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Hanna Sheehy Skeffington 'The ablest of all the fearless women who worked for Ireland’s freedom'

Sheehy Skeffington fought for equality and the republican cause – but why wasn’t she put forward as a candidate in the crucial 1918 election?

GIVEN HER UNDOUBTED talents as a strategist and as a public speaker, why did Hanna Sheehy Skeffington not become one of the key figures in the republican movement?

More specifically, why did Sinn Féin not put those skills to best use by selecting her as a candidate in the crucial election of 1918?

There were many tributes made to the Irish feminist following her death in 1946. These included Maud Gonne MacBride, who described her as”the ablest of all the fearless women who worked for Ireland’s freedom”.

From Labour, Cathal O’Shannon considered her not only “the ableist of the women” in Irish public life over the past forty years, but “in some respects she had a place of her own even among those of her political class and calibre in America and in Britain”.

Another wrote that she had been ‘”distinguished for her grasp of public affairs and her outspoken style of expressing her views”.

She had joined Sinn Féin in 1918, following her return from a tour of America, where she had been hailed as the most successful of the republican propagandists to have visited in the aftermath of the Rising.

The Sean Connolly Club unanimously selected her to contest the Harbor division in Dublin, but they must have been overruled as she was offered only the unwinnable seat of North Antrim, an offer she rejected with indignation.

She was generous with her time in campaigning for the imprisoned Constance Markievicz, determined that the woman who had been “thrown as a sop to the women of the country” (in the words of Irish Women’s Franchise League member Meg Connery), would be successful.  

Forthright views As editor of the suffrage paper the Irish Citizen, Hanna had a vehicle in which to articulate her views regarding the formation of Dáil Eireann.

Her forthright words perhaps provide a clue why party leaders might have preferred she remained as a worker rather than a spokeswoman with the authority of an elected position.

While she congratulated the Dáil for its progressive action in appointing Constance Markievicz as Minister for Labour, she was less than impressed by the pomp and ceremony the TDs attempted to bring to proceedings, regretting they had not “cast off the whole system of British cabinet making and British parliamentary methods, a system that has strangled true democracy”. She preferred the progressive small nations of the Scandinavian countries, most of which “in feminism far outstrip us”.

Hanna, as organising secretary, was working in close proximity to Michael Collins, whose organisational skills she admired, although there were elements of his personality she disliked, writing in her unpublished memoirs: “He had the usual soldier’s contempt of civilians, particularly of women, though these often risked their lives to help him.”’ In her opinion the Republic he visualised would have been “a middle class replica of an English state… for he knew no other”.

For his part, Collins complained about the Sinn Féin ‘Standing Committee of malcontents’, who were much too “political and theoretical” and not militant enough for that military man.

Hanna was one of five Sinn Féin women elected to Dublin City Council in January 1920.

At this time forty two women were elected throughout Ireland, but the Irish Citizen was scathing in its assessment of that result: “We do not think 5 in 80 members on Dublin city council or 42 women throughout Ireland a fair proportion – 50% would be more like our idea of fairness.”

Sinn Féin was commended for setting a good example, but the other political parties, including Labour, were criticised for the lack of support they gave women. Her record as a councillor reflected her experience as a teacher of many year’s standing, giving an indication of what her concerns would have been, if she had been elected to the Dáil.

She was a member of the Cleansing Committee, a member of the Technical Education Committee and Chair of the Public Libraries Committee. The unequal position of female local government employees was one of her first concerns and all town councils were written to and asked for the numbers of women they employed as clerical workers, what their pay scales were and whether they were eligible for promotion.

She would receive many letters of gratitude from clerks whose positions she had helped to improve. When she was appointed to the Finance and General and Purposes Committee, she became involved in promoting the ‘Orion’ system of building corporation houses, with the first buildings opening in Clontarf in July 1921.

She was also a judge in the republican courts and one of the most effective speakers for the republican cause, travelling the countryside for that purpose. In August 1919 in County Westmeath she was struck on the head and stunned by the butt-end of a police carbine as 20 armed police rushed the platform where she was speaking.

Although unable to speak on the Treaty in the Dáil, she used her journalistic skills to make plain her opposition.

She was prominent in the unsuccessful campaign to have the franchise extended to women between 21 and 30 before the vote was taken (Kate O’Callaghan, the Deputy who put forward the motion in the Dáil was a friend and former pupil) and in the American journal The Freeman, Hanna emphasised this was not merely a feminist concern but a question of democracy and of supporting working class interests:

The antediluvian property franchise, with all its anomalies and rottenness, its plural votings and university electorate…(which would) naturally be to the advantage of the vested interests, for the propertied classes, the people that boast of “stakes in the country!”, are all in favour of the Free State. These will all vote at the election.

While the election concerned “the future destiny and status of the nation”, adult suffrage would only be granted after others had voted them into the Free State.

In her sardonic dismissal of politicians who promised “jam yesterday, jam tomorrow, but never jam today”, we hear the voice of a woman who could have made a powerful and radical contribution to the emerging Irish state.

Dr Margaret Ward is Honorary Senior Lecturer in History at Queen’s University, Belfast. Her latest book is Fearless Woman: Hanna Sheehy Skeffington, Feminism and the Irish Revolution, 2019, UCD Press.

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    Mute Murph11
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    Nov 25th 2014, 7:34 AM

    We need to see good quality leadership for a change. Gender not important

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    Mute Emmet Kilbride
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    Nov 25th 2014, 10:21 AM

    So what she means is that we need to see more women like Lorraine Higgins….who has lost all four elections that she ran for and is now a Senator because Kenny put her there. So demonstrating that the will fo teh people matters not.

    So we need more women who don’t understand the meaning of utopia.

    Need more women to lie about what there being told on the door steps.

    What we need are more women who listen to the people and have a brain and have an interest in Thiosd country and that will put us first.

    Its not a gender issue its a capability issue!!!!!

    10-12-2014

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    Mute Emmet Kilbride
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    Nov 25th 2014, 10:23 AM
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    Mute thejournalvigilante
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    Nov 25th 2014, 12:59 PM

    Sorry emmet that was sooo sexist * uses my victim card*

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    Mute professor pNibbler
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    Nov 25th 2014, 5:57 PM

    #dec10

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    Mute Kane Abel
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    Nov 25th 2014, 6:26 PM

    What has Frances F ever done for anyone that wasn’t begging a cheap vote in return? She’s only in there by luck and chance after FF imploded….

    - She is a role model to no soul.

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    Mute tom murphy
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    Nov 25th 2014, 7:47 PM

    Tell joan the phone that, if she had any balls at all she would have folded this Government.

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    Mute Robin Tobin
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    Nov 26th 2014, 11:53 AM

    Murph you right what a load of crap. If Enda Kenny is their chosen one they don,t know any thing about leadership. This plonker has lost the people.

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    Mute Tim Kearney
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    Nov 25th 2014, 7:27 AM

    I would love to see more women in Politics .. Women that work for the people ….. Women that are not involved with Political Parties that hurt those that are finding it hard to survive ..women that listen to the people… Would you not agree Ms Fitzgerald. . ???

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    Mute Larry L'Oiseau
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    Nov 25th 2014, 7:47 AM

    “Who would have thought women would be in the sex trade in 2016″

    Frances planning to eliminate the oldest profession in the world ??? (holds hands in head)
    Notable albeit naive aspiration

    Herself and O Riordan are spending too much time alone and believing their own bull$hit.

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    Mute the truth hurts
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    Nov 25th 2014, 7:24 AM

    We need to rear a nation of Joan Burton..a successful female role model. Put a bit of manners on Samsung and Apple too with those sinister smartphones.

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    Mute Randle P McMurphy
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    Nov 25th 2014, 12:11 PM

    Or wonderful examples such as Gemma Hussey, Alice Glenn, Mary Robinson, Mary Harney, Lucinda Creighton, the last Rehab CEO….the list of self-serving Luddite feminist-type ‘leaders’ is awe-inspiring and endless to be sure!!

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    Mute Fintan Stack
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    Nov 25th 2014, 8:42 PM

    Yes, the current and previous lot would not be examples to learn from. burton is a disgrace to humanity.

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    Mute Big Crazy Al
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    Nov 25th 2014, 8:16 AM

    It would be great to see more women in politics. As long as they’re not in fg ff and labour. Then it’s fine

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    Mute Chris
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    Nov 25th 2014, 8:12 AM

    Correct Minister and lets hope the leaders they see are more like Maureen O’Sullivan TD & Cllr Brid Smith than like you.

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    Mute Joseph O'Regan
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    Nov 25th 2014, 7:31 AM

    The gender equality issue has to do with the enormous power that the catholic church had and to a large extent still has in this country and its legacy. It still has an iron grip on our educational system and our health system.
    The sheer hypocrisy of the Government, in fact all governments have shown when dealing with this issue is baffling. Plenty of sound bytes but no real action, it would upset a bunch of old male virgins wearing pointed hats.

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    Mute Thomas Aquinas
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    Nov 25th 2014, 8:29 AM

    Bullsh Joseph. Pretty much every society across the world discrminates against women and it did not take the Catholic church to achieve that. Nor religion more generally. It is part of the human power game in which male physical strength is translated into social power.

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    Mute Joseph O'Regan
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    Nov 25th 2014, 9:59 AM

    Religion (no matter what flavor) discriminates against women. The Main and most powerful religion is in Ireland was/is Catholicism.

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    Mute Dan public
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    Nov 25th 2014, 8:43 AM

    Does she know of any good male or female leaders , what happened the file of over 200 complaints against guarda, b4 she even opened it she said most would be malicious claims bla bla bla and yet she still has done nothing

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    Mute Gus Sheridan
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    Nov 25th 2014, 2:00 PM

    Frances YOU have to prove yourself a LOT more….but guess its too late for that now

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    Mute johngahan
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    Nov 25th 2014, 7:23 AM

    Frances Firzgerald. Taoiseach 2016-2021

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    Mute Sam Bartell
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    Nov 25th 2014, 9:26 PM

    Perish the thought

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    Mute richard fennessy
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    Nov 25th 2014, 6:23 PM

    Quality is more important then gender p Healy eames lucinda creighton must set back women’s equality by years.women who believe they belong in the 1920s

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    Mute Alex McCarthy
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    Nov 25th 2014, 8:05 PM

    Women have more to prove? What a gender-neurotic comment.

    She obviously has never felt the weight of expectation that has encumbered men since time immemorial: an onus of expectation that tells us we need to be successful, respected and employed in a ‘manly’ job at all costs, lest we be seen as less of a ‘man’ – both by society and by ourselves – and thereby worthless to the world.

    More and more men and becoming suicide statistics simply because we can no longer deal with this weight of expectation. Yet here we have this ‘gender-neuroticism’ that operates on the assumption that women always have it worse!

    In any case I don’t believe it possible to quantify the level of struggle for the purpose of comparison between the two genders. Men and women suffer in different ways. Sadly, men tend to suffer in silence, and it is that silence that leads to the presumption that we do not suffer at all, or at least that our suffering is of a much weaker magnitude than that of women.

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    Mute Paul Circle
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    Nov 25th 2014, 7:49 PM

    And guess what she just appointed a woman garda commissioner who worked wit Callinan.

    What a sexist waste of space this Frances Fitzgerald is !

    She has done nothing of any value …. ever !

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    Mute Joanna
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    Nov 25th 2014, 7:48 AM

    It is interesting how people respond to role models and why gender identity is an important factor in one. This is something I’ve always been curious about.

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    Mute Lorem Ipsum
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    Nov 25th 2014, 8:40 AM

    How am I supposed to succeed in life with so few left-handed role models? :’(

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    Mute Mrs Shalakalananaka
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    Nov 25th 2014, 9:31 AM

    So few left handed role models? Are you serious, bleeding everyone’s a lefty these days.

    What about Kermit the Frog? He’s deadly.

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