Gather Derry: The Irish Revolution, 1912-23 Curated By Adrian Grant Shown As Textbook
Derry was a busy port city with a thriving textile industry, An important transport hub, it was also a city divided along confessional and political lines, The unionist establishment controlled local government despite the existence of a large Catholic nationalist majority, leading to charges of gerrymandering and discrimination, The onset of home rule increased tensions inas unionist power was challenged and nationalist confidence grew, Street violence in the city and county towns was accompanied by the mass mobilizations of
the Ulster and Irish Volunteers, on a collision course only halted by the outbreak of war in Europe.
After the EasterRising, the spectre of partition reemerged and became the principal issue of concern to nationalists of all shades, An upsurge in republican violence afterwas largely kept in check by the presence of a significant number of British army and police moreover, half the population was loyal to the British state.
North county Derry was largely unionist and saw little republican activity, while the south was the main centre of action until the IRA's abortive Northern Offensive ofand the exodus of republicans across the newly formed border.
Meanwhile, the election of the first nationalist corporation in Derry city inkickstarted a series of events that led to the worst sectarian violence in a generation.
Based on newly released sources, this book makes a vital contribution to the historiography of Ulster during the revolutionary period, Subjects: Irish History TwentiethCentury History Local History Northern Irish History Irish Revolution,