Irish Central

On This Day: Arthur Griffith born in Dublin in 1871

- IrishCentr­al Staff

Arthur Griffith was the founder of Sinn Féin and one of the fathers of the Irish Free State. We remember the politician and writer whom Michael Collins de‐ scribed as a "mighty force in Ireland." Griffith was born of humble means in Dublin on March 31, 1871. Educated by the Irish Christian Brothers, he was a printer and typesetter before joining the Gaelic League (an organizati­on seeking to restore the Irish language to national prominence) during the 1890s. He was also a member of the Irish Republican Brotherhoo­d.

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Arthur Griffith pictured in July 1922. (National Library of Ireland / Public Do‐ main)

In 1897, Griffith traveled to South Africa, where he lent his support to the Boers on principle, against British ex‐ pansionism. When he returned to Dublin in 1899, he founded the weekly United Irishmen newspaper, a nationalis­t news‐ paper whose contributo­rs include Patrick Pearse, Maude Gonne, and Ro‐ ger Casement.

Rather than support a violent uprising, Griffith used his newspaper as a propa‐ ganda tool to gather support for the newly-formed Sinn Féin party. He founded the party on November 28, 1905, on the principle that Ireland could have a self-governing state if the ex‐ isting Irish MPs withdrew from West‐ minster and if Ireland could have a bal‐ anced national economy by taxing British imports.

The party steadily gained supporters and in 1913 Griffith joined the Irish Volun‐ teers and was involved in the Howth gun-running scheme. By 1916, the pop‐ ularity of Sinn Féin had increased to the point that even though Griffth took no part in the Easter Rising himself, he was arrested in its aftermath on the as‐ sumption by the British authoritie­s that Sinn Féin had sparked the rising. Ironically, Sinn Féin was not yet that in‐ fluential and it was only after the Rising that the popularity of the party among Irish voters became apparent. This cul‐ minated in Sinn Féin winning massive victories in the 1918 election and Sinn Féin MPs vowing not to take their seats in the British House of Commons but in‐ stead, they set up a separate Irish gov‐ ernment - Dáil Éireann in Dublin. Griffith himself was elected MP for East Cavan but had just stepped aside as president of Sinn Féin to allow Éamon de Valera to assume that role.

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Michael Collins and Arthur Griffith. (Public Domain)

However, during the Irish War of Inde‐ pendence, de Valera left Ireland to raise money in the US, and Griffith assumed the role of acting president of the Dáil, giving regular press interviews and eventually becoming disillusio­ned with the IRA’s use of violence.

As a result, he was appointed the head of the Sinn Féin delegation in the subse‐ quent Anglo-Irish negotiatio­ns and was a pro-treaty supporter. After the treaty was signed and ratified in 1922, Griffith officially replaced de Valera by popular vote as president of the Dáil, though he served mostly as a figurehead due to his ideologica­l clashes with Michael Collins, who was the head of the provisiona­l government.

Eight months after ratificati­on, and less than two months after the outbreak of the Irish Civil War, Griffith entered St. Vincent’s Nursing home in Leeson Street, suffering from tonsilliti­s. Most historians attribute his failing health to overwork and strain after negotiatio­ns with the British government and the Irish provisiona­l government. He died less than a week later on August 12, 1922.

Four days after this death, Griffith was laid to rest in Dublin’s Glasnevin Ceme‐ tery. Six days after that, his comrade Michael Collins was assassinat­ed in West Cork.

Of Griffith, Collins is believed to have said, "In Arthur Griffith, there is a mighty force in Ireland. He has none of the wildness of some I could name. Instead, there is an abundance of wisdom and an awareness of things which are Ireland." *Originally published inAugust 2016. Updated in2024.

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