Sunday 23 January 2011

THE LAND FROM WHENCE THEY CAME Ch: 19

THE LAND FROM WHENCE THEY CAME Ch: 19

Chapter 19

THE LAND FROM WHENCE THEY CAME

Until the end of the second decade of the 20th Century, Ulster as well as the other Provinces of Ireland formed part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. Since the 1920′s Northern Ireland has continued to function as an integral part of the smaller United Kingdom brought about by the secession of Southern Ireland from that realm – and has made good progress. This advancement has been most creditable, because it has been achieved in face of much hostility, political and physical, not only from Eire, but also from those people within the boundaries of Northern Ireland who seek an all-Ireland Republic. Southern enmity officially has manifested itself in the non-recognition of Ulster as a part of the United Kingdom, and since 1937 by a claim to her territory in clauses in the Southern Constitution. It must be emphasised, too, that this non-recognition and territorial claim are completely contrary to the Tri-partite agreement signed in 1925 by the Governments of the Irish Free State (now the Republic of ireland), Northern Ireland, and the United Kingdom. This mutual recognition was solemnly registered with the League of Nations, and later accepted by the Southern authorities in the Treaty of Rome, and also in the Helsinki Agreements – the latter of which included an undertaking not to make territorial claims on other countries who signed. So much for Irish Republican adherence to solemnly signed treaties! The physical antagonism to the State of Northern Ireland has shown itself in many ways – by attempted armed intervention into the Province, by terrorism and support of terrorists, by land tariffs, by anti-Ulster propaganda, and by what can be generally described as acts of ill-will. Co-operation with the Government of Northern Ireland has been with-held by the majority of Irish Nationalists in the Province who have consistently refused to take up places proportionately allocated to them in essential services, such as the Civil Service and the Royal Ulster Constabulary. Also their elected representatives abstained from taking their places in the Northern Ireland Parliament. Thus they sought to bring down the newly established State, but all to no avail.

Prosperity attended the efforts of those British people of the Province who wished only to live at peace with their neighbours. Some extent of Ulster’s progress was evidenced by the material help she was able to contribute to the United Kingdom War Effort during the years of the Second World War. Figures relating to these supplies, as quoted by Hugh Sherman in 1946 are astonishing, From 1940 till 1944 the Belfast shipyards provided 140 warships and 123 merchant ships, The former included 6 aircraft carriers, 3 cruisers, and 2 large depot ships as well as a large number of smaller craft like corvettes, The merchant ships represented roughly 600,000 tons, or 10% of the total shipping output (merchant vessels) of the whole United Kingdom. Northern Ireland also supplied a considerable number of tanks, guns, and ammunition, and her aircraft factories 1,500 heavy bombers, including 110 Sunderland flying-boats. The textiles industry wove over 200 million yards of cloth for the use of the Services, over 2 million parachutes, and 90% of all the shirts required for men and women in uniform. In the countryside there were 850,000 acres under tillage in 1943, and cattle and sheep to the value of £3 millions annually were sent to Britain. Up to the Winter of 1943/44 almost 7 million gallons of milk were shipped to Scotland. The Province also provided 20% of all home produced eggs in the U.K. In 1944 these totalled 360 millions.

But most important of all was the fact that her territory’ s strategic position in the Battle of the Atlantic was held by a loyal. friendly. and entirely co-operative people, unlike those in the rest of the island, who denied the use of their ports to the Allies, That this denial cost Britain most dearly was evident from the vast losses of ships and men brought about by the enemies’ U ,boats and surface raiders, Figures quoted by Ronald Bassett (ex R,N,- war-time) in his book “The Pierhead Jump” are distressing, One quotation should suffice:- “In March 1943 they (the British) had lost 627,000 tons of shipping,” (Bassett also quotes that at this time, the Germans had deployed 1 12 of their operational U,boats in the North Atlantic.) This great loss in vessels takes no account of the many brave men who were lost. In contrast to the despicable stance of the Republic of Ireland, warships were able to operate from Northern Ireland ports. and planes from her air-fields to chase and sink the raiders. It was an air-crew operating from a base in the Province that first spotted the “Bismarck” and what crippling losses her sinking prevented.

In contrast to this a German legation was permitted to remain in Dublin throughout the War, providing as Ronald Bassett writes “the base for an active enemy espionage network,” In addition Irish Republicans tried to disrupt the British and American war efforts in Northern Ireland. Large terrorist dumps of arms and ammunition were found by alert members of the RU.C. and the Ulster Special Constabulary, Mr. Churchill’s glowing tribute to Ulster’s help was well earned and the vital contribution it afforded to our nations very survival in his further statements also quoted below:

“We were alone, and had to face single-handed the full fury of the German attack, raining down death and destruction on our cities and, still more deadly, seeking to strangle our life by cutting off the entry to our ports of the ships which brought us our food and the weapons we so sorely needed. Only one channel of entry remained open, That channel remained open because loyal Ulster gave us the full use of the Northern Ireland ports and waters and thus ensured the free working of the Clyde and the Mersey. But for the loyalty of Northern Ireland and its devotion to what has now become the cause of thirty governments or nations, we should have been confronted with slavery and death and the light which now shines so strongly throughout the world would have been quenched.”

“The Battle of the Atlantic was the dominating factor all through the war. Never for one moment could we forget that everything happening elsewhere, on land, at sea or in the air, depended ultimately on its outcome, and amid all other cares we viewed its changing fortunes day by day with hope or apprehension.” – Winston Churchill

He was later to admit:

“The only thing that really frightened me during the war was the U-boat peril” – Winston Churchill

And if any should doubt just how vital Ulsters support during that crucial battle of the Atlantic truly represented one more quote should suffice to make the point from a very different scource:-

“The moment England’s supply routes are severed, she will be forced to capitulate.” ; Adolf Hitler

In the years following the Second World War until the late 1960′s progress under the Northern Ireland Government was continued in a most creditable way. The main industry of agriculture prospered as before, and even more quickly with increased mechanisation. In 1962 there were some 30,000 tractors in use. About 50,000 tons of high quality seed potatoes were sent out of Ulster each year. The over-all figures for exported potatoes in 1952 was 211,000 tons, although this was tending to decrease. In 1965 the number of cattle sent out of the country, more to Great Britain, was 216,000. The population of cattle, pigs, and sheep reared each reached the million mark in 1960. The Northern Ireland Government had steadily built up, for its farm products and animals, a high reputation. This had been achieved through enforcing strict collecting, grading, packing, marketing, and inspecting standards. The related industry of afforestation had been consistently encouraged and a target of 150,000 acres under suitable trees steadfastly pursued. Every endeavour was made, most of them successful, to improve strains and standards of livestock by selecting and licensing for breeding purposes, and extending the use of artificial insemination. The elimination of livestock diseases, such as bovine tuberculosis, fowl pest, and swine fever had been largely accomplished through efficient research and high standard veterinary service. The increasing use of several agricultural colleges and research stations had continued to improve the competence of the entire farming community.

Whilst the exceptional production in the shipbuilding, aircraft, and heavy engineering industries of the Second World War years could not be maintained in peace time, yet there were notable achievements in the post-war period. Messrs Harland and Wolff launched, among other ships, the graceful “Iberia” of over 28,000 tons, the 45,000 tons “Canberra”, which introduced revolutionary construction techniques, several giant oil tankers, and a very large refrigerated vessel. In addition, the versatility of the workmen was demonstrated by their making the very first and largest oil-rig, the “Sea Quest”, for the North Sea field. In aircraft construction, too, were the successes of the large “Belfast” air-freighters, and the very first vertical take-off machines. Engineering firms produced machinery for the textiles, tea, and coffee industries, and showed the adaptability of their workers by the range of their products, from fans and ventilating plant of all kinds, through tribunes, tabulating machines, electronic computers, tape recorders, and optical goods to cameras. The introduction of man-made fibres, such as continuous filament rayons, Acrilan, terylene, and nylon yarns, proved that the workers in the textile industries could be versatile, too.

The Northern Ireland Government, also, displayed most creditable and effective initiative by passing several Acts that brought into the country a variety of new industries. Differing legislative measures introduced financial assistance to firms starting new industries, or extending old ones, by offering grants to buy new plant, machinery, or buildings. Others helped with the cost of fuel, and still later ones provided money for the replacement of obsolete plant and buildings. In 1967 a most enlightened Act offered special payments to concerns employing consultants to improve their efficiency. The wisdom of these measures is shown by the fact that, by 1964, some 160 new firms had been established, largely rough the encouragement of these Government grants. Among the industrialists who set up concerns during this period were two those headquarters in America had interesting links with the 18th century Ulster American connections. These were the Du Pont Industrial empire and the Hughes Tool Company Ltd. The former, in setting up their branch near Londonderry, was, in a way reversing the movements of the earlier years.

It’s headquarters at Wilmington, in Delaware, lies near the port of Newcastle, where many of the Ulster-Scottish settlers landed in those past years, before heading
Westwards. It was in Texas that the Hughes Tool Company developed the oil-drills
that were to prove so effective in extracting from the earth the valuable liquid fuel.
It will be remembered that the Lone Star State, for its formation and early years owed much to such pioneers with Ulster connections as Jim Bowie, Davy Crockett, and most especially Sam Houston. The town of Houston, named in his honour, is the home of the NASA Manned Spacecraft Centre, which controlled the American moon flights. These, too, forged another Ulster-American link, for two of the world-famed astronauts have connections with the Red Hand Province. Colonel Neil Armstrong, whose ancestors came from Ballygawley, County Tyrone, was the first man to set foot on the moon. This, he did, at 4.18 p.m. on July, 20th, 1969. He and Col. Buzz Aldrin had descended from the command module, Apollo II on the lunar module, “Eagle.” It was Armstrong who manually guided the “Eagle.” His words on that never-to-be-forgotten occasion neatly summed up the uniqueness of his achievement, “That’s one small step for a man, one giant step for mankind.” Col. Jim Irwin, whose grand-parents emigrated to U.SA about 1859, from Altmore Parish, at Pomeroy, in County Tyrone, also had the great distinction of landing on the moon. He was the pilot of the lunar module, “Falcon” and with Col. Dave Scott put foot on the moon on July, 31st, 1971. They were the first to travel on a “moon buggy” to explore selected places like Hadley Rille, the Apennine Mountains, and especially the Spur Crater, where they located the much sought-after “‘white rock”. This has since been named the Genesis Rock, because it is thought that the analysis of it will help to determine the age of the moon, and relate it to that of the earth. They managed to bring back to NASA some 180 pounds of material from the moon. Col. Irwin has the added distinction of being the only man who has quoted a Biblical passage on the lunar surface. It was the first verse of Psalm 121 – “I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, from whence cometh my help.” Since returning to earth, he has largely devoted his life to sharing his Christian faith with as many people as possible.

Mellon Homstead PlaqueThe establishment of firms in Northern Ireland in recent years by American business men was, in a way, “returning the compliment” for several very large concerns have been built up in U.S.A. by men from Ulster. Prominent among these were the Mellon family from Omagh, who, in 1818, emigrated to Western Pennsylvania. They prospered by much hard work, foresight, and acumen. Thomas, a son, after going to the University in Pittsburgh, became a Judge. However, resigning from the Law, he devoted his great talents to finance. In 187O, he opened the banking house of Thomas Mellon and Sons, which was to become one of the greatest finance houses in the United States. Under, Andrew, the Judge’s son, it became the Mellon National Bank. At one time, Andrew,was a director in more than 60 large corporations, including Gulf Oil, and the Aluminium Company of America.

The Mellons have interested themselves very much in reconstructing and preserving at Camphill, in Co. Tyrone, their ancesteral home. This has developed into an Ulster-American folk park. Then there Was Alexander Brown from Ballymena, who, at Baltimore became, among activities, a linen thread importer, a tobacco dealer, a cotton handler, and a banking director. The banking house he later set up, Alexander Brown and Sons, even yet remains the oldest institution of its kind in America. There was also James Graham Fair, from Clogher, in County Tyrone, who after becoming a millionaire in the California Gold Rush, founded a large banking company. It was over the Border of Canada, that the Eaton family, from Ballymena, in County Antrim set up a firm that was to develop into the largest chain stores system in the country. They largely established Eaton Park, in the County Antrim town from which the emigrants had set out, to forge a link between Ulster and their adopted country.

The agricultural and industrial progress in Northem Ireland since the 1920′ s, previously outlined, was repeated in the educational and welfare provisions for the people. Between 1947 and 1964 there was an increase in the number of pupils at grant-aided schools of almost 40%, and an accompanying improvement in the number and standard of school buildings, both Primary and Secondary. The range of subjects, too, was enlarged. The direction of the children at 11 years of age into the type of school which suited their capabilities best was taken on responsibly by the Ministry of Education. This introduction of a selection procedure gave a real boost to aspiring pupils and parents. To the more academically minded and gifted pupils, this opened the way, through grant aids, to university and professional training.
One aspect of this may be stressed. The doors to this higher education and to the professions were thus opened, without restriction, to all classes and creeds alike. This was consistent with the Northern Ireland Government’s educational policy since its setting-up in the early 1920′s. Although Roman Catholic school authorities had declined to participate in the State education system, they were given a grant of 65% towards all running costs, new buildings, and reconstruction of their schools. In the rest of the United Kingdom, schools which similarly opted out of the State system received only 50% towards such expenses.

In another aspect of welfare, too, that of health, substantial improvements were made towards the provision of a system by which people generally could be guaranteed better facilities to ensure their healthiness. In 1944, a new Ministry of Health and Local Government was created. Within a few years after the War, Northern Ireland had its own General Health Services Board, its Hospitals Authority, and one, unique in the United Kingdom, the Tuberculosis Authority. All these. improvements and benefits, if regarded objectively and fairly, proved that the decision to remain within the United Kingdom was a wise one. They also proved that the Stormont Government’s record was a most creditable one.

It was therefore basically inexplicable, disregarding the natural fellow-feeling and sympathy that people generally hold towards those who have shared the angers and hardships of two world-wide conflicts, that, in 1972, Mr. Edward Heath, he was then United Kingdom Prime Minister, should, first of all prorogue and then abolish the Northern Ireland Government. This action has been likened by Mr.Biggs – Davison, M.P. to ” someone sawing away the branch he bestraddles.” All one can add to that judgement is that the cutter’s resultant fall does not seem to have any arousing effect on Heath, himself, or on many of his Parliamentary colleagues. They still seem to regard the subsequent plight and status of the Ulster people with scornful indifference. Briefly, the action was a breach of the faith expressed in the Ireland Act of 1949. It was undemocratic when regarded against

(1) the findings of Professor Richard Rose, of Strathclyde University in 1969 that only 12% of the people of Northern Ireland were opposed to the Stormont Government, and

(2) the statement in the British House of Commons in December, 1981, by a Government spokesman, in reply to a question by an M.P., that there was no case of legislative discrimination by the Stormont Government against any section of the Northern Ireland people. The abolition of the Government recklessly gave encouragement to those who sought by different means to bring about a United Republican Ireland, and was quickly seized on by those people. It certainly was a major factor in bringing about the subsequent years of disorder and bloodshed.

For those determined to remain part of the United Kingdom, to the distresses of those years have been added an increase and intensification of the pressures to coerce or cajole them into an unwanted union with the Republic of Ireland. It is not necessary to name or discuss all the sources of such pressures, but they could be classified into the obvious and the hidden or secretive. The former emanate from traditional Republican sources and entail the typical hostile acts and propaganda. Some of the latter come from surprising quarters. One cited by Mr. Jonathan Harsch, the Dublin – based correspondent of the “Christian Science Monitor is typical of the unexpected. He wrote in August, 1973, “In public the British administrators of Ulster repeat their pledges to maintain the Union so long as the Northern majority wishes, while privately they work towards a British withdrawal and unification,” At the present also, there is a justifiable concern among Ulster Unionists at the continuing largely secretive talks between the highest ranking ministers of the British and Irish governments concerning the future of Northern Ireland. In addition spokesmen of three of the four political parties at Westminster have recently voiced their support for Irish unification.

This ambivalent attitude of the British Government is rather like that of a host who informs a guest that he may stay if he wishes, gives no further welcome and then proceeds to give fairly broad hints that he would prefer him to move in as a permanent lodger with a neighbour, who has shown nothing but hostility towards the guest and desires merely to take what he owns and then treat him very much as an inferior. This less than friendly attitude of the British Government has
exerted great pressure on the Unionists, has very much encouraged their enemies, worsened the situation and has led to much confusion and doubt those who support Britain are seemingly regarded with the same favour government as those who strive to take the Province into a United Ireland.

Sometimes, indeed, it would appear that Republicans are given preferencial treatment in order to appease them. “Peace must be brought about maintained at all costs” would seem the message coming from West Often loyal British citizens are made out to be wrong-doers when legitimate measures to safeguard their citizenship. In order to preserve an uneasy balance, and wittingly or unwittingly, keep a constant pressure on Unionists, many words have been brought into current use especially by Westminster and Dublin politicians, helped considerably by the British and Republican media, and have stood reality or. its head. Among these misleading or weasel words are “extremist,” “oppressed minority”, “nightmare of existence”, “discrimination”, “intransigent” (only applied to Unionists) “peace-making”, “bigotry” and two very potent ones “reconcile” and “reconciliation.” The constant use of these in specific circumstances has brought about a kind of nonsense language, much akin to Neville Chamberlain’s phrase on his return from Munich, “Peace in our time” when the reality was that war was imminent.

To take just the last two to illustrate how these can be used to leave entirely the wrong impression. Unionists are constantly being told that they must be “reconciled” to Republicans. It is not stated that the “reconciliation” would lead to absorption of their country by a hostile neighbour. “Patriotism”, too, has become synonymous with “bigotry,” or “extremism.” The fundamental disagreements between Northern Ireland and Republic of Ireland leaders and people are mostly political, but also substantially religious. In the same way, therefore, as misleading terms have been used to put pressure on Unionists politically, so, too, they are being applied to bring about “reconciliation” in religious matters. “Unity” is the kind of code-word for this continuing campaign. Efforts have been and are being made to bring about a “Unity” between Protestant and Roman Catholic churches, as far as possible in many ways, but chiefly in worship and religious observances. This continuing campaign is generally termed

“The Ecumenical Movement,” and is pursued by many clergymen in Protestant churches as well as those from Roman Catholic places of worship. There are in Protestant churches many who steadfastly oppose the movement and see in it a departure from Reformation principles. They have described the “Unity” as “a counterfeit of spiritual unity and Scriptural Ecumenism.”‘ Most Protestants would hold that the differences between the Reformed and Un-reformed religious beliefs are too fundamental to gloss over and that such “Unity” would be simply a sham.

This alignment of the political and religious aspects of the long-lasting problems in Ireland is well-founded, but truly is not one of Ulster’s making, politically it stems from the claims, embodied in the Southern Constitution, to the territory of Northem Ireland. In the world there are few peoples who would regard such arrogant and unjustified claims from a neighbouring population with any degree of equanimity. The religious aspect can be traced to the truth inherent in the Unionist adage of 1912, when similar demands were building up, that, Irish Home Rule means Rome Rule.” The rapid decline in the numbers of Protestants in Southern Ireland since that country’s secession from the United Kingdom in the 1920′s, the insistence of the Roman Catholic churches regarding children of mixed marriages, and the most recent declarations of the Hirearchy of that church demanding strict adherence to their doctrines all clearly underline the wisdom of the majority who determined to remain part of the United Kingdom.

Many years of their past history have brought to the Ulster people many daunting situations, fraught with danger, but these were all successfully met with fortitude, hope and Faith. Who can doubt, given their record, that their present generations, through those same sustaining virtues, will again cope triumphantly with the challenges of the current much prolonged troubles in their country? But, when one reflects on the tenacity with which their forefathers, like those on the “Eagle Wing”, clung to their Reformed Faith, it surely behoves those descendants to ponder over the following lines of an ancient poem:

“Go call thy sons, instruct them what a debt
They owe to their ancestors, and make them swear
To pay it by transmitting down entire
Those sacred rites to which themselves were born,”

Such adherence to those ancient tenets would certainly put the seal to the many achievements “TO ULSTER’S CREDIT” and place them in a proper perspective.
Especially would it be so, if those same descendants would strive to follow faithfully the instruction given to his flock by the Rev. John Livingston, the first Presbyterian minister of Killinchy in County Down, more than three hundred years ago:

“Let God be your only rule,
Christ your only hope,
The Holy Spirit your only guide,
The glory of God your only end,”

“COLLATERAL DESCENDANTS OF THE MEN WHO EMIGRATED” Ch: 18



“Collateral Descendants of the men who emigrated” Ch: 18

Chapter 18

“COLLATERAL DESCENDANTS OF THE MEN WHO EMIGRATED.”
Ian Adamson
Although the number of Ulster people who emigrated to America in the 17th and 18th centuries was very large, indeed, many of the same basic British stock remained to make the best of the conditions existing. Several of their descendants, collateral with those in America down through the years gave distinguished service for Britain in
other countries in Colonial days. One reputable writer has stated that the history of India is largely the biography of Ulstermen. There is much justification for this claim. In very critical days for British rule in that sub-continent several men from the Province played most vital parts in preventing a plunge into civil war and disastrous lawlessness. Most prominent in the challenging days around Indian Mutiny times, about 1857, were the two brothers, Lawrence, Henry and John, and John Nicholson. Sons of a former British Army officer who had served in the Napoleonic Wars in the Iberian Peninsula, the Lawrences received their education at Foyle College, Londonderry, to which they travelled from their home at Coleraine.
Henry, the elder, had a distinguished army career, beginning with service in the Anglo Burmese War. However, his main contribution to the development of British rule was of a mixed military and administrative nature. He seemed to assess accurately the abilities needed for the success of his future career as circumstances would demand in that unsettled country. He studied and became most fluent in the languages of the different peoples of the North-West Frontier Provinces, and also gave much thought to the ambitions and characteristics of the peoples themselves. His interest was well directed, for when trouble with Sikhs and Afghans threatened, he was able to quell it without much bloodshed. His was a brillant administration and was conducted with courage and firm impartiality. Even to the unsettled State of Kashmir he brought a fairly lasting peace. When in the Central Indian States resentment against some British Army measures, which could have been more sensitively introduced, built up, he travelled quickly to Lucknow. There, while realising that matters had gone too far, he managed by diplomatic means to delay the outbreak of the Indian Mutiny until he had organised the strengthening of the Residency to such an extent that a small British force was able to hold out for six months. They were then relieved by troops under the command of Sir Colin Campbell.
Unfortunately Lawrence, himself, was killed by shrapnel from an exploding shell from the enemy guns at the beginning of the sepoys’ attack. So, he never knew that he had been appointed Govemor – General of the whole country. The word was delayed by the turbulent events. His younger brother, John, did attain to serve in the high rank, denied to Henry, and his wise and courageous rule as Viceroy and Governor – General brought many benefits to the Indian people. His rise to this exalted position was a fairly rapid one. He organized supplies to the Punjab during the first Sikh War most efficiently. Soon afterwards he was appointed Commissioner at Jullunder. Like Henry he had the cool courage, firmness, and wisdom to move just at the
right time, and several times he prevented trouble from war-like chiefs reaching dangerous proportions. He established courts throughout the territories which curtailed the influence of the chiefs, and did much to stamp out the barbarous sacrificing of babies, and also the long established practice of suttee. That was the suicide of widows on their husbands’ funeral pyres. These wise measures brought
him the name “Saviour of the Punjab.”‘ He introduced a common currency throughout the country which brought stability in trading. His services in the highest position in the country were most enlightened and beneficial to the people.
It was also in the years leading up to, and including, the Indian Mutiny that John Nicholson, of Lisburn, in Ulster, gained exceptional fame by his military leadership, Even in those stirring days his exploits stood out. When the warlike Sikhs struck against the British in 1848, it was only his quick, bold actions that saved the situation. The district between Rawalpindi and Peshawar has been, as a result, termed “John Nicholson’s country.” At a narrow part of the approach road to Rawalpindi occurred one of the most memorable examples of his prowess. The place was called the Margalla Pass. A large force of Sikhs was assembledthere prior to an attack on the town. Leading a much smaller number of British troops, Nicholson attacked the column with such ferocity and determination that the enemy was forced to fall back to a tower on the hill side, overlooking and commanding the roadway. There was a hesitation in the British advance, but their leader dashed forward on his own towards the enemy position, and his reckless
courage so inspired the men that they rushed on to support him. The resumed attack was completely successful and the Sikhs fled. A memorial archway was later built into the hillside and John Nicholson’s name engraved in large letters across it. An obelisk, too, was erected there and, in English and Hindustani wording, is recorded one of the most outstanding military feats of that heroic time. On the outbreak of the Indian Mutiny, Major General Nicholson raised a Frontier contingent and marched to the relief of Delhi.
There, while leading an attack on the mutineers at the main gateway to the city, the hero of many fierce engagements was killed, He was only 34. There was a statue built, illustrating distinguished man from Lisburn in a typical war-like stance, in the County town, and a commemorative plaque affixed near the doorway of his former h
Robert Rollo Gillespie has been described by Sir John Fortesque, the military historian, as “the bravest soldier who ever wore the uniform of the British Army.”It is an impressive claim. Born at Comber, in Co. Down in 1766, he expressed a strong desire, from an early age to become a soldier. His wish was soon granted by his parents. As an officer of the Light Dragoons, he went in 1792 to the West Indies. It was there in San Domingo he first displayed the impetuous courage that was to characterise his future military life. Fretting at cavalry inaction, he transferred to the infantry, in which he was promoted to the rank of captain.
It was in this role that, with great success, he led a small force on a daring night attack on a strong enemy position at Tiburon. The boldness of his tactics must have impressed his men. Scaling the steep approaches to the back of the fort, although not knowing much about the nature of the terrain, his small force surprised the defenders, and quickly took the position. Soon the whole island was seized by the British. It was in San Domingo, too, that Gillespie displayed exceptional bravery and determination in an episode that must have been recounted in many a barrack-room. Indeed, when
George, the third, observed the short stature of the chief character in the incident, it is reported that he marvelled that so small a man could have performed such a deed. Hearing the screams of his faithful servant during the night, Gillespie, in his right attire, rushed downstairs from his bedroom to find his servant badly injured, and eight
ruffians bent on his own assassination. The aroused Ulsterman ferociously attacked them with his sword, and killed six. One of the fleeing two fired a pistol and wounded him to the head. From this injury, however, Gillespie made a quick recovery.
In those days soldiers received scant attention from their officers, generally, and, in many cases, were treated harshly. Often lives were needlessly lost through neglect and unhealthy conditions that could have been improved. Gillespie, who had himself suffered the horror of Yellow Fever, was sympathetic and enlightened enough to introduce measures which benefited the men under his command. He even went so far as to remove them to the more healthy atmosphere of the seaside, out from the steaming jungle. It was something entirely unheard of at the time and, while endearing him to the soldiers, was resented by other officers. It was noted, however, by someone in authority and led afterwards to improved conditions for “Tommy Atkins.”
On his return from West Indies he was appointed to serve in the Indian Command. In 1806 he joined his regiment at Arcot, near Madras, in Southern India, just in time for trouble. New military rules, insensitive to the pride of caste and religion among sepoys, had been introduced and stubbornly insisted on by the British Army authorities. Insurrection suddenly broke out at Vellore, the larger town near Arcot.
Many hundreds of Europeans were savagely killed. The charge by Gillespie and his troops to the rescue was commemorated in a poem written later by Tennyson, and brings out, not only the dramatic ride, but also the ruthlessness with which order was restored. Gillespie was promoted to the rank of Colonel and placed in command of the sore Division, for an expedition to conquer the island of Java. This brought him contact with the 8th Royal Irish Regiment, with whom he had been closely associated earlier. The expedition was successful and he was made Major General. In this elevated rank he took part in several other engagements, where his reckless bravery helped to bring further successes to British arms.
It must be deemed that he died as he would have wished. On 31st October, 1814, he led his men of the 8th Royal Irish Dragoons in a furious charge to force an entry into the fortress of Kalunga. Their onslaught penetrated the enemy lines, but they were unsupported on the flanks, and found themselves cut-off by their foes in the gateway. Desperate close fighting ensued. Gillespie, urging a brother officer to make a further charge for “the honour of Down” fell mortally wounded.
The news of his death was not received in London for several months, and in the New Year’s Honours List of 1815, he was made a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath. An imposing high monument to his memory was erected in the Square of his native town of Comber in County Down.
In the Boer War, too, of 1899-1902, in South Africa, the talent of Ulster officers to inspire the soldiers under their command was demonstrated. Mer the battle at Talana, the 1st Battalion of the Royal Irish Fusiliers was forced to fall back to the town of Ladysmith. There the troops were compelled to withstand a long siege, which, while it lasted, engrossed the interest of all British peoples. In charge of the beleaguered battalion was Major General Sir George White, a native of Ballymena, in County Antrim, who had begun his military career with the 27th Inniskillings. He kept up the morale of his men in spite of the very trying conditions within the, town and the continued determined attacks from without. Relief at last came through a force which included the 1st Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers and the 2nd Royal Irish Fusiliers.
The uncanny ability of men of Ulster stock to provide military leadership reached, what can only be described as an extraordinary peak during the Second World War. The value of their power to command and direct in that global conflict increased from one of
national importance to a necessity for the whole free world. It is no exaggeration to claim that, if it had not been for their military genius, people everywhere could now be enslaved under a worldwide Fascist dictatorship. Those old enough among Europeans, citizens of the former British Empire, and Americans will readily recall the names of Alexander, Alanbrooke, Auchinleck, Dill, Montgomery, and Templer from those challenging days of 1939 till 1945. They became Field Marshals all, and every one with Ulster roots.
Nigel Nicholson in his book on Field Marshal Lord Alexander entitled simply “Alex” finds it impossible to explain “the bouquet of high military talent which the Northern part of Ireland has given Britain over the centuries:’ He finds the record “extraordinary:’ One has only to glance at the command structure of the British Expeditionary Force sent to France in the critical days of September, 1939 to understand his remarks. His outline of that pattern of control of Britain’s contribution
to the defence of Europe reveals clearly the dependence on Ulstermen at the time. Under Lord Gort as Commander-in-Chief were two Army Corps. The 1st was commanded by Lieutenant General Sir John Dill, from County Armagh, and the 2nd Corps by Lieutenant General Alan F. Brooke, from County Fermanagh the latter of whom Winston Churchill was to say
“When I thump the table and push my face towards him what does he do? Thumps the table harder and glares back at me – I know these Brookes, stiff-necked Ulstermen, and there’s no one worse to deal with than that.”
Each corps was comprised of two Divisions, the 1st of which was under the command of General Alexander and the 3rd (i.e. the first component of the Second Corps) was under General Montgomery from Londonderry. These officers were all to prove their competence for their onerous tasks in the days of that long and world shaking conflict. In the dark days of May and early June of 1940 when the evacuation of that same Expeditionary Force, or rather the remnants of it, could not have been more vital for the continuation of Britain’s part in the struggle, it was to Harold Alexander, of Caledon, in County Tyrone, that the Commander-in-Chief turned to save the day.” He did not turn in vain. The successful evacuation of almost 400,000
British and some 140,000 French troops from Dunkirk at the time has been described as miraculous. Certainly the part played by the owners of small boats, especially those on the South coast of England, and by the Royal and Merchant Navies was nothing short of amazing. Their help was indispensable and it would be difficult to over-estimate it. But the soldiers had to be brought to the beaches to be removed and
the achievement of General Alexander in making them available was remarkable. Basically operating under highly emotionally charged and conflicting orders from those in high political and military offices, he managed with a high degree of success to organise
(1 ) the defence of his front line troops while they were withdrawing.
(2) the embarkation of those troops and a substantial number of French troops. One has to remember that this organization was to proceed in the face of an unceasing series of all-out Blitzkrieg” attacks, by overwhelming German forces, especially in the air, and the utter confusion brought about by terror-stricken refugees.
General Alexander’s character qualities and competence to deal with the daunting task were really unique. His conscientiousness in carrying it out was emphasised by his being the last British soldier to leave the Dunkirk beaches. As Churchill himself typically put it, “He was a man for a tight comer,” He displayed that same imperturbability when he was sent to evacuate a large mixed force of British, Indian, and Chinese troops from Burma, where they were in immediate and constant danger of being cut-off by a much stronger Japanese army. He did so successfully, travelling all the way with the men over a distance of some 700 miles, through the North of the country. This, the only possible route, took them across two mountains, through malaria-ridden jungles, and over broad rivers. He led the British and Indian troops to India, and, at least, temporary safety.
Again Sir Winston Churchill, in 1942, just before Alexander left for Burma, stated, “If we could not send an army, we could, at least, send a man,”‘That man was later to become the Commander-in-Chief of the British Army in the Middle East, Commander of the 18th Army Group, and afterwards Supreme Commander of the Mediterranean Theatre, during which time the armies under his command defeated and drove the German and Italian forces from Africa back into Europe again. After the War, he was appointed Governor General of Canada.
General Gerald Templer, before the outbreak of the Second World War, made it known that in the early 1930′s the commonly held view in authoritative British military circles was that the two most promising officers in the British Army at day were Harold Alexander and Claude Auchinleck. These two Ulstermen were to be appointed in 1934 as commanders of two neighbouring brigades in the North West Frontier area of India. There they were to add further to their considerable reputations. Indeed, they took part in combined operations against the
Mohmand tribes near Afghanistan, with Auchinleck in command. “The operations were successful. “The Auk”, as he was nicknamed in Army circles, was appointed commander-in-Chief of India in 1940, but his service in that capacity was short lived. In June, 1941 he was sent to succeed General Wavell as Commander-inChief in the Middle East, where the British forces had been driven back by the Germans and Italians under Field Marshal Rommel.
Those were the days of tremendous pressures on both the Allied political and military leaders, and as A.J.P. Taylor points out in his “History of the Second World War” it was the political leaders who counted, the generals being often simply administrators. When Auchinleck took over, German invasions, troop movements, and victories on land, sea, and by air operations began to pose new
threats to
(1) Allied oil supplies from Persia and Iraq, brought about by rapid
enemy thrusts into South Russia, and the Balkans, and
(2) Allied naval supply lines to North Africa and British Mediterranean bases, especially Malta through increased U-boat and air attacks from newly acquired lands. Thus, immediately Churchill and the War Cabinet began to urge the new Commander-in-Chief, Auchinleck, for quick aggressive action in North Africa. However, “The Auk” was not to be stampeded. He delayed beginning attacking operations until November, 1941, when the threat to the Middle East oil region was
removed by the Russian containment of German thrusts. Rommel’s forces were driven back out of Cyrenaica, although the British advance was sustained only by the determined intervention, at one stage, of the Commander-in-Chief, himself, in front-line operations.
In that successful offensive, Auchinleck showed that he would ‘encourage and employ new and bold ideas, if the safety of too many men was not endangered. Virginia Cowles in “The Phantom Major” described him as “an efficient, thorough, cautious Ulsterman”, but his caution was brought about by his deep rooted feeling of responsibility for those he commanded. However, he willingly accepted the offer of a young Scottish army officer, called David Stirling, to set up a force that would raid behind the enemy lines to destroy aircraft, lorries, and
fuel dumps.
He placed the new unit under his direct authority. It was to prove an incredibly productive decision as it brought into being what was to become the Special Air Service, the now famous and world renowned S.A.S. They were able to achieve considerable success. Rommel was later to say that they “caused more damage than any other British unit.”This statement was, if anything, not comprehensive enough.
They had destroyed over 250 aircraft, blown up and destroyed vehicles, ammunition dumps, derailed trains, destroyed petrol dumps, mined roads, and struck fear into enemy troops over a very wide area. Rommel was to send to Germany for a substantial detachment of special troops to try to stop their attacks. They are of special Ulster interest, because the second-in-command of the first regiment was a young officer, Blair Mayne from Newtownards in County Down.

After Stirling was captured, the Ardsman was destined to take over command of the entire force for the remainder of their wartime operations throughout North Africa, Sicily, and Italy. Later as Lieutenant Colonel, he was in command of one of the regiments that formed the S.A.S. Brigade that was listed on the Battle Order for the D-Day invasion of Europe. With the D.S.O. and three Bars, in 1945 he was the most decorated soldier in the British Army. The winning of the 2nd bar to his Distinguished Service Order medal is of particular interest to many in his native Ulster. In one of Paddies many letters home to his sister Barbara, he described a bit about what happened. “Before we went on this op, we were inspected and spoken to by all the generals and, I believe, impressed them with our looks and turnout. I am pleased about that but I am more pleased by the way we impressed the Jerries and Eyeties, and we did that in no mean tune. We went at them like terriers after rats. We had only one man killed in our first operation and he, poor chap, had been with me since commando days at Galashiels. I was very fond of him.
Incidentally we made our second landing (from an assualt craft called ‘The Ulster Monarch) on the Twelfth. (The 12th of July is the Orangemans day in Ulster when a celebration of the Battle of the Boyne in 1690 is commemmerated with parades) All we needed was some drums and banners and we would have felt right at home. The attack was on Agusta. I wonder if you heard anything about it on the wireless or in the papers. Probably didn’t – we never had much publicity.
The official medal citation covering this action reads as follows:- On July 10th 1943, Major Mayne carried out two successful operations, the first the capture of CD battery the outcome of which was vital to the safe landing of 13 Corps. By nightfall SRS captured three additional batteries, 450 prisoners, as well as killing 200 to 300 Italians. The second operation was the capture and hold of the town Agusta. The landing was carried out in daylight – a most hazardous combined operation. By the audacity displayed, the Italians were forced from their positions, and masses of valuable stores and equipment were saved from enemy demolition. In both these operations it was Major Maynes courage, determination and superb leadership which proved the key to success. He personally led his men from landing craft in the face of heavy machine gun fire. By this action he succeded in forcing his wat to ground where it was possible to form up and sum up the enemies defences.
Corporal Billy Hull was a fellow Ulsterman from the Shankill Road in Belfast who became Blair Maynes wartime driver. While at their base in Chelmsford, Hull and other members of his regiment the Royal Ulster Rifles, were recruited for a mission behind enemy lines in occupied France. 24 hours before the zero hour Hull recieved new orders that his expertees was required for a seperate operation against a train carrying nazi troops and supplies. Hull pleaded with Mayne to be allowed to go on the first mission with his RUR colleagues but was refused as the new mission was deemed equally vital. The troops who Hull was to have originally accompanied known as the Garston ‘stick’, were either killed in the drop the remainder being later murdered by the nazis. This episode left a lasting mark on Corporal Hull and one which others including Blair Mayne soon noticed in his determination to even the score with the nazis.
The Colonel had one job which he knew would provide his corporal with a much-needed distraction. He asked him to go into the town of Chelmsford and pick up a vehicle from a signwriter’s premises. When Hull arrived at the shop he was led to a yard at the rear. To his astonishment,Hull found a jeep with the bonnet decorated with an Ulster flag, ringed with shamrock. decorated jeep, and drove straight through to Germany without stopping, his signals corporal was David Danger, who recalls: “He directed me to fix a public address system to his staff car with the aim of broadcasting rude words to the retreating Germans. We also fitted his gramophone to the back of the jeep, and all the way up through Holland we played John MacCormack, greatly to the astonishment of the convoys.”
Blairs brother also recalled a time when they were boys their father used to have a shed at their home in Mountpleasant Newtownards for hanging animal carcasses. On occasions this attracted rats. The two boys and their father would then open the shed chasing them out of it whereupon they shot them with rifles.
The rifles were a story in themselves as they were the remnants of those smuggled into Ulster during the ‘Home Rule’ crisis of 1912 aboard the ship the Clyde Valley. These arms were destined for the then Ulster Volunteer Force the men Lord Edward Carson had formed into a private army to fight against imposition of Irish Home Rule upon Ulster and one of whose members had been Blair Maynes father.
It is here interesting to also note that the most decorated soldier in the American army was a man of Ulster Scots descent one Audie Murphy who went on to become a major star in many Hollywood westerns. The S.A.S. worked in North Africa in close co-operation with the Long Range Desert Group, which consisted of soldiers not only from the British Isles, but from New Zealand and from Rhodesia. (Among the men from the last-named country was a cousin of the author, Laurence Allen, who had emigrated from Belfast in the years just before the start of the Second World War.)
After the successful British advance in late 1941, Rommel again counter attacked and the 8th Army was forced back. Auchinleck once more took command of the front-line and, in order to prevent their encirclement, withdrew his forces to EIl-Alamein. There the Quattara Depression, a very large and long salt bog, protected the British flank on the land side. From that position Auchinleck sent out several crippling counter-attacks against the enemy in July, 1942. Taylor, the historian, claims that this fighting, which became known as the First Battle of EI Alamein, was decisive “The Axis advance in North Africa was stopped for good.” This verdict was, in keeping with Rommel’s own words, “Our chance”" was irretrievably gone!” However, Churchill did not see it that way, and Auchinleck was replaced as Commander-in-Chief, by General Alexander, with General Montgomery put in charge of the 8th Army.
If there was one British general who inspired the British people to believe that victory was possible from 1942 onwards it was Bernard Montgomery – known to all as Monty. The years before had brought little to encourage such hopes. Everywhere the enemy seemed to be gaining victory after victory, not only on land, where their armies
constantly pushed forward, but at sea, where losses, not only of merchant ships, but also of British warships had added to gloomy reports. However, soon after the change of command in that year in North Africa, more encouragement for the British public was to come. The partnership of Generals Alexander and Montgomery was to “Turn the Tide,” and to lead to considerable successes for the Allies. The contrasting personalities of the two principal characters would seem to have indicated that such harmony could not be long standing. Alexander’s quiet, modest efficiency was the direct opposite of the flamboyant, arrogantly aggressive, but highly capable Montgomery. Monty, himself, probably summed up the difference best when he
wrote,
“I ruffled people’s feelings, Alex smoothed them.” A typical response from Monty upon being put in command of the Eighth Army in August 1942 read

“…..I then cancelled orders about a further withdrawal. I issued orders that if Rommel attacked, we would fight him on ground where we stood: There would be no withdrawal and NO SURRENDER!”



(Titled ‘Situation in August 1942.’)

However, it would seem that there was more to the selection of two such different persons at such a critical time, and for such an important, command, than would appear on the surface. Indeed, General Brooke, as related in Bryant’s “Turn of the Tide,” seems to have chosen the two men following on his observation of them working together around the critical time of Dunkirk. He was highly impressed then by how imperturbable and efficient both were then, and how well they worked together. It would seem that the choice of these two Ulstermen at that time for Middle East operations, was most carefully thought out, and skilfully directed towards the beginning of the road to victory.
The impression was encouraged that Monty was the Eighth Army and the Eighth Army was Monty’s focussed the people’s attention on what was to prove a most successful general and a most successful army. Monty’s haughty attitude to others, outside his own Eighth Army (only those who had served under him were permitted to wear the Africa Star), and his distinctive and jauntily worn beret were deliberately pursued by him to foster the idea that this was a special army commanded by a special general. Alexander seems to have deliberately kept himself in the background, although, when necessary, he could still demonstrate that he was in over-all control. They both realised that soldiers and officers would follow best a strong definite leader, who knew what he was about. That he did was soon evident. With his “different” army he “hit the enemy for six” and “saw Rommel off.”‘ It was exactly what the British public, as well as the Government and the Cabinet, wanted. By the 13th May, 1943 the enemy had been driven out of North Africa.
Monty remained in command of the 8th Army for the invasion of Sicily and the subsequent attack on the Italian mainland. There were to be several setbacks to the Allied progress in that theatre, as the Germans put up a desperate and stubborn resistance. When the forces under his command had reached the neighbourhood of Salerno.
Montgomery was transferred back to Britain, where he was to take charge of all the land-forces for “Operation Overlord” – the Normandy invasion. This position he held until August, 1944, when as A.J.P. Taylor describes, at “a significant moment in British history.”‘ General Eisenhower took over as Supreme Commander. Significant in that from then on Britain with many fewer troops in Europe was to take the subordinate role. Monty remained in command of the British and Canadian armies as they pushed on through Holland to capture Hamburg on 3rd May, 1945. This was to involve the daring airborne landings that he organised to secure three most strategic bridges over the River Rhine, in order to outflank the strongly fortified Siegfried Line. Two were successfully taken, but the other at Arnhem was to fail through a combination of most unfortunate and unforeseeable circumstances. The chance regrouping of two armoured enemy divisions in the neighbourhood, and the dropping of paratroops rather far from the target area meant that the vital element of surprise was missing.
It was eminently fitting that it was to Field Marshal Montgomery that the German forces surrendered at Luneberg Heath on 4th May, 1945. There was much similarity in the important military roles during the Second World War of Field Marshal Lord Alanbrooke (Alan F. Brooke) and Field Marshal Arlington National Cemetry in Virginia is the resting place of some of America’s greatest heroes and is the focus of American remembrance of its sons and daughters who died on active service. But among those American heroes rests a field marshal of the British Army who earned so much respect in wartime America that, as Winston Churchill wrote,
“He was accorded the unique honour of a resting place in Arlington Cemetery, the Valhalla hitherto reserved exclusively for American warriors.”
The man on whom that unique honour was bestowed was Sir John Dill, the vital link in the Anglo-American alliance in Washington from January 1942 until his death on 4 November 1944. The personal representative of Churchill as Minister of Defence, Dill was recognised by the Americans as one of the outstanding individuals who cemented the alliance and made it work in spite of the differences on both sides that could have seriously damaged the war effort. A memorial service was held in Washington Cathedral and the lesson was read by the US Army Chief of Staff. The funeral cortege drove along a route lined by thousands of troops to Arlington National Cemetery where the coffin was transferred to a gun carriage drawn by six grey horses. The US Joint Chiefs acted as honorary pall bearers as the coffin, draped with the Union Flag, was carried to the graveside. Salutes were fired, the Last Post and Reveille sounded and official America mourned a revered British general. One American witness described the scene:
“I have never seen so many men so visibly shaken by sadness. Marshall’s face was truly stricken.”
The US Joint Chiefs sent a unique message of condolence to their British counterparts,
“mourning the:. . . loss to our combined war effort resulting from the death of Field Marshal Sir John Dill. His character and wisdom, his selfless devotion to the Allied cause, made his contribution to the combined British-American war effort of outstanding importance. It is not too much to say that probably no other individual was more responsible for the achievement of complete co-operation in the work of the Combined Chiefs of Staff. . . . We mourn with you the passing of a great and wise soldier and a great gentleman. His task in this war has been well done.”
Surely no greater tribute could be paid to a truly outstanding general of Ulster Scots descent. Another Ulsterman Alan Brooke succeeded Dill as CI.G.S. in December, 1941. In this capacity he was influential regarding the Allied grand strategy, especially in Europe and the Middle East. His was the experience and knowledge of officers that was much used for the selection of commanders at different stages of the war and for the different theatres. His quick grasp of all dangers and advantages of developing situations made his advice to Churchill and the remainder of the War Cabinet invaluable. A complication in the successful planning of war moves was the need to preserve harmony in all aspects between America and Britain. One can readily see that this was a difficult task. He had to try to smooth out disagreements between strong personalities of army leaders, to endeavour to lessen the inevitable suspicions that grew as to the comparative contributions and sacrifices of men and materials in the different theatres, and also that the pursuit of a particular strategy had not been taken for the benefit of one nation. He also had to hold resolutely to what he saw was the right course of action towards not only immediate, but also final, victory. The ultimate success of Allied arms is testimony that he carried out his onerous duties with brilliant efficiency and competence.
The sixth of the Second World War military leaders from Ulster was Field Marshal Sir Gerald Templer who was born at Loughgall, in County Armagh. He gave most distinguished service, especially as Division Commander in the hard fought campaign in Italy. There the rugged mountainous terrain, extremely severe weather conditions, particularly in the early Winter of 1944, and fanatical German resistance brought heavy casualties and very slow progress to the Allied forces. These difficult circumstances called for an extremely high standard of leadership and this was certainly provided by the man from the County Armagh. It would seem apt here to mention that at the crossing of the River Carigliano, the 2nd Inniskillings added further to their glorious history of battle honours. Their hard-won success there helped a great deal towards enabling the Eighth Army to push on beyond the Sangro and Cassino.
However, Field Marshal Templer is nowadays best remembered for his post war leadership in Malaya. That whole country was beset by unrest and violence stirred up by the Communist Party, and he was sent there in 1952 to bring order out of chaos. As High Commissioner he successfully combined military action with diplomatic moves and brought harmony among the various peoples of that entry that had suffered so much in the Japanese War years. He enabled them assume independence without unnecessary bloodshed.
It was not only in the military, but in a variety of spheres of life that Ulstermen have distinguished themselves. It was as an explorer and surveyor that Francis Rawdon Chesney, from Banbridge, became famous. He foresaw the great advantage to Britain in the 1820′s of having a trade route from the Mediterranean Sea by way of the
River Euphrates to the Persian Gulf and thus to India. With this view he explored the land of Iraq and tested the navigability of that great river. In 1835 he organized the transportation of two steamers in sections overland, used them on the river and proved that such a route was feasible. However, the idea was not pursued by the British Government. The information gleaned from his survey of the Isthmus of Suez was later used by the Frenchman, Ferdinand de Lesseps, for the building of the famous and most important Suez Canal.
Francis Crozier, from Banbridge, in County Down, was also stirred by the spirit of exploration and discovery. The possibility of finding a route from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean North of the land mass had exercised men’s minds for many years. In 1845 Sir John Franklin set off with over 120men on H.M.S. “Erebus” and H.M.S. “Terror’ to seek the elusive North West Passage by way of the islands North of Canada. His second-in-command was Crozier. The two ships vanished and later explorers could find no trace of the ill-fated expedition.
There have been noted scientists and inventors also among the men from Ulster. Such a one was William Thomson, later to be known as Lord Kelvin. His father, James Thomson, from Ballynahinch, in County Down, became, first of all, Professor of Mathematics in the Royal Belfast Academical Institution. Later he was appointed to the Chair of Mathematics in Glasgow University. William, his son, was born in Belfast, opposite the Institution where his father taught. At the age of 24 he became Professor of Natural Philosophy at the same Glasgow university. But later he applied his brilliant mind successfully to more practical things. One of his many accomplishments was his inspiring and direction of the laying of the first trans-Atlantic cable from England to America. The famous Kelvin Hall in Glasgow was that city’s honouring of this famous Ulsterman. There must be few countries in the world in which Ferguson or Massey Ferguson farm machinery, especially the tractor, is unknown. The inventor of these widely acclaimed aids to farming, Harry George Ferguson, was born in Dromore, in County Down. Following a prolonged study of machinery used on the farms, not only of Ulster, but of all Ireland, during the first World War, he sought to provide a low-priced tractor that could be widely adopted to help farm work generally throughout the land. Not only did the machine, this talented engineer invented, meet the attractiveness of low cost, but it also embodied a linkage which, when connected with the implements it pulled, enabled the driver to control almost all operations from the tractor seat. It revolutionized farm-work. It was such a success that the demand for it from many countries, in all parts of the world, rose most quickly.
In 1938 Harry Ferguson agreed to the manufacture of his machines in United States of America. He also had the distinction of designing and building an aeroplane. In this, he made the first recorded flight in Ireland flying along the strand at Newcastle Co Down from Dundrum bay and winning a £100 prize put up by the town a considerable sum in those days. In March, 1983, the 500th human life was saved by the invention of another talented County Down man. The benefit of this most clever contrivance is increased by the fact that these were highly skilled men, whose lives were saved thus. They were of such abilities as to be set apart from their fellows – the pilots of extremely fast-flying aeroplanes. The invention is the Martin Baker ejector seat, and the man who made it available for such a laudable purpose, Sir James Martin. His early years were spent in the rural area of Killinchy Woods, near the small town of Crossgar, within a few miles from Downpatrick. It was at Killinchy Woods Public Elementary School that he obtained his early education. In the years that followed he pursued with dedication his great love for the study of machinery and mechanical operations. This was to lead to his founding of his own Aircraft Company, and later to his becoming Managing Director and Chief Designer of the Martin-Baker Aircraft Company Ltd. Prior to this life-saving invention, he had invented and patented several nationally useful and valued contrivances, including a balloon-barrage cable cutter, a 12 gun nose for the Havoc night fighter, a jettison hood for the Spitfire, and a flat feed for the 20mm Hispano gun.
But it is for the rocket ejector seat that James Martin will be best remembered. It provides a comparatively safe way of escaping from the fastest and highest flying aircraft – a pilot has successfully ejected from a plane travelling at over 1300 miles per hour, another from one over 10 miles above the earth. When one considers that there are estimated to be some 22.000 of these seats in operation today, by 68 nations, that on average 3 lives each week are saved by their operation, and that they have been used effectively from May 1949 till the present day, including the Battle for the Falklands, one begins to appreciate the debt the world, in general, owes to this talented man from County Down.
There must be millions of people, from the most eminent to the lowliest, who have visited with much benefit to themselves the British Museum, There will not have been too many of those who have been aware that it owed its beginning to the foresight, the generosity, and the dedication of an Ulster naturalist and physician. That man was Sir Hans Sloan, who was born at Killyleagh in County Down in 1660. In his long and distinguished career he was first physician to King George, the Third, collected some 800 new species of plants, and succeeded Sir
Isaac Newton as President of the renowned Royal Society. It was Sloan’s bequest to the National Library of over 50,000 volumes, thousands of manuscripts, and a large collection of coins, and curios that formed the nucleus of the most prestigious museum in the United Kingdom.
The small town of Saintfield in County Down was the birthplace of Francis Hutcheson, who became famous as a professor of Philosophy at Glasgow University from 1729 till 1746. He was the author of “A system of Moral Philosophy.” Dr. McCosh has recorded that Hutcheson was the true founder of the Scottish School of Philosophy, Several noteworthy authors have been natives of Ulster. They have included George A. Birmingham, which was the pen-name of Canon Hannay. He wrote several light novels which sometimes poked fun at the clergy. Freeman Wills Croft also became famous as a writer of detective stories, It was as a novel writer, too, that Forrest Reid’s name became known. His writings were particularly considerate and sympathetic regarding the various characters and in his portrayals of the environment. Dr. Alexander Irvine, too, had a keen sense of understanding of his fellows. He had a most varied career, during which he wrote a simply told moving story about the deep religious faith of his mother
“My Lady of the Chimney Corner.”‘ Born in Pogue’s Entry, in Antrim, his early years saw him a stable boy, a coal miner, and, as a Royal Marine, he took part in the famous Gordon Relief Expedition. His meeting with Professor Henry Drummond, the dynamic religious speaker and writer, was a turning point in his whole life. Shortly afterwards, he emigrated to America, where, after studying at the Divinity School at Yale. from 1899 till 1903. he became assistant pastor of the Church of the Ascension of Fifth Avenue. New York City. He preached there for fifty years, During the First World War. he was invited by Lloyd George to go on a morale boosting. speaking tour to the British and American troops in France. Captain Mayne Reid. son of a minister at Ballyroney. in County Down. also attained fame in U.S.A. to which country he emigrated. After his employment as a journalist. he devoted his attention to writing novels. centred on American frontier life. One of his most popular publications was. “The Rifle Rangers.”
James Seaton Reid’s, “History of Presbyterian Church in Ireland” written in the 18th century was widely acclaimed in Britain and America as a reliable record at that church from its troubled early years in Ulster. Such well-known historians as Macauley. Lecky and Froude were enthusiastic in their praise of this County Armagh author. Other successful writers were St. John Ervine. from Belfast. J.J. Connington.
the pen-name for a distinguished University lecturer. W.R. Rogers. Filson Young, whose “Letters from Solitude’ are written with much sensitivity. and Agnes Romilly White. who wrote a simple. but moving story at First World War times in Dundonald near Belfast called “Gape Row,” It is still read and much appreciated. The fame of Edward Hincks. the rector of Killyleagh in County Down. was established in the mid-
nineteeilth century. when he discovered the correct methods of deciphering the ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics and the related Persian cuneitorm vowel systeml which ‘brought to life” many of the archaeological finds of the Royal Tombs in Egypt and those in connection with Semitic kings..
Edward Hinck’s brother. Sir Francis. also became eminent. After emigrating to Canada in the 1840, he became a journalist. writing in Toronto and Montreal. and later a newspaper editor. Greater things were to follow. for him. In 1851 he became Prime Minister of Canada, a position he held until 1854. He was. too. at a time the Governor of Barbadoes and the Windward Islands New Zealand was the country in which two other Ulstermen were to reach the position of Prime Minister. They were John Ballance and William Ferguson Massey. Their life stories provide examples of the same grit and integrity as shown by the many who settled in America in the 18th century. John Ballance was born at Mallusk in County Antrim. Soon after arriving in New Zealand, he took part in the Maori Wars. Later he became a newspaper editor.
He was very much concerned about the welfare of people, and this consideration allied to his courtesy and good humour made him much more respected and popular. It was not long till he was elected as a ‘workers’ representative in the Parliament. He attained the position in 1891, and soon set about reducing the excessive influence of some of the most wealthy land and property owners. His government replaced the tax on property with one on land and income.
This relieved the small land-holders from crippling payments and introduced more realistic tax on the better-off. They also passed an Employers’ Liability Act, by which ‘bosses’ had to pay compensation in the event of injury or death to a worker during employment. There was very firm opposition to these measures. The Legislative Council, whose members were appointed by the Governor, refused to pass the Acts, but Ballance was not to be denied. He appointed a new Council, and appealed to the British Government who supported him. Ever since, New Zealand had the right to manage all her own affairs, without interference from the Governor. John Ballance died in 1893.
William Ferguson (Bill) Massey was born in Limavady, in County londonderry. His father and mother, when they emigrated to New Zealand, left him with friends to complete his education. Bill joined them, when he was 14, at their farm near Auckland. Within a few years he had his own farm, and, at the age of 37 became a member of Parliament. In 1912 he was elected as Prime Minister, and retained that position for 13 momentous years. They took in the challenging times of the First World War, and the period of turmoil and change which followed it. One of the first Acts of his government enabled some 13,000 Crown tenants to purchase their own farms. In 1913 he met with courage what turned out to be almost a General Strike. His resolution as a responsible leader inspired volunteers to act as special constables, dockers, van drivers, and even seamen until the disagreement was settled. When War broke out in 1914, his response was a typically Ulster one. He cabled to the British Government, “All we are and all we have is at the disposal of the British Government.” Willing as he was to pledge his country to play its full part in the coming conflict, he was not prepared to let New Zealand troops take needless risks.
Aware that German raiders were on the prowl in the South Pacific, he refused to let the troopships leave their shores until better naval protection was afforded. Under his Government the setting up of Electricity Boards to control and further the provision of that power to the more important towns in the two main islands was successfully performed. Winston Churchill’s words of appreciation of this Ulsterman must have brought pleasure to his country as well as to himself:-
“We knew Mr. Massey when the storm raged and the waves ran high. We saw him always resolute and always cool and confident. New Zealanders may well congratulate themselves upon one who is regarded as such a source of strength to the Empire.”
Northern Ireland, too, showed her valuation of her son by naming the processional way up to her Parliament at Stormont Massey Avenue. An Ulster Scot, also, was to become Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, itself, in the early 1920′ s. He was Andrew Bonar Law. His father, Rev. James Law, a Presbyterian minister, had emigrated to New Brunswick, in Canada from his native town of Coleraine. There, his son, later to be thus distinguished, was born. Bonar was brought up from the age of 12 by a wealthy relative in Glasgow. He was elected M.P. in 1900, and, becoming leader of the Conservative Party in 1911, retained that challenging position during the momentous years from then until 1922. In that year he was elected to be Prime Minister when his party came to power. His was a unique appointment, as it was the first, and probably the only time, that a person born in an overseas part of the Commonwealth attained that position. During his strong leadership of the Conservatives before the outbreak of the First World War, he fiercely supported Ulster’s resistance to having Irish Home Rule forced on her by the Liberal government under Asquith. Law acted almost in unison with such stalwart leaders as Captain James Craig. Lord Carson. and Lord Londonderry. He declared publicly that there were no limits to the lengths he would go in his opposition to such a betrayal of a loyal people. In this declaration he was certainly in accord with those who were representing Ulster in those critical days. There was a strong and widespread support for the people of the Province. not only from the Conservative Party. but from many such prominent men as Lords Roberts. Milner. and Halifax and Mr Rudyard Kipling. There were also declarations of help and donations from many parts of the Commonwealth:- Canada. Australia. New Zealand. South Africa. and even from parts of U.S.A. This was understandable. They were no idle words that “Ulster would fight. and Ulster would be right.” Her position was well summarised in parts of Rudyard Kipling’s poem.
Ulster 1912.”
“The dark eleventh hour
Draws on and sees us sold
To every evil power
We fought against of old.
The faith in which we stand.
The laws we made and guard.
Our honour. lives. and land
Are given for reward
To murder done by night.
To treason taught by day.
To folly. sloth. and spite.
And we are thrust away.
We stand to pay the cost
In all that men hold dear.
What answer from the North?
One Law. one Land. one Throne.

