kept a cool head in the aftermath of this
setback his ability to influence the political scene was severely undermined as
the forces of Revolution and Reaction took centre stage. He retired from politics
in 1797 and though his name was implicated in the Rising of 1798 it would
appear these accusations were unfounded.
With the prospect of a Union between Britain and Ireland
looming in the aftermath of the crushing of the Rising he returned to Parliament
to fight for its continued existence. When he was defeated in that effort he
again stepped down but was returned for Dublin City in 1805 and took his seat
in Westminster.
Here his oratorical skills were recognised and admired as
one of the great parliamentarians of the age but as one amongst hundreds his
influence was negligible and he was left in the Limelight. He continued to
press for Catholic Emancipation but with conditions attached - re the
appointment of Catholic Bishops being within the approval of the British
Government. As the years wore on he made less and less appearances in the House
of Commons and reluctantly accepted that the Union was now a political reality.
In 1820 he left Ireland for London to attend the House once
again but fell ill while there. He died at Portman Square, Baker Street, London
on the 4th of June. He had wanted to be buried back home but such was the
respect he had in the British Parliament that it was decided to bury him
amongst the great and the good in Westminster Abbey.
As the only Irish politician to have a phase of
parliamentary history named after him -'Grattan's Parliament' - Henry Grattan
is unique in Irish history.
There is a fine statue of him [above] situated in College
Green Dublin facing his old Alma Mater of Trinity College
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