EDWARD CARSON, BARON CARSON
The Rt. Hon. The Lord Carson
''HMSO image''
''HMSO image''
'Edward Henry Carson, Baron Carson of Duncairn in the County of Antrim', PC, KC (9 February 1854–22 October, 1935) was a leader of the Irish Unionists, a barrister and a judge.
| Contents |
| Early life |
| Politics |
| Leading trials |
| Unionism |
| Cabinet member |
| Judge |
| Private life |
| Later years |
| Notes |
| References |
Early life
Edward Carson was born at 4 Harcourt Street in Dublin. He was from a wealthy Protestant family; his father was an architect. The Carson family were of Scottish origin and Edward's grandfather originally moved to Dublin from Dumfries in 1815. Edward was educated at Portarlington School, Wesley College Dublin and Trinity College, Dublin, where he read law and was an active member of the College Historical Society. He graduated BA and MA. He was called to the Irish Bar at King's Inns in 1877. He soon gained a reputation for fearsome advocacy and supreme legal ability and became regarded as a brilliant barrister,[1] one of the leading ones in Ireland at the time.[2] Lord Carson was also an acknowledged master of the appeal to the jury by his legal wit and oratory.[[1]] He was made a Queen's Counsel in 1889.
Politics
He began a political career in 1892, when he was appointed Solicitor-General for Ireland on 20 June, although he was not then in the House of Commons. He was elected as Member of Parliament (MP) for the University of Dublin in the 1892 general election as a Unionist, although the party lost the election to the Liberals. He was admitted to the English Bar by The Honourable Society of the Middle Temple in 1893 and from then on mainly practised in London. He was appointed Solicitor-General for England on 7 May 1900, receiving the usual ''ex officio'' knighthood. He served in this position until the Conservative government resigned in December 1905, when he was rewarded with membership of the Privy Council.
Leading trials
In 1895 he was engaged by the Marquess of Queensberry to lead his defence against Oscar Wilde's libel action. This meant his job was in effect to prosecute Wilde, who had been his contemporary and rival at Trinity College. When Wilde heard of his appointment, he remarked "No doubt he will pursue his case with all the added bitterness of an old friend". Carson's cross-examination of Wilde is a supreme example of a battle of wits.
In 1908 he appeared for the London ''Evening Standard'' in a libel action brought by George Cadbury. The ''Standard'' was controlled by Unionist interests which supported Joseph Chamberlain's Imperial Preference views. The Cadbury family were Liberal supporters of Free Trade and had in 1901 purchased the ''Daily News''. The ''Standard'' articles alleged that Cadbury Bros Ltd ,which claimed to be model employers having created the village of Bournville outside Birmingham, knew of the slave labour conditions on Sao Thome, the Portuguese island colony from which Cadbury purchased most of their cocoa for the production of their chocolate. The articles alleged that George's son William had gone to Sao Thome in 1901 and seen for himself the slave conditions and that the Cadbury family had decided to continue purchasing the cocoa grown there because it was cheaper then that grown in the British colony of the Gold Coast, where labour conditions were much better, being regulated by the Colonial Office. The ''Standard'' alleged that the Cadbury family knew that the reason cocoa from Sao Thome was cheaper was because it was grown by slave labour. This case was regarded at the time as an important political case as Carson and the Unionists maintained that it showed the fundamental immorality of free trade. George Cadbury recovered one farthing in damages in a case described as one of Carson's triumphs.[3]
Carson was also the victorious counsel in the 1910 Archer-Shee Case, on which Terence Rattigan based his play ''The Winslow Boy''. He was the model for the barrister Sir Robert Morton in the play.
Unionism
In 1910, the House of Lords' opposition to the Third Irish Home Rule Bill was about to be overridden through the Parliament Act. When James Craig and other leading Unionists asked Carson, who was their most effective speaker, to assume their leadership, he accepted. Carson was a natural choice but was not ideal because the vast majority of Irish Unionists came from Ulster, with which Carson had no special connection. Carson disliked many of Ulster's local characteristics and in particular the culture of Orangeism. He stated that their speeches reminding him of ''the unrolling of a mummy. All old bones and rotten rags.''[2]

Sir Edward Carson signing the Solemn League and Covenant
Carson campaigned against Home Rule using both illegal and constitutional means. He spoke against the Bill in the House of Commons and organised rallies in Ireland. At one rally, Carson told a crowd of 50,000 that a provisional government for "the Protestant province of Ulster" should be ready, should a Third Home Rule Bill come into law.[3]
On 28 September 1912 he was the first signatory on the Ulster Covenant, which bound its signatories to resist Home Rule with the threat that they would use "all means necessary". In January 1913, he established the Ulster Volunteer Force, the first loyalist paramilitary group. The UVF received a large arms cache from Germany in April 1914. Imperial Germany was very eager to promote political tension in the United Kingdom at the time and readily allowed the delivery of arms to both sides of the political divide in Ireland.
Carson addressed 250,000 supporters in Liverpool in September of 1912; 30,000 in Wallsend on Tyne in October 1913; and anything up to half a million in Hyde Park in April 1914. Carson also drew tens of thousands of supporters out on to the streets in Glasgow, Durham, Manchester, Blackburn, Dundee, Norwich, Leeds, Edinburgh, Inverness, Plymouth, Sheffield, Birmingham, Bolton, Ipswich, Truro and Herne Hill, amongst other places in Britain, between 1911 and 1914.
Indeed, a simple head count would suggest that his campaign in Britain to rouse support for Ulster was numerically more impressive than Gladstone's famous Midlothian Campaign.
The Home Rule Bill was passed by the Commons on 25 May 1914 by a majority of 77 and due to the Parliament Act of 1911, it did not need the Lords consent, so the bill was awaiting royal assent. To enforce the legislation, given the activities of the Unionists, Herbert Asquith's Liberal government prepared to send troops to Ulster. This sparked the Curragh Incident on 20 July. Ireland was on the brink of civil war when the outbreak of the First World War led to the suspension of Home Rule.
Cabinet member
On 25 May 1915, Asquith appointed Carson Attorney-General when the Coalition Government was formed after the Liberal government was bought down by the Shell Crisis. However he resigned on 19 October, over his opposition to Government policy on war in the Balkans, which had left two British and one French division in Salonica instead of being dispatched to support the Serbs who were being attacked by Austria from the north and Bulgaria from the east. However some say his real reason was a hope of destabilizing Asquith's government. He then became the leader of those Unionists who were not members of the government, effectively Leader of the Opposition in the Commons. When Asquith resigned, he returned to office on 10 December 1916 as First Lord of the Admiralty, becoming a Minister without Portfolio on 17 July, 1917.
Carson was hostile to the foundation of the League of Nations as he believed that this institution would be ineffectual against war. In a speech on 7 December 1917 he said:
Talk to me of treaties! Talk to me of the League of Nations! Every Great Power in Europe was pledged by treaty to preserve Belgium. That was a League of Nations, but it failed.[4]
Early in 1918, the government decided to extend conscription to Ireland, and that Ireland would have to be given home rule in order to make it acceptable. Carson disagreed in principle and again resigned on 21 January 1918. He gave up his seat at the University of Dublin in the 1918 general election and was instead elected for Belfast Duncairn. He continued to lead the Unionists, but when the Government of Ireland Act 1920 was introduced, advised his party to work for the exemption of six Ulster counties from Home Rule as the best compromise (a compromise he had previously rejected). This proposal passed and as a result the Parliament of Northern Ireland was established. After the partition of Ireland, Carson repeatedly warned Ulster Unionist leaders not to alienate northern Catholics, as he accurately foresaw this would make Northern Ireland unstable. In 1921 he stated: "We used to say that we could not trust an Irish parliament in Dublin to do justice to the Protestant minority. Let us take care that that reproach can no longer be made against your parliament, and from the outset let them see that the Catholic minority have nothing to fear from a Protestant majority." His calls went unheeded.
Judge
Carson was asked to lead the Unionists during the election to become the first Prime Minister of Northern Ireland. Carson declined due to his lack of connections with Ulster and resigned the leadership of the party on 4 February 1921. Carson was appointed as a Lord of Appeal in Ordinary on 24 May 1921 and created a life peer on 1 June, 1921 as 'Baron Carson', of Duncairn in the County of Antrim.
Private life
Carson's father was Edward Henry Carson, who in 1851 married Isabella Lambert, the daughter of Captain Peter Lambert, who had an estate at Castle Ellen, some 7 miles from Athenry, County Galway.
Carson married twice. His first wife was Annette Kirwan, daughter of a retired County Inspector of the Royal Irish Constabulary. He had two sons and two daughters by his first wife, namely
★ William Henry Lambert Carson, born 2 October 1880
★ Aileen Carson, born 13 November 1881
★ Gladys Isobel Carson 1885
★ Walter Seymour Carson 1890.
The first Lady Carson died on the 6 April 1913.
His second wife was Ruby Frewen, a Yorkshirewoman whom he married on 17 September 1914. They had one son, The Hon. Edward Carson, who was born on 17 February 1920 and who later became a Member of Parliament.
Later years
Lord Carson retired in October 1929. After his death on 22 October 1935, the Northern Ireland Government gave him a state funeral and he was buried in St Anne’s Cathedral, Belfast; he is still the only person to have received that honour. From a silver bowl soil from each of the six counties of Northern Ireland was scattered on to his coffin, which had earlier been covered by the Union Flag. At his funeral service the choir sang his own favourite hymn : "I vow to Thee, My Country". A warship had brought his body to Belfast and the funeral took place on Saturday 26 October 1935. Shops and factories closed down and the shipyards were silent as HMS Broke steamed slowly up Belfast Lough. Earlier, in July 1932, he had unveiled a large statue (sculptored by L S Merrifield) of himself in front of Parliament Buildings at Stormont, Belfast. The statue was unveiled by Lord Craigavon in the presence of more than 40,000 people. The statue was cast in bronze and placed upon a plinth. The inscription on the base read "By the loyalists of Ulster as an expression of their love and admiration for its subject". This was the final time he visited Belfast. He died peacefully at his home at Cleve Court, Isle of Thanet, Kent.
Notes
1. www.suite101.com/article.cfm/british_social_history/25974
2. http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/sir_edward_carsons.htm
3. ''Chocolate on Trial: Slavery, Politics, and the Ethics of Business'', by Lowell J. Satre ISBN 082141626X
4. Henry R. Winkler, 'The Development of the League of Nations Idea in Great Britain, 1914-1919', ''The Journal of Modern History'', Vol. 20, No. 2. (Jun. 1948), p. 105.
References
H. Montgomery Hyde, Carson (Constable, London 1974) ISBN 0-09-459510-0
A T Q. Stewart, Edward Carson (Gill and Macmillan Ltd, Dublin 1981) ISBN-10: 0717110753
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