Basically what was to be enforced were
(1) separating people of British stock from their fellows in Britain. their Government. and from their Sovereign. and uniting them to a basically hostile people. under an anti-British and potentially Republican government.
(2) the endangering of their religious faith. for to them Home Rule
meant. and still means. Rome Rule. The deep felt and intense Ulster opposition to this unwarrantable separation took tangible form eventually in the formation of the disciplined, armed Ulster Volunteer Force, to resist physically this coercion. But the real reason for their steadfast refusal to submit was well displayed in August. 1914.
when Lord Carson and Captain James Craig, in response to a request from Lord Kitchener. the British War Minister. offered 35.000 trained men of the UVF. to defend King and Country. Their basic loyalty was a positive one: “One Law. One Land, One Throne.” Kitchener rather reluctantly agreed later to include the word “Ulster” in the name of the unit formed:- The 36th (Ulster) Division. Asquith, in the House of Commons, after announcing that the Home Rule Bill would become law on 18th September, 1914, stated, as a sop, that its operation would be suspended until the end of the War, and that opportunities would be afforded to alter or modify its provisions, He spoke highly of the spirit of patriotism shown by the U.V.F, and said that it made unthinkable the coercion of Ulster. Bonar Law, after scathingly rebuking the Prime Minister for the Government’s deceit and betrayal, most pointedly led Carson and the entire Conservative Opposition from the House, It was an unmistakable scorning of shameful political manoeuvring, There was to be a further demonstration of Ulster’s loyalty in contrast to the Government’s unfeeling desertion, It took place at the Battle of the Somme, which began on the 1 st July, 1916. In that dreadful battle almost half of the 36th (Ulster) Divison – termed derisively “Carson’s Army” by some uncomprehending people – were to shed their blood in Britain’s cause. But in doing so, they were to make, against a well entrenched and powerful German army, the farthest advance by any major unit. They took not only the formidable Schwaben Redoubt, the strongest part in the enemy position, but they were to push on and reach the second German line. No wonder Philip,Gibbs, the well known war correspondent, was to write that day:-
“Their attack was one of the finest displays of human courage in the world “
36th Ulster Division Attack Somme 1st July 1916
36th Ulster Division Attack Somme 1st July 1916
Captain, later Lieutenant Colonel Wilfred Spender, who observed this glorious action, also paid his tribute to the Ulster troops,
“I am not an Ulsterman, but yesterday, the 1st July, as I followed their amazing attack, I felt I would rather be an Ulsterman than anything else in the world. Then I saw them attack, beginning at a slow walk over No Man’s Land, and then suddenly let loose, as they charged over the font two lines of enemy trenches shouting “No surrender boys!”
Unfortunately, the advances by the neighbouring divisions broke down and as Martin Holbrook records in his book “The First Day on the Somme,” “indeed for 4 miles on either side (of the Ulsters) there was no advance to distract the German defence.” The troops from the country, the British Government were willing to desert, were left exposed to concentrated attacks by shell, mortar, and bullet for some 14 hours without help from any source, It was barely interrupted slaughter, They held on grimly until re-enforced German counter-attacks caused them to give way, The Division lost in killed, wounded, and missing 5,500 officers and men. The stories of the Ulster 36th divisions Victoria Cross winners are here recalled……

Captain Eric Norman Franklin Bell 9th Battalion Royal Inniskillen Fusiliers:- For most conspicuous bravery, when the front line was hung up by enfilading machine gun fire, Captain Bell crept forward and shot the machine gunner. Later, on no less than three occasions, when our bombing parties, which were clearing the enemies’ trenches, were unable to advance, he wet forward alone and threw trench mortar bombs among the enemy. When he had no more bombs availible he stood on the parapet, under intense fire, and used a rifle with great coolness and effect on the enemy advancing to counter attack. Finally he was killed rallying and reorganising infantry parties which had lost their officers. All this was outside the scope of his normal duties with his battery. He gave his life in supreme devotion to duty.
Second Lieutenant James Samuel Emerson 9th Battalion Royal Inniskillen Fusiliers:- On the 6th December 1917 on the ‘Hindenberg Line’, north of La Vacquene, France, Second Lieutenant Emerson led his company in an attack and cleared 400 yards of enemy trench. Though wounded when the enemy attacked in superior numbers, he met their attack with eight men, killing many and taking six prisoners. For three hours afterwards, all other officers having become casualties, he remained with his company, refusing to go to the dressing station, and repeatedly repelling bombing attacks. Later leading his men to repel another attack, he was mortally wounded. His heroism inspired his men to hold out until reinforcements arrived.
Lance Corporal Ernest Seaman 2nd Battalion Royal Inniskillen Fusiliers:- On the 29th of August 1918 at Terhand Belgium, when the right flank of his company was held up by enemy machine guns, Lance Corporal Seaman went forward under heavy fire with his lewis gun and engaged the position single handed, capturing two machine guns and twelve prisoners, and killing one officer and two men. Later in the day he rushed another enemy machine gun post, capturing the gun under heavy fire. He was killed immediately afterwards, but due to his gallant conduct, his company was able to push forward to it’s objective.
Private Norman Harvey 1st Battalion Royal Inniskillen Fusiliers:- On the 25th of October 1918 at Ingoyghem Belgium when the battalion was held up and suffering heavy casualties from enemy machine guns, Private Harvey on his own initiative, rushed forward and engaged the enemy single handed, disposing of 20 of them and capturing the guns. Later when his company was checked by another enemy strongpoint, he again put the enemy to flight. Subsequently after dark, he voluntarily carried out a single handed and important reconnaissance and gained valuable information.
Second Lieutenant Edmund de Wind 15th Battalion Royal Irish Rifles:- For seven hours after the launch of German assaults of March 21, 1918, and despite being wounded twice, he fought on against overwhelming odds tohold his position at Groagie. On two occasions, with two NCOs only, he got out on top under heavy machine-gun and rifle fire and cleared the enemy out of the trench, killing many. He continued to repel attack after attack until he was mortally wounded and collapsed. His valour, self-sacrafice, and example were of the highest order.
Private William Fredrick McFadzean 14th Battalion Royal Irish Rifles:- In the early hours of July 1st 1916, he was in a concentration trench in Theipval Wood preparing grenades for distribution. A box of bombs slipped into the crowded trench, with two of the safety pins falling out. Instantly realising the danger, with heroic courage threw himself on top of the bombs. The bombs exploded, blowing him to pieces, and only one other man was injured. He knew well his danger, being himself a bomber, but without a moments hesitation, he gave his life for his comrades.

Rifleman Robert Quigg 12th Battalion Royal Irish Rifles:- On the 1st of July 1916 rifleman Quigg took part in three assaults. Early next morning, hearing a rumour that his platoon officer was lying out wounded, he went out seven times to look for him under heavy shell and machine gun fire, each time bringing back a wounded man. The last man he dragged in on a waterproof sheet from within a few yards of the enemy’s wire. He was seven hours engaged in this most gallant work, and finally was so exhausted that he had to give up.
Lieutenant Geoffrey St. George Shillington Cather 9th Royal Irish Fusiliers:- Lieutenant Cather spent over five hours on the evening of 1st July 1916, up to midnight, searching for wounded men in No-Man’s-Land north of the Ancre. During that time he rescued three men, dragging them to safety. Next morning, at 8am, he contionued his search, brought in another wounded man, and gave water to others, arranging for their rescue later. Finally at 10.30am, he took out water to another wounded man, and was proceeding further when he himself was killed. All this was carried out in full view of the enemy, and under direct machine gun fire and intermittent artillery fire. He set a splendid example of courage and self-sacrifice.
Second Lieutenant Cecil Leonard Knox Corps of Royal Engineers (‘Att’ 36th Ulster Division) :- On the 22nd of March 1918 twelve bridges at Tugny France were entrusted to this officer for demolition, and all of them were successfully destroyed. In the case of one of the steel girder bridges, the destruction of which he personally supervised, the timing fuse failed. Without hesitation Second Lieutenant Knox ran to the bridge, under heavy fire and machine gun fire, and while the enemy was still on the bridge, tore away the the fuse and lit the instantaneous fuse, to do which he had to get under the bridge. This was an act of the highest devotion to duty, entailing great risks, which as a practical civil engineer he fully realised.
Of nine Victoria Crosses awarded to British forces in that battle, four were bestowed on Ulstermen, Wilfred Spender was later to write:-
“The Ulster Division has sacrificed itself for the Empire, which has treated them none too well. The much derided Ulster Volunteer Force has a name which equals any in History. Their devotion deserves the gratitude of the British Empire, It is due to the memory of these brave heroes that their beloved Province shall be fairly treated.”
An example of that gratitude was to follow within a few years, The cemetery in which many of their Fallen were buried was named by the Army “The Connaught Cemetery.” As Martin Middlebrook writes, “One wonders why it was not named ‘The Ulster Cemetery.”
However, the sacrifice of Ulster lives was taken into account in the settlement of 1921, when much of the Province was excluded from incorporation into the Irish Free State.
Although Bonar Law’s occupation of the Premiership in the House of Commons was a short one from October, 1922 till May, 1923, yet his leadership of the Conservative Party in the years of the fierce Home Rule clash with the Liberals and the Irish Nationalists was a crucial factor in uniting opposition to that unwanted legislation.

“IT IS A SHAMEFUL SIGHT, WHEN BROTHERS OF ONE FAMILY DO CHIDE, Ch: 17

“IT IS A SHAMEFUL SIGHT, WHEN BROTHERS OF ONE FAMILY DO CHIDE Ch: 17

Chapter 17

“IT IS A SHAMEFUL SIGHT, WHEN BROTHERS OF ONE FAMILY DO CHIDE, FALL OUT, AND FIGHT . “

So go the lines of an old rhyme. They have a homely setting and were probably employed on many occasions to rebuke the quarrelling younger members of a family. However, they contain a truth that, at times, must have caused more adult persons to cease from bickering’s that would have lead to actual strife. It is to be very much regretted that more forbearance by both sides in the disagreement in the United States in the mid 1800′ s was not exercised before actual fighting took place. It was not a cut and dried dissension between the Northern States and the Southern, On this point it is interesting to note that when the South fired on Fort Sumter, beginning the war, there were eight slave states in the Union and only seven in the Confederacy. But when Lincoln called for an invasion of the South, North Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee, and Arkansas left the Union. Even the states with Ulster Scots heritage that remained in the Union reacted to this call with outrage. The governor of Kentucky contemptuously replied that his state would furnish no troops “for the wicked purpose of subduing her sister Southern States.”

Claiborne Fox Jackson, Missouri’s governor, sent a wire claiming that such an idea was “illegal, unconstitutional, and revolutionary in its object, inhuman and diabolical, and cannot be complied with.” for many in the South would have supported the abolition of slavery viewpoint, and there were sections of the population in the North that saw no harm in keeping slaves. Indeed, it has been pointed out by several writers, among them Whitelaw Reid, that the first anti-slavery actions began, not in the Northern States, as is usually assumed, but among the Scotch and the Scotch-Irish of South Carolina and East Tennessee. That happened some 20 odd years before any voice was raised against the practice in the North. It has also been recorded that it was the refusal of a Covenanter pastor in New York to accept a call to a church there in the early 19th century, because of some slave owning members of it, that led to the Presbytery enacting that Communion be with- held from slave-holders.

John Rankin, the noted anti-slavery leader, stated in 1820 that it was safer to make Abolition speeches in Kentucky or Tennessee than in Northern States. With this wide divergence of views in the regions, it was a calamity that the differences could not have been resolved without recourse to arms.

The Civil War was a conflict between members of a nation with so much in common. Sometimes members even of the same family fought on opposite sides. It was a tragic occurrence. In a young developing nation, then of some four score years, harmony among all its peoples was a vital necessity for progress. Prominent people in both the North and the South tried by impassioned speeches to halt the drift to open
conflict. These were men who had the wider vision to foresee the disastrous effects of a war within a nation. They knew that, not only would it lead to much loss of lives and damage to property, but that the bitter feelings of suspicion, distrust, and even hatred would poison relationships for many years afterwards. Such a prominent man was Sam Houston, the Hero of Texas and its first governor.

His love for the United States as a whole had been demonstrated previously when, as a leader of the Lone Star State, he did much to have it embodied in the Union. He had shown that he would have gone to any lengths to have this brought about. Like that other great patriot of Ulster stock, Andrew Jackson, he foresaw that it was only as a united nation that America could best fulfil her destiny. Like Old Hickory, too, Houston was no romantic idealist, but a man who had experienced violence and war at its most vicious. He had taken strong action against even his own fellow Texans to make the State a real
community. In 1844 he declared martial law and had several dangerous lawbreakers arrested and imprisoned.

In the developing crisis between Northern and Southern interests, even although a man of seventy, he decided to take action according to what he deemed was best for the whole nation. The inclusion of Texas within the Union had been opposed vehemently by some Northern States, because they thought it could lead to an extension of slave holding. So Houston knew exactly how fierce would be the opposition within his own state to any attempts at reconciliation. In spite of threats to his life and most hostile receptions at meetings he addressed, he went throughout the State of Texas speaking forcefully against seceding from the Union. He warned that it would lead to Civil War and would bring ruin to the South but few listened.

In March, 1861, at a great meeting of the most influential men of Texas, he had only one backer when he voted against a proposal that all State office-holders would have to swear allegiance to the Confederacy, the name given to the alliance of seceding states. It was passed by 109 votes to 2. Afterwards he refused to swear thus and thereby sacrificed his position as governor. In March, 1863, he made his final appeal. This was in the middle of the hard-fought Civil War. He again revealed his whole-nation patriotism when he spoke with great feeling of “his dream of an empire as vast and expansive for a united people as the bounds of American civilization.” Even at that stage he pleaded for a healing of the breach between the peoples of the nation, and begged his hearers “to resist to the last that worst of all tyranny fraternal hate.” Surely the words of a high mlnded statesman.

The same charitableness and hopes were to be voiced by that other great Ulster Ulysses S Grant Wilderness

Scot, Ulysses S. Grant, to the Southern commander-in-chief, General Lee, after the latter’s surrender at Appomattox. General Robert E. Lee, himself, had similar forebodings to Houston when he wrote before the outbreak of war, “I can contemplate no greater calamity than a dissolution of the Union.” But he expressed a reservation. “Still a union that can only be maintained by swords and bayonets,and in which strife and civil war are to take the place of brotherly love and kindness has no charm for me.”He refused to strive against his own state, and his own family. He resigned his commission in the American army. Lee, like many in high and in lowly positions at that time had to make most painful decisions. His own brother was to command the naval forces of the North. The wife of President Lincoln had three brothers killed while fighting with the Confederate army. Members of the same race were to oppose each other in that bloody conflict, which left three quarters of a million dead – the finest of that generation – and men that the developing nation could ill afford.

Among that vast number were to be many thousands of Ulster ancestry, who fell while fighting on opposing sides. They displayed the same high standard of courage and devotion to duty that has typified their race on battlefields throughout the world and in all ages. The Northern army records shows that the State of Pennsylvania supplied the most volunteers for service in the Northern cause. This State will be remembered as the “hub of the Scotch-Irish settlements” in the early 18th century. From North Carolina, the Scotch-Irish State of the South, came a similar record number of recruits for the Confederate forces. Both these states also had the highest number of losses on the battlefields. One particular battle occasioned a distressing number of slain for these two areas. It was the battle of Gettysburg, fought on the first of July, 1863. A pivotally significant date in Ulster’s history. The conflict at Gettysburg was a decisive one. The Southern armies under General Lee were threatening to take part of Pennsylvania, and it looked as if President Lincoln would be forced to order the withdrawal of troops from around Vicksburg in the vital Western theatre, to bolster up the Union forces in the East. The sufficiency of man-power and military equipment was beginning to be a worry, also, for the leader of the Southern forces. The Northern soldiers were holding the Cemetery Ridge South of the town of Gettysburg against Confederate attacks from what was known as the Seminary Ridge. Fighting around three vital locations Cemetery Hill, Round Top, and another lesser elevation, Little Round Top, had been especially fierce.

Bloody AngleLee decided to make an all-out attack on a part of the enemy-held
ridge, called “The Angle.” He chose for this main assault one of his most distinguished units the 26th North Carolina Regiment, under the Ulster Scottish generals Trimble and Pettigrew. It was the greatest infantry charge of the war, consisting of 15,000 men on a mile-wide front. The assault was met with equal fierceness by the 151st Pennsylvania Regiment. It was in all senses “a fight to the death.” Both regiments were practically wiped out. The Southem attack failed and the result had a signifigant effect on the whole war. This action was but one example of occasions on which men of Ulster blood strove against each other on hardest-fought battlefields. As John Dalzell stated in a memorable speech at Pittsburgh in 1890,

“On many a battlefield of the Civil War men faced each other, who were sons of Scotch-lrish settlers, inheritors of a common history and sharers of it’s glory. Borne apart by the accident of fortune, the Scotch-Irishman of the South, rallying to the support of the Stars and Bars, met the Scotch-Irishman of Pennsylvania following the Stars and Stripes. In conflict, deadly, desperate, hand-to-hand, the iron blood of Irish Scotland met its kind and men died, as their fathers would have them die. For some the ebbing tide of life crimsoned the gray, for some the blue. But under either flag death only added new proof of the verdict of history, that for the peerless courage that men honour and women love, America owes a need of pride for her Scotch-Irish sons.”

General Robert E. Lee confirmed, too, the excellence of the fighting quality of the soldiers of Ulster stock. To a visiting Scottish minister who had asked him which race in his opinion made the best soldiers, the general replied:

“The Scotch who came to this country by the way of Ireland because they have all the dash of the Irish in taking a position,and all the stubbornness of the Scotch in holding it.”

Praise indeed, from a man who had proved he was the most outstanding military leader of his day, and who had ample opportunities to judge. As we have seen previously several of the military leaders of the Revolutionary forces were men whose forefathers had come from Ulster. Many of the generals of the Civil War were of a similar racial background. For the Northern or Union armies outstanding leadership was given by Generals Irvin McDowell, George B. McClellan, James B. McPherson, and Ulysses S. Grant, while among the commanders of the Confederates were Generals Joe Johnston, Leonidas Polk, J.E.B. Stuart and Thomas Jonathan (Stonewall) Jackson. Several of them had earned high reputations in the war against Mexico, and felt themselves called on to serve again when the Civil War broke out in 1861.

Both Irvin McDowell”s and James McPherson’s ancestors had arrived in New England in 1718 in the large emigration from Ulster in that year. They had, like many others, had to settle in the dangerous frontier areas, where Indian attacks happened frequently. Some of their descendants inevitably would serve with the Colonial forces in the War of Independence. General McDowell was one of the first generals called on by the Northem authorities. He led about 33,000 Union soldiers at
the battle of Bull Run near Washington. It was the first major engagement of the war and resulted in heavy casualties for both sides. General McPherson was an outstanding officer, well-known, not only for his soldierly qualities, but also for his straight-dealing and sense of justice. He was much respected by his men, and his loss in battle was a severe one, not only to those under his command, but to his fellow-officers, too.

General Grant, on hearing of his death said, ‘”The country has lost one of its best soldiers, and I have lost one of my best friends.” Right from the outset of the war, General Joe Johnston was in action. He was in command of some 11,000 Confederate troops in the Shenandoah Valley and their progress in that area caused the Northern Commander to detach a large number of his best men to meet the threat. Later, General McClellan had his army transported down Union Chesapeake Bay, in an attempt to encircle a large Southern force. Johnston took immediate steps to conquer this move. When a Corps crossed the strategically important Chickahominy River, the Southern general led an attack on this dangerous threat.

In the fierce fighting that ensued, the gallant Johnston was seriously wounded. A measure of his patriotism was revealed by his remark shortly afterwards, when he said, ‘The shot that struck me down is the very best that has been fired for the Southern cause yet.” This was his compliment to his successor, General Robert E. lee. Johnston’s abilities as a master strategist were well displayed also in the Western theatre, where he took over command when only partially recovered from his wounds. He led his troops with such skill, particularly after the fall of Vicksburg, that, although opposed by much bigger forces under Sherman, he managed to keep his army intact. It had become a war of attrition, and, at times, he best served his cause by withdrawing tactics.

However, his opponents could not take his actions for granted, as was
proved at Kennesaw Mountain. There, from a strong position, he launched an unexpected attack that sent the enemy reeling back. But he was forced again to retreat to near Altanta. He was the last Southern general to surrender – in April, 1865. It was in the Western theatre, too, around Shiloh and later at Vicksburg that General (and Bishop) Leonidas Polk gave distinguished leadership to Southern forces. His ancestor, Robert, was one of the earliest Ulster settlers in America, reaching Maryland about 1660. There were several revolutionary officers among his descendants, as well as James Knox Polk, 11th President of U.S.A.

George B. McClellan was a direct descendant of James McClellan, who was appointed the first town Constable of the town of Worcester in Massachusetts, in 1724. This was six years after he had landed with many Ulster settlers from the “Robert” near Boston. George B. was sometimes referred to as “the pocket Napoleon” and in many ways lived up to this description. He and “Stonewall” Jackson were classmates at West Point, the Military Academy which has helped to
produce many of America’s war leaders. Soon afterwards they were both serving as officers in the Mexican War. After that conflict, McClellan resigned his commission, and was employed in the country’s railway system. He became a competent chief at the Illinois Central network. During his work in that capacity he displayed several qualities that were to suit him for a distinguished army career in the future.

He had an exceptional flair for organizing, an ability to get on well with men, a patience to concentrate on every aspect and detail of problems, until they could be seen to fit into their proper place to provide the solution, and finally he had a tireless energy. His work as a railway boss brought him into contact with many people, but with one man it was to effect profoundly the future lives of both. That man was Abraham Lincoln, the President during the Civil War. He was employed as one of the railway’s lawyers. On the outbreak of hostilities, McClellan offered his services to the Northern authorities. Following the setback sustained at Bull Run Creek, he was given command of the Union army in the North East. Only 35 years, of age, he applied himself with his usual thoroughness to the building up of a first class fighting force. According to most historians he made a really good job of it, and the” Army of the Potomac” was termed by one writer as “a superb instrument of war.”

One of the factors which made General George Washington’s leadership of the Revolutionary forces most difficult was the short term enlistment permitted to those offering themselves for war service. This enabled them to go home when that agreed period was over, no matter the military position at the time. One of the first things that McClellan did was to change the 90 days militia undertaking into a 3 year volunteering. This meant that a unit commander had no worries concerning the strength of his forces at a future date, with all the advantage to forward planning that that introduced. “Little Mac”, as he was nicknamed by his troops, displayed the same supreme self-confidence, decisiveness, and lack of deference to his superiors as another Ulsterman of the Second World War many years later was to show – he was Field Marshal Montgomery. McClellan insisted on the same build-up of superior forces and completion of his plans before his taking action as ‘Monty’, held to before the battle of Alamein.

As the fighting in 1861 was at times close to Washington itself, it was inevitable that there would be no shortage of “armchair generals” among newspaper editors and politicians who gave advice to the officers in charge of warfare. The spate of criticism did not seem to effect “Little Mac’s” plans or operations in the slightest. Even the President, himself, seemed to have been treated with scant regard.
According ‘to President Truman, the former rail road boss had trouble in remembering that Lincoln was no longer one of the railway employees and was very rude to him at times. On one occasion some friends of Abe’s told him that they were surprised that he accepted such treatment. Lincoln replied that he would hold McClellan’s horse, if he would only bring him success. He also said that the whole thing reminded him of the fellow whose unruly horse got its hoof caught in the stirrup and he told it, if it wanted to get on, he would get off.

After the battle of Antietam, where there were heavy losses on both sides, the President visited the battlefield, and told McClellan that there was some criticism of his slowness in the campaign. The general replied, “You may find those who will go faster than I, Mr. President, but it is very doubtful if you will find many who will go farther.” Little Mac, himself, was loudly cheered by his men after that particular battle.

In several of the engagements, he was opposing two master strategists, generals Lee who had his own share of critical newsopaper editors to contend with. In a conversation with a Senator Hill, Lee replied much to the shock at first of the senator, “We made a great mistake, Mr. Hill in the beginning of our struggle, and I fear in spite of all we can do, it will prove to be a fatal mistake. The clearly shaken senator asked “What mistake General?” to which Lee replied “Why Sir, in the beginning we appointed all our worst generals to command our armies and all our best generals to edit our newspapers!” and Jackson. It is reckoned by several historians that he did extremely well in keeping intact his “Army of the Potomac” in spite of many attempts by his opponents to encircle it.

JEB Stuart and General LeeGeneral J.E.B. (Jeb) Stuart’s great-great-grandfather was born in the city of Londonderry, in Ulster, from where he emigrated to America in the early 18th century. General Stuart has been described as a very fine Calvary officer, but as well as leading his troops into battle, he helped Generals Robert E. Lee and (Stonewall) Jackson in a particularly effective way. With great daring and cunning, gained from experience, he used his men to find out in advance of battles the numbers and positions of the enemy. Stuart, himself, directed and often led these daring scouting expeditions and then assessed the information gained before conveying it to the commander. In the undulating surface of the Virginia countryside this kind of intelligence, was invaluable for planning the movements of the Southern troops, prior to the actual fighting, as often there were superior numbers of Union forces.

The army of the Potomac had the great advantage, too, of a well-developed system of field telegraph. This was controlled by a battery wagon from which a very fine gauge insulated wire, some 1/8 of an inch in diameter, was taken on reels, carried on pack mules. These were taken along and the wire put on quickly improvised poles clear of the ground.

This was the first employment in war of the Morse Code, invented by another Ulster Scot, Samuel Finley Breese Morse. It has been recorded that Grant, the final Union commander, could get in touch with his officers in any part of the zone of operations. They used the clicks of small magnets to convey messages. The Scouting parties of General Stuart afterwards picked up the transmissions by tapping the wires, and this forced the use of codes by the Northern operators. Both Lee and Jackson spoke highly of the help given them by JEB Stuart. By means of the information obtained by him and his men’ from these dangerous scouting trips, well into enemy-held ground, they were able to plan their strategy.

Ulster Descendents of Stonewall Jackson Unveiling PlaqueThomas Jonathan Jackson’s great grandfather, John, was born at Ballinarry House, The Birches, Portadown, Co. Armagh, in Ulster. He emigrated to America about 1748. Today, there are reportedly more Jacksons living in this part of Co Armagh than in any other region of Northern Ireland and they are convinced of the local connection with “Stonewall” Jackson s family. John Jackson is traced by the Co Armagh Jacksons as a grandson of Robert Jackson, and a son of John Jackson, who is buried in Tartaraghan Parish Churchyard. Another John Jackson, from this area, fought with King William III at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690 and his sword and cutlass carried by him in the battle, have been displayed at Carrickfergus Castle in Co Antrim The Jacksons of Co Armagh have always been strong supporters of the Orange- Protestant cause in Ireland and today that tradition is manifested in their membership of various Orange lodges in a region, where the Orange Order was founded in 1795, following the battle of the Diamond.

These Jacksons primarily belong to the Church of Ireland (Episcopal) and if the American link is authentic, it would have meant that the emigrant John Jackson and his family almost certainly converted to Presbyterianism when they reached America. John Jackson had a brief sojourn in London before he reached Maryland in 1748. It was there that he met the girl he was to marry, Elizabeth Cummins, the daughter of a London hotelier, who, when her father died and her mother remarried, decided to emigrate. Elizabeth was a highly educated woman of a large stature, and it was said she was “as remarkable for her strength of intellect as for beauty and physical vigour”. John Jackson was a “spare diminutive man, of quiet but determined
character, sound judgment and excellent morals”. The pair married in 1755 and within two years they headed to the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia with the great flow of Scots-Irish families, who had moved from Ulster. They settled at Moorefield in Hardy County, West Virginia, but after the French-Indian War of 1754-63, they moved 150 miles westwards to find a home at Buckhannon in Randolph County, Virginia.

In his exploits as an Indian fighter and scout John Jackson amassed sizeable land holdings in the Shenandoah Valley and these he distributed to his eight children. The Jacksons in time became one of the leading families in the Valley. In terms of wealth and influence, Jackson was a Randolph County justice and, in 1779, at the age of 74,
he served as a captain of a frontier militia regiment. Elizabeth Jackson, who had possession of 3,000 acres of land in her own right at Buckhannon, survived her husband and she lived until she was 105. She also showed tenacity and courage in fending of Indian attacks on their home and family records show that even in the most dangerous situations, she never wilted.

Two sons rose to high office. Edward (1759-1828), grandfather of “Stonewall”, was Randolph County surveyor, militia colonel, commissioner of revenue and high sheriff. He represented Lewis County in the Virginia Assembly and was “a citizen who acquired some knowledge of medicine, was an expert millwright, and a farmer of more than usual ability”. George, his older brother, after service as a colonel in the Revolutionary War, completed three terms in the American Congress and was a close associate of General Andrew Jackson, later to become President. George and Andrew Jackson were not related, but they frequently talked about their first generation Ulster connections who had moved to America several decades earlier. George Jackson’s son, John George Jackson replaced his father in Congress and, as lawyer, he was an articulate spokesman in Washington for the Shanendoah Valley dwellers. Jonathan Jackson , father of “Stonewall”, studied law at the Clarksburg office of his uncle and, although married to the daughter of a merchant from Parslbury, West Virginia, Julie Beeleith Neale, he was never a man of great wealth. He died when his son Jonathan was only three.

John George Jackson married Mary Payne of Philadelphia, a sister of Dolly Madison, wife of James Madison, the fourth President of the United States. This increased the influence of the Jackson clan to the highest level and John George was appointed by Madison s successor in the White House James Monroe, as the first federal judge for the western part of Virginia. A brother, Edward Burke Jackson, was the army surgeon during the Creek Indian War of 1812, a Clarksburg doctor and a member of the American Congress for four years. It was from this noble family tradition of soldiering and public service that Thomas Jonathan “Stonewall” Jackson emerged and in 1842, at the age of 18, he was given a Congressional appointment to the premier American military academy at West Point.

He, himself, had been born at Clarksburg, in Virginia (now W. Virginia) in 1824. His father died when his son was young, and Thomas had to assume family responsibility at a very early age. It is more than likely that this duty thus forced upon him increased the seriousness of his outlook on life at a later date. His abilities as a military leader were soon recognised in the Mexican War, during which he was promoted to the rank of major. He displayed exceptional coolness under fire and
resourcefulness in dangerous situations in that war that were good indications of his future excellence for leadership. He resigned his commission afterwards and was appointed Professor of Artillery atactics at a military institute in Virginia. There he gained the reputation of being a most conscientious instructor and a rather stern
Presbyterian. During his time at that training centre he must have added considerable knowledge of the terrain of the Shenandoah Valley to his youthful familiarity with it. This was to prove a great asset to him and to his troops during the fighting in that region in the Civil War.

Stonewall Jackson Harpers FerryOn the outbreak of that war, he offered his services to the Virginia authorities and was appointed Colonel. One of his first actions was at Harper’s Ferry on the Baltimore to Ohio Railway and at the junction of the Shenandoah and Potomac rivers. This had been one of the most strategically important positions in Virginia since the establishment of a ferry there by an Ulster Scot, Robert Harper, in 1734. It was surrounded by the Loudain and Maryland Heights and other steep mountains with
almost impassable gaps, so it was an ideal place for an important National Armoury that was constructed there. Incidentally, it was where the famous John Brown, the abolitionist, remembered even yet, in song, seized the armoury buildings and held them against the local militia for about three weeks, before being overcome. Thirteen of his eighteen supporters were either killed or badly wounded. He, himself, was tried and later hanged, an event which added to the growing ill-feeling between the North and the South.

Jackson, with a surprisingly quick move, seized the Maryland Heights which commanded the whole position. As a result large stores of military supplies, heavy guns and ammunition came into the hands of the Southern army, and they were able, too, to transfer much of the machinery to Richmond. The seizure was of great importance, because it was just before the vital battle at nearby Antietam. It was at the battle of Bull Run Creek (sometimes referred to as the Battle of Mannassas) near Washington that Jackson gained his legendary reputation and nickname of “Stonewall”. Indeed the whole brigade with which he was most closely connected became universally known as the”Stonewall Brigade.” The nucleus of that military unit were volunteers from the Ulster-Scottish educational establishment of the South, which started off as Augusta Academy and later became the Washington and Lee University.

Even in face of a highly concentrated and murderous fusillade, the whole brigade, under the orders of their undaunted commander, stood so firmly that General Lee, who had been observing the incident, said to a nearby officer, “There is Jackson standing there like a stone wall.” It was the start of the legend. He had another nickname given to him by his troops, who held him in high regard – “Old Blue Light” It was their soldierly recognition of the menacing gleam that came into his eyes before battles. His unshakable religious faith gave him the bold assurance in his military tactics that almost always ensured success.

Even against the very efficient and powerful Army of the Potomac, his close knowledge of the important passes off into the Appalachian and Blue Ridge Mountains from the Shenandoah Valley enabled him to out-manoeuvre and harass larger enemy forces. On several occasions, with timely and skilful attacks he prevented the link-up of two main parts of the Union forces that would have brought considerable risk to General Lee’s whole campaign. Even President Lincoln praised the brilliant generalship of this great leader, and described him as “a brave, honest Presbyterian soldier.”

His clever, unpredictable tactics at times had brought his army very close to Washington itself. The great effects of such a capture could hardly be assessed, although the cutting off and destruction of a major part of the Union armies would have been worse militarily. The shock of the taking of their capital would have been a severe blow to Northern confidence and morale. It was inevitable that, when the sudden attacks by General Jackson endangered Washington, there would be much criticism by influential Northern politicians and others of the Union generals and even Lincoln himself.

Several generals had been replaced, and in 1863, “Fighting Joe” Hooker was appointed as Chief in-Charge in the North Eastern theatre. It was at a critical state of the War. The Union army had suffered heavy losses at Fredericks burg and the next encounter at Chancellorsville was to be a decisive one. It was to prove a momentous one for the South. Again the skilful tactics of Lee and Jackson were to prove successful even against the drive of Hooker. Again there was a danger that the Army of the Potomac under General McClellan would be cut-off. It was certainly a victory for Southern arms but even in the midst of such triumph came the seeds of their eventual downfall.

The sending out of reconnaissance parties or patrols to obtain vital information regarding enemy strength and positions was a practice well established in warfare. Immediately after a battle much information could be gleaned by a daring sortie near the enemy lines, for there would be then much confusion and possible lack of alertness by sentries. At about 9 o’clock in the evening after the battle of Chancellorsville, a small party was seen approaching from the battlefield towards the position occupied by a Southern regiment. Thinking it was an enemy patrol, some of the troops opened fire. One of those coming nearer was seen to fall. Immediately there were shouts from the other members of the party. With horror it was discovered by those who had fired that it was their commanding officer who had been hit.

In a way that was customary to him, Stonewall Jackson was always ready and willing to undertake dangerous missions along with his men. So had it been on this tragic occasion. The legendary Confederate leader died the following day, the 10th May, 1863. General Lee said on hearing the news, “I have lost my right arm.” It was a catastrophe for the Southern forces. The universally highly rated reference book “Encyclopaedia Britannia” writes of him, “He ranks among the most skilful tacticians in military history.” Surely a high commendation from such a distinguished source. After the war during a ride in the country on his trusty steed Traveller, Lee remarked to a friend, “If I had had Stonewall Jackson at Gettysburg we should have won a great victory.” As it was Gettysburg eventually would prove to be the Confederacies Waterloo.

As the conflict dragged on seemingly interminably, in the North too, war weariness was mounting on the home front. In the midwest particularily, which had been badly hit by the loss of Southern markets and where inevitably, the peace wing of the democratic party were making inroads. Politics which appeared to favour blacks were not likely to win many votes. Indeed, racial prejudice was never far below the surface of Northern opinion. Already there had been race riots in a number of major Northern cities, such as Toledo and Cincinnati, often provoked by Irish and German immigrants, fearful for their jobs. Northern newspaper editors warned of “millions of ‘semi-savages’ intermingling with the sons and daughters of white families.” Others talked of, “free labor being ‘degraded’ by the competition of these blacks, many of whom will have to be supported as paupers and criminals at the public expense.”

Even Archbishop Hughes of New York had proclaimed that, “Catholics are willing to fight to the death for the support of the constitution, the government and the laws of the country. But if…..they are to fight for the abolition of slavery, then they would turn away in disgust from the discharge of what would otherwise be a patriotic duty.” In the same year 1862, Lincons own state of Illinois voted to ban the further settlement of blacks within its borders. Northern soldiers reflected these attitudes, too, and not all of them welcomed the ‘contrabands.’

When a delegation of leading free blacks visited the Whitehouse in August to plead the emancipation cause, Lincoln urged they consider emigration instead. Congress subsequently voted $600,000 to encourage voluntary colonisation of freed slaves and much of it went in resettling 450 black Americans on an island near Haiti, which turned out to be prone to smallpox. When most of them died from it,
Washington evacuated the survivors. The same month, August, Lincoln replied to a request from Horace Greeley at the New York Tribune urging that he turn the war into crusade for freedom with the words:

“My paramount object in this struggle is to save the Union and it is not either to save or destroy slavery. If I could save the Union without freeing any slaves I would do it. If I could save it by freeing all the slaves I would do it. If I could save it by freeing some and leaving others alone I would also do that.”

The commander of all the Union armies at the end of the Civil War was Ulysses Simpson Grant. He was the great-grandson of a County Tyrone man, John Simpson, who was born at Dergina, Ballygawley, not far from Dungannon in that county in 1738. His historic birth place now bears a commemorative plaque unveiled there in 1965 by the then American Consul in Northern Ireland. At that time, Miss Isobel Simpson, great niece of the future general and 18th president of the United States of America was the hospitable owner of the little snow-white cottage with such historic associations. A sign on the wall states, “The house is small, but the welcome is great.” Like many of his fellow-countrymen of the time, John Simpson emigrated to America in 1760. His grand-daughter, Hannah Simpson, married a skilled leather-worker, whose people had come from Scotland and had settled in Galena, in Illinois, a small town situated near that state’s boundary with Wisconsin. There had been a prosperous lead-mining industry carried on near it in the 19th century, but it did not continue. There the Grants began a harness-making business and in that picturesque place with its steep streets and handsome buildings Ulysses was born. The hard-working leather artisan tried to interest his son ,in the business
without success. Disappointed, he contacted some of his political friends, and the young man was accepted for officer-training at West Point. But there, too, he showed a greater liking for horsemanship than for military routine. However, on the outbreak of the war in Mexico, he was sent there with the rank of lieutenant. He quickly demonstrated he had a flair for leadership in war, and a knack of bringing the maximum pressure on an enemy. This latter ability was illustrated by the incident previously related, when he had a heavy gun mounted in a commanding position on top of a church tower to bring about an almost immediate surrender by the opposing force. During the war he was promoted to the rank of captain.

After the end of hostilities against Mexico his interest in the army seemed to flag again, and he resigned his commission- There followed a most unsettled time for the future general, when he tried several occupations with success. His wife, formerly Julia Dent, for whom we had great affection, maintained her faith in him. Her father gave him some wooded land near St. Louis, and there Ulysses built his own log cabin, which he named “Hard Scrabble.” This is now visited every year as a national monument by many thousands of interested patriots. He cleared some acres for farming, but it turned out a time of recession for farm produce, and again the result for him was failure.

Shortly after the outbreak of the Civil War, he offered his services to the Northern authorities. They must have recalled the military skill he had displayed a few years before, as he was appointed colonel. There was no delay either in putting into active service the unit to which he was detailed, the 21st Illinois Regiment. Within a few days they moved into Missouri for operations. It was a theatre of changing fortunes in warfare. There, his forces were opposed by those “under another general of Ulster blood, Leonidas Polk. In the first battle of Shiloh the Union forces had suffered a setback, but Grant mounted a surprise counter attack. The general in over-all command of the Southern armies, Albert Sydney Johnston, was killed, and victory was gained for the North. The losses on both sides were very heavy, almost 25,000 men. Grant was promoted to Brigadier, an event which pleased his father, who counselled him to be sure and not lose such a good job. His views on tactics were bluntly expressed in his response to a query if he had read a popular book by a French strategist. He said that all one had to do was to seek out the enemy and “hit him with everything you’ve got, and keep on at it.”

There was this relentless persistence displayed in most of his campaigns. In 1862, as well as his victory at Shiloh, he pushed on to capture the strategically important Forts Henry and Donelson on the Tennessee River. His greatest victory in the West was the taking of Vicksburg on the Mississippi. It was largely surrounded by soggy,
swampy land on the main approach routes, and it was only from the East that it could be taken. His campaign was masterly. He struggled with his men through the Louisiana swamps, to reach a position from which the gunboats and transports could float down past the defence batteries. They were almost beyond the range of the guns with their lights out and engines stopped, when firing began. However, the plan
had succeeded. They reached firmer ground and went Eastwards to reach the town of Jackson. From there they began a successful siege and Vicksburg was surrendered at the time of the battle of Gettysburg in the East. About that time someone had said to Lincoln that Grant was a heavy whisky drinker.

The unimpressed President replied that. if his informer could find out the brand of spirits, he would get some for some of the rest of his generals. Grant, himself. was not given to display. The President once remarked, “I don’t know what to make of Grant. he’ s such a quiet fellow. The only way I know he’ s around is by the way he makes things git.” In March, 1864, Lincoln appointed Grant Commander of all the Union armies, and he took on the immediate command of the North-Eastern sector. His dogged, tenacious, approach to war, soon stamped itself on operations. It was to be a conflict of attrition. When he led the Northern forces over the river Rapid and to begin the “Wilderness” campaign, the fighting became even more vicious, and losses heavier. His advance took on a relentless character, and, although General Lee’s forces struck back very hard, and inflicted many casualties, still the Northern army kept pressing forward.

Meanwhile Sherman had begun his destructive march to the sea. This was largely against civilians, crops, and property. It finally brought his forces to Georgia, and the Carolinas, inflicting 100 million dollars worth of damage, most of which was admitted as “simply waste and destruction”. Lee held out in the strategically vital centre of communications, Petersburg, hoping to break out to link up with General Joe Johnston’s forces. But it was not to be. They did break out. but were hemmed in again at Appomattox. General Lee was left with no alternative, but to surrender. One can well understand his painful statement, ‘There is nothing left for me to do, but to go and see General Grant. I would rather die a thousand deaths.”

Leein Defeat AppomattoxHowever, he was to find the Northern Commander most magnanimous. They met on Palm Sunday, April 9th, 1865. Grant said that the Confederate soldiers were not, treated as those conquered, but as fellow countrymen. He ordered that those who had claim to horses should be allowed to take them, and, on their word of parole, were to go home to start life anew. He even forbade any mocking cheering from his men as General Robert E. Lee rode away.