Monthly Archives: November 2014

Acts of Union 1

Scotland’s journey to Union

On 18 September 2014, voters in Scotland were asked in a referendum whether they want the nation to become independent from the rest of the United Kingdom. We thank God that they chose to remain part of the United Kingdom making it a stronger better place. There has always been a tension at the heart of our Union since it contains four separate nations, three of which have had a long history of self governance. To fully understand the difficult marriage between England and Scotland it is useful to look back over its development. We draw upon a BBC resource to be found at  http://www.bbc.co.uk/timelines/zypbgk7

The road to Union spanned centuries. Monarchy, religion, wars and money all played a part in an intriguing and often bloody story. This timeline will guide you through the key events leading to the signing of the Act of the Union in 1707.

1237

The Treaty of York

Medieval map of Great Britain by Matthew Paris. Copyright British Library

The border lands changed allegiance many times prior the 13th century. Image: Paris map of Britain detail, British Library Board.

For the first time, the border between Scotland and England is established.

In an attempt to consolidate his kingdom, Alexander II of Scotland signs the Treaty of York with Henry III of England. The Treaty officially defines the border and remains in place with only the ownership of Berwick-upon-Tweed being contested over the following years. This is finally settled in 1482 when the town is captured and held by English forces.

More about Alexander II (royal.gov.uk)

1295

Edward I, invasion and the ‘Auld Alliance’

Edward I strips Scotland of its symbols of sovereignty. Clip: A History of Scotland

After the sudden deaths of Alexander III of Scotland in 1286, and his daughter Margaret in 1290, there are many claimants to the throne.

England’s Edward I agrees to adjudicate but requires the claimants to accept him as their superior lord. In 1292, he selects Scottish nobleman John Balliol. In 1295, the Scots sign a treaty of alliance with France; the ‘Auld Alliance’. Edward invades Scotland. His army rampages through Berwick, then Dunbar, overpowering the Scots. Balliol is imprisoned and exiled. Scots lords are forced to pledge allegiance to Edward.

Find out more about Edward I

1297

Scotland revolts

Scots forces win a striking victory at Stirling. Clip: A History of Scotland

Local revolts against English rule turn into a national rebellion in 1297 under the leadership of William Wallace and Andrew Moray.

Higher taxes and the threat of war with France lead many ordinary Scots to join the rebel army. English control of Scotland is weakened but armed conflict continues as Balliol remains in exile. In 1305, Wallace is captured and executed by Edward in London.

Why is Stirling Castle the bloody heart of Scotland?

1314

Battle of Bannockburn

Key to victory at Bannockburn was the ‘schiltron’ formation. Clip: The Quest for Bannockburn

Robert the Bruce murders John Comyn, a rival claimant to the Scottish throne, and has himself crowned king in 1306.

Bruce leads a guerrilla war against English occupation, slowly building support in Scotland for his kingship. On 23-24 June 1314, the armies of Robert the Bruce and Edward II meet at Bannockburn, near Stirling. Bruce’s army is greatly outnumbered. But with the twin advantages of local knowledge and military cunning, the English are overwhelmed. Edward’s army is forced into a humiliating retreat.

Six crucial moments during the Battle of Bannockburn

1320

The Declaration of Arbroath

Prof Ted Cowan discusses the legacy of the Declaration of Arbroath. Clip: Scotland’s History Top Ten

Baronial supporters of Robert I sign a letter to the Pope asking for papal backing in their fight against English overlordship.

The letter, prepared at Arbroath Abbey in 1320, announces that Bruce has freed the country but, if he ever submits to the English he will be driven out and replaced as king. The declaration states “…for, as long as but a hundred of us remain alive, never will we on any conditions, be brought under English rule”. In 1328, Edward III agrees to recognise the independence of the Scottish throne. Scotland’s alliance with France leads to intermittent fighting as part of the Hundred Years War.

See the only surviving copy of the Declaration

It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself.

Declaration of Arbroath, 1320

1502

Treaty of Perpetual Peace

 The influential legacy of the marriage of the Thistle and the Rose. Clip: A History of Scotland

A long dynastic conflict in England, the Wars of the Roses, leads the first Tudor king, Henry VII, to make peace overtures to Scotland.

A treaty intended to end over 200 years of enmity is signed by Henry and James IV of Scotland. The following year James marries Henry’s daughter, Margaret Tudor. The terms of the treaty are broken in 1513 when war between England and France is renewed and the Scots invade England in defence of the Auld Alliance. James is killed at the Battle of Flodden. His son takes the throne as James V.

Margaret Tudor: Scotland’s forgotten queenHow James IV met his death at the Battle of Flodden

1542

Mary, Queen of Scots

The infant Queen of Scots, becomes a pawn in an Anglo-French power struggle. Clip: A History of Scotland

Mary, the only child of James V and his French wife, Mary of Guise, is born. James dies six days later and Mary becomes queen.

In 1543 Scotland’s Regent, the Earl of Arran, agrees a marriage alliance with England, now a Protestant realm under Henry VIII. Mary is to wed Henry VIII’s son Edward. Scotland’s parliament rejects the treaty and Henry invades Scotland in what becomes known as ‘the Rough Wooing’. Scotland turns to France, agreeing a marriage between Mary and France’s crown prince. Mary lives in France from 1548 becoming its queen in 1558. She returns to govern Scotland in 1561 after the death of Francis II.

Your Paintