Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-s2hrs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-03T00:18:52.367Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Physical culture, the Royal Irish Constabulary and police masculinities in Ireland, 1900–14

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 December 2019

Conor Heffernan*
Affiliation:
University College Dublin
*
*School of History, University College Dublin, [email protected]

Abstract

This article examines the importance of physical culture systems for Irishmen seeking to enter the Royal Irish Constabulary (R.I.C), and those already operating within it, in the period 1900 to 1914. R.I.C. entrance requirements encouraged some men to alter their bodies physically to meet standardised body measurements for police officers. Simultaneously, a growing body of literature urged men to reflect upon their stature and, if found deficient, to undertake courses of physical culture. This situation, it is argued, led to a valorisation of muscularity and strength as foundational to an officer's physical presence and strength of character. To further demonstrate the relationship between physical culture and the R.I.C., the article also examines efforts by members within the force to associate strong bodies with broader masculine identities related to courage, integrity and bravery. The article begins with a brief discussion of the R.I.C., before examining the historiography of Irish masculinity and police masculinities more generally. Next, the article examines the importance of physical culture for those seeking entry into the constabulary, with reference to the Irish Times’s physical culture column, before finally examining the efforts by existing members to strengthen the R.I.C.’s relationship with physical culture. In both instances, involving aspirant and actual members of the R.I.C., the article argues that conceptions of masculinity in the constabulary echoed broader social messages and came to equate strong physiques with wider assumptions about police integrity and character.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Irish Historical Studies Publications Ltd 2019

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Connell, R. W. and Messerschmidt, J. W., ‘Hegemonic masculinity: rethinking the concept’ in Gender & Society, xix, no. 6 (Dec. 2005), pp 829–59CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

2 Royal Irish Constabulary list & directory; containing lists of the constabulary departments, Dublin Metropolitan Police, resident magistrates, coast guards, etc., January 1910 (Dublin, 1910), p. 189Google Scholar.

3 Hargreaves, Jennifer and Vertinsky, Patricia, ‘Introduction’ in eaedem (eds), Physical culture, power, and the body (London, 2006), p. 1Google Scholar.

4 Budd, Michael Anton, The sculpture machine: physical culture and body politics in the age of empire (New York, 1997)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Dominique Padurano, ‘Making American men: Charles Atlas and the business of bodies, 1892–1945’ (Ph.D. thesis, Rutgers University, 2007); Morris, A. D., Marrow of the nation: a history of sport and physical culture in republican China (California, 2004)Google Scholar; Tumblety, Joan, Remaking the male body: masculinity and the uses of physical culture in interwar and Vichy France (Oxford, 2013)Google Scholar; Grant, Susan, Physical culture and sport in Soviet society: propaganda, acculturation, and transformation in the 1920s and 1930s (London, 2012)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

5 Budd, The sculpture machine, pp 49–55; Royal Irish Constabulary list & directory, 1910, p. 189; Royal Irish Constabulary list & directory; containing lists of the constabulary departments, Dublin Metropolitan Police, resident magistrates, coast guards, etc., January 1915 (Dublin, 1915), p. 194Google Scholar.

6 Royal Irish Constabulary list & directory, 1915, p. 194.

7 Hawkins, Richard, ‘The Irish model and the empire: a case for reassessment’ in Anderson, David M. and Killingray, David (eds), Policing the empire: government, authority, and control, 1830–1940 (Manchester, 1991), pp 1920Google Scholar.

8 Breathnach, Seamus, The Irish police from the earliest times to the present day (Michigan, 1974)Google Scholar.

9 Palmer, Stanley, Police and protest in England and Ireland, 1780–1850 (New York, 1988)Google Scholar.

10 O'Brien, Joseph V., Dear, dirty Dublin: a city in distress, 1899–1916 (Berkeley, 1982), p. 179Google Scholar.

11 Hamilton, Charles William, On the fortification of police barracks in Ireland (Dublin, 1868), p. 9Google Scholar; Curtis, L. P., ‘Ireland in 1914’ in Vaughan, W. E. (ed.), A new history of Ireland, vi: Ireland under the Union, II: 1870–1921 (Oxford, 1989), p. 150Google Scholar.

12 Curtis, Robert H., The history of the Royal Irish Constabulary (Dublin, 1871)Google Scholar.

13 Lowe, W. J. and Malcolm, E. L., ‘The domestication of the Royal Irish Constabulary, 1836–1922’ in Irish Economic and Social History, xix (1992), pp 2748CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

14 Townshend, Charles, Political violence in Ireland: government and resistance since 1848 (Oxford, 1983), pp 7085Google Scholar; Lowe, W. J., ‘The war against the R.I.C., 1919–21’ in Éire-Ireland xxxvi, nos 3 & 4 (Fall / Winter 2002), pp 79117CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Hughes, Brian, ‘Persecuting the Peelers’ in Fitzpatrick, David (ed.), Terror in Ireland, 1916–1923 (Dublin, 2012), pp 206–18Google Scholar.

15 According to one officer in 1881, ‘Everything in Ireland, from the muzzling of a dog to the suppression of a rebellion, is done by the Irish constabulary’ (Hawkins, ‘The Irish model and the empire’, p. 24).

16 Brewer, John D., The Royal Irish Constabulary: an oral history (Belfast, 1990), pp 25–6Google Scholar.

17 Sinclair, Georgina, ‘The “Irish” policeman and the empire: influencing the policing of the British empire–commonwealth’ in I.H.S., xxxvi, no. 142 (Nov. 2008), pp 173–87Google Scholar.

18 Ibid.; Brogden, Mike, ‘The emergence of the police – the colonial dimension’ in British Journal of Criminology, xxvii, no. 1 (Winter 1987), pp 414CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Mukhopadhyay, Surajit C., ‘Importing back colonial policing systems? The relationship between the Royal Irish Constabulary, Indian policing and militarization of policing in England and Wales’ in European Journal of Social Science Research, xi, no. 3 (1998), pp 253–65CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Fedorowich, Kent, ‘The problems of disbandment: the Royal Irish Constabulary and imperial migration, 1919–29’ in I.H.S., xxx, no. 117 (May 1996), pp 88110Google Scholar.

19 O'Sullivan, Donal J., The Irish Constabularies, 1822–1922: a century of policing in Ireland (Dingle, 1999)Google Scholar.

20 Malcolm, Elizabeth, The Irish policeman, 1822–1922: a life (Dublin, 2006)Google Scholar. Malcolm's work is certainly complemented by the detailed biographies undertaken by Jim Herlihy. See Herlihy, Jim, Royal Irish Constabulary officers: a biographical dictionary and genealogical guide, 1816–1922 (Dublin, 2005)Google Scholar.

21 Campbell, Fergus, ‘The social composition of the senior officers of the Royal Irish Constabulary, 1881–1911’ in I.H.S., xxxvi, no. 144 (Nov. 2009), pp 522–41Google Scholar.

22 Sinclair noted that ‘police history, in its broadest sense, is a sound indicator of social history’ (Sinclair, ‘The Irish policeman’, p. 173).

23 Brian Griffin, ‘The Irish police, 1836–1914: a social history’ (Ph.D. thesis, Loyola University of Chicago, 1991); idem, The Bulkies: police and crime in Belfast, 1800–1865 (Dublin, 1998)Google Scholar; idem, Sporting policemen: sports and the police in Victorian and Edwardian Ireland’ in Éire-Ireland, xlviii, nos 1–2 (Spring / Summer 2013), pp 5478Google Scholar.

24 Allen, Gregory, The Garda Síochána: policing independent Ireland, 1922–82 (Dublin, 1999), pp 99114Google Scholar; Conway, Vicky, Policing twentieth century Ireland: a history of an Garda Síochána (London, 2013), p. 80CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

25 Conway, Policing twentieth century Ireland, pp 79–85.

26 Valente, Joseph, The myth of manliness in Irish national culture, 1880–1922 (Urbana, 2011)Google Scholar; McDevitt, Patrick F., ‘Muscular Catholicism: nationalism, masculinity and Gaelic team sports, 1884–1916’ in Gender & History ix, no. 2 (Aug. 1997), pp 262–84CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

27 Banerjee, Sikata, Muscular nationalism: gender, violence, and empire in India and Ireland, 1914–2004 (New York, 2012)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

28 Griffin, Brian, ‘Cycling and gender in Victorian Ireland’ in Éire-Ireland, xli, nos 1–2 (Spring / Summer, 2006), pp 213–41CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

29 O'Donoghue, Donal, ‘“Speak and act in a manly fashion”: the role of the body in the construction of men and masculinity in primary teacher education in Ireland’ in Irish Journal of Sociology, xiv, no. 2 (2005), pp 231–53CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

30 Ging, Debbie, Men and masculinities in Irish cinema (London, 2012), pp 520Google Scholar.

31 Kelly, Laura, ‘Irish medical student culture and the performance of masculinity, c.1880–1930’ in History of Education, xlvi, no. 1 (2017), pp 3957CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

32 Beatty, Aidan, Masculinity and power in Irish nationalism, 1884–1938 (London, 2016)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

33 Ibid., pp 68–77; see also, McGarry, Fearghal, Eoin O'Duffy: a self-made hero (Oxford, 2005)Google Scholar.

34 Barrie, David G., and Broomhall, Susan (eds), A history of police and masculinities, 1700–2010 (London, 2012)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

35 Susan Broomhall and David G. Barrie, ‘Introduction’ in eidem (eds), A history of police and masculinities, pp 10–13.

36 Haia Shpayer-Makov, ‘Shedding the uniform and acquiring a new masculine image: the case of the late Victorian and Edwardian English police detective’ in Barrie & Broomhall (eds), A history of police and masculinities, pp 141–63.

37 Matthew McCormack, ‘“A species of civil soldier”: masculinity, policing and the military in 1780s England’ in Barrie & Broomhall (eds), A history of police and masculinities, p. 56.

38 Shpayer-Makov, ‘Shedding the uniform and acquiring a new masculine image’, p. 142.

39 Fennell, Thomas, The Royal Irish Constabulary: a history and personal memoir (Dublin, 2003), p. 11Google Scholar.

40 Cranfield, J. L., ‘Chivalric machines: the Boer War, the male body, and the grand narrative in The Strand magazine’ in Victorian Literature and Culture, xl, no. 2 (2012), pp 549–73CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

41 Brown, Michael, ‘Cold steel, weak flesh: mechanism, masculinity and the anxieties of late Victorian empire’ in Cultural and Social History, xiv, no. 2 (May 2017), pp 127Google Scholar; Davenport, Paul, ‘Remaking the fighting man: martial masculinity and the British army's command depots, 1915–1918’ in Contemporary British History, xxx, no. 3 (2016), pp 349–67CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

42 Davenport, ‘Remaking the fighting man’, p. 354. See also Siebrecht, Claudia, ‘The image of the soldier: portrayals and concepts of martial masculinity from the wars of liberation to the First World War in Germany’ in Journal of War & Culture Studies, v, no. 3 (2012), pp 262–3Google Scholar.

43 Roper, Michael, ‘Between manliness and masculinity: the “war generation” and the psychology of fear in Britain, 1914–1950’ in Journal of British Studies, xliv, no. 2 (Apr. 2005), pp 343–62CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

45 Delap, Lucy, ‘“Thus does man prove his fitness to be the master of things”: shipwrecks, chivalry and masculinities in nineteenth- and twentieth-century Britain’ in Cultural and Social History, iii, no. 1 (2006), pp 4574CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Matthews-Jones, Lucinda, Arnold, John H. and Brady, Sean (eds), What is Masculinity? Historical dynamics from antiquity to the contemporary world (London, 2011)Google Scholar.

46 Bourdieu, Pierre, Distinction: a social critique of the judgement of taste, trans. Nice, Richard (Cambridge, MA, 1984), p. 30Google Scholar; Swartz, David, Culture & power: the sociology of Pierre Bourdieu (Chicago, 1997), p. 120CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

47 Thorpe, Holly, ‘Bourdieu, gender reflexivity, and physical culture: a case of masculinities in the snowboarding field’ in Journal of Sport and Social Issues, xxxiv, no. 2 (2010), pp 176214CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

48 McCormack, ‘“A species of civil soldier”’, p. 56.

49 The measurement moved from thirty six inches in 1889 to thirty seven inches by 1893 (Royal Irish Constabulary list & directory; containing lists of the constabulary departments, Dublin Metropolitan Police, resident magistrates, coast guards, etc., 1889 (Dublin, 1889), p. 4Google Scholar; Constabulary, Royal Irish, Terms of employment (London, 1893), p. 4Google Scholar).

50 Budd, The sculpture machine, pp 49–55.

51 Finn's identity was revealed on his death in 1924 (Ireland's Own, 13 Feb. 1924).

52 Weekly Irish Times, 4 Dec. 1909.

53 Fedorowich, ‘The problems of disbandment’, pp 89–90.

54 Weekly Irish Times, 4 Dec. 1909.

55 Fennell, The Royal Irish Constabulary, p. 11; Newlands, Emma, ‘Preparing and resisting the war body’ in McSorley, Kevin (ed.), War and the body: militarization, practice and experience (London, 2013), pp 35–9Google Scholar.

56 Weekly Irish Times, 4 Dec. 1909.

57 On this point see Roper, ‘Between manliness and masculinity’, pp 343–62. See also Royal Irish Constabulary list & directory, 1915, p. 194.

58 Weekly Irish Times, 12 Dec. 1908.

60 Royal Irish Constabulary list & directory, 1915, p. 194.

61 Beatty, Power and Irish nationalism, pp 54–60.

62 Brady, Jacqueline, ‘Ambiguous exposures: gender-bending muscles of the 1930s physique photographs of Tony Sansone and sports photographs of Babe Didrikson’ in Padva, Gilad and Buchweitz, Nurit (eds), Sensational pleasures in cinema, literature and visual culture: the phallic eye (London, 2014), pp 180–6CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

63 Weekly Irish Times, 28 Dec. 1912.

64 Kristeva, Julia, Powers of horror: an essay on abjection, trans. Roudiez, Leon S. (New York, 1982), pp 15Google Scholar.

65 McKay, James, ‘“Marked men” and “wanton women”: the politics of naming sexual “deviance” in sport’ in Journal of Men's Studies, ii, no. 1 (Aug. 1993), pp 6987CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Bhatia, Michael V., ‘Fighting words: naming terrorists, bandits, rebels and other violent actors’ in Third World Quarterly, xxvi, no. 1 (2005), pp 522CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Reis, Elizabeth, ‘Divergence or disorder?: The politics of naming intersex’ in Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, lxxxi, no. 4 (Autumn 2007), pp 535–43CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

66 Royal Irish Constabulary list & directory, 1915, p. 194.

67 Weekly Irish Times, 16 Oct. 1909.

68 Royal Irish Constabulary list & directory, 1915, p. 194.

70 Weekly Irish Times, 3 Apr. 1909.

72 Ibid., 24 Feb. 1912.

73 Liam Murphy statement (M.A.I., B.M.H., W.S. 19); Felix O'Doherty statement (M.A.I., B.M.H., W.S. 739); John Walsh statement (M.A.I., B.M.H., W.S. 19, 966); Buckland, Patrick (ed.), Irish unionism, 1885–1923: a documentary history (Belfast, 1973), pp 154–5Google Scholar.

74 Banerjee, Muscular nationalism, pp 83–90.

75 Constabulary Gazette, 27 Nov. 1909. See also, Sugden, John, Boxing and society: an international analysis (Manchester, 1996), p. 94Google Scholar.

76 Sugden, Boxing and society, pp 94–5; Griffin, ‘Sporting policemen’, pp 54–78.

77 Fanning, Ronan, Fatal path: British government and Irish revolution, 1910–1922 (London, 2013), pp 222Google Scholar.

78 Weekly Irish Times, 6 Jan. 1912.

79 Greene, G. S. and Marrinan, P. A., The athletes’ guide to health and physical fitness: modern physical culture, boxing, deep breathing, swimming and resuscitation (Dublin, 1908)Google Scholar.

80 Irish Independent, 2 Mar. 1908; Harding, W., The R.I.C.: a plea for reform (Dublin, 1907)Google Scholar; Lowe & Malcolm, ‘The domestication of the Royal Irish Constabulary’, pp 34–5.

81 Morris, Marrow of the nation, pp 91–3; Constabulary Gazette, 31 July 1909.

82 Greene & Marrinan, The athletes' guide, pp 3–64.

83 Ibid., p. v.

84 Ibid., p. vii.

85 Ibid., pp 65–86. Concerns that not enough policemen were proficient in swimming appeared as early as 1898 in the Constabulary Gazette (17 Sept. 1898).

86 Greene & Marrinan, The athletes' guide, pp 89–140.

87 Kelly, ‘Irish medical student culture’, pp 51–7.

88 Connell, & Messerschmidt, ‘Hegemonic masculinity’, p. 833.

89 Constabulary Gazette, 27 Nov. 1909.

90 Ibid., 17 Dec. 1910.

91 Ibid., 4 Apr. 1903.

92 Ibid., 2 Jan. 1904.

93 Health and Strength, Apr. 1907.

95 Constabulary Gazette, 14 Mar. 1908.

96 Ibid., 4 July, 23 Sept. 1908; Wolff, J., Swimming (London 1908)Google Scholar; Miles, Eustace, The Eustace Miles system of physical culture (London, 1908)Google Scholar.

97 Constabulary Gazette, 3 Oct. 1908.

98 Inch was famed for his ‘Inch Dumb Bell’, a thick gripped dumb-bell many people found impossible to lift. See Willoughby, David P., The super athletes (New York, 1970), p. 162Google Scholar.

99 Griffin, ‘Sporting policemen’, pp 54–78.

100 Constabulary Gazette, 27 June 1908.

101 Morais, D. G., ‘Branding iron: Eugen Sandow's “modern” marketing strategies, 1887–1925’ in Journal of Sport History, xl, no. 2 (Summer 2013), pp 193214Google Scholar.

102 Constabulary Gazette, 30 Sept. 1911.

103 Ibid., 23 Oct. 1920.

104 Lander, Ingrid and Signe, Ravn, Masculinities in the criminological field: control, vulnerability and risk-taking (London, 2016), pp 71–2CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

105 Heffernan, Conor, ‘Strength peddlers: Eddie O'Callaghan and the selling of Irish strength’ in Sport in History, xxxviii, no. 1 (2017), pp 2345Google Scholar.

106 Barr, Rebecca Anne, Brady, Sean and McGaughey, Jane, ‘Ireland and Masculinities in history: an introduction’ in eidem (eds), Ireland and masculinities in history (London, 2019), pp 117CrossRefGoogle Scholar.