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Irish identity and integration within the British armed forces, 1939–45

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 July 2015

Steven O’Connor*
Affiliation:
Trinity College Dublin
*
Centre for Contemporary Irish History, Trinity College Dublin [email protected]

Abstract

During the Second World War tens of thousands of volunteers from the island of Ireland served in the British armed forces. This article will examine the effect of an Irish background on the volunteers’ experience of the British forces. It will explore the ways in which the military authorities facilitated and encouraged the development of a pluralist Irish identity. In doing so the article will demonstrate how the volunteers’ ideas of Irishness were influenced by British perceptions and it will assess to what extent volunteers from North and South really shared a common Irish identity. The article will also place the Irish experience of the British forces in the context of a multinational army incorporating personnel from, among others, Scotland, Wales, the dominions and Poland.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© Irish Historical Studies Publications Ltd 2015 

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References

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39 Army Council instructions for 1 Nov. 1941 (T.N.A., W.O. 293/26).

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42 Memo, ‘Proposed Formation of an Irish Brigade’, 25 Oct. 1941 (T.N.A., PREM 3/129/5).

43 John Andrews to Winston Churchill, 18 Dec. 1941 (T.N.A., PREM 3/129/5).

44 Andrews to Clement Attlee, Lord Privy Seal, 23 Jan. 1942 (T.N.A., PREM 3/129/5).

45 Memo, ‘“Nationality” Classification of Personnel Serving in Proposed “Irish” Bde’, 1 Jan. 1942 (T.N.A., PREM 3/129/5). The Southern Irish proportion in these regiments was even smaller: 4 per cent and 19.2 per cent respectively.

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76 S. F. Swift papers, p. 21 (I.W.M., MSS 19814).

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88 Ibid.

89 Memo, ‘Assistance being afforded to Irish citizens to enlist in the British Army’ by Minister for Defence, 5 Sept. 1941 (N.A.I., DT, S6091A).

90 Interview with Wg. Cdr. O’Toole (U.C.C., V.P.S.A.). See also interviews with Fl. Lt. M. Quayle (U.C.C., V.P.S.A.); Air Marshal William MacDonald (I.W.M.S.A., 4610) and Sqn. Ldr. Vigors, Tim, Life’s too short to cry: the compelling memoir of a battle of Britain ace (London, 2008), pp 78Google Scholar, 203.

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92 Interview with Lt. J. Jacob (U.C.C., V.P.S.A.).

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101 Major General Macmillan of the 15th (Scottish) Division took a similar view, asserting that: ‘I do not think that it is essential to prove that there are more than 50% Scots in the units concerned, as the basis of my argument is that the wearing of the Balmoral will promote divisional esprit de corps and is not a sign that the wearer is a Scotsman, but only that he belongs to a Scottish Division’: French, , ‘The fashioning of esprit de corps’, p. 284Google Scholar.

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104 C.M.F.-B.N.A.F., appreciation and censorship report no. 38 covering period 1–15 Feb.1944, Part B – Canadian Expeditionary Force, p. 4 (T.N.A., W.O. 204/10381).

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112 Interview with Columbanus Deegan (I.W.M.S.A., 25513). I would like to thank Prof. Brian Girvin, Dr Robert Armstrong and the external readers for their comments on earlier drafts of this article, and the Irish Research Council for funding the Ph.D. research on which this article is based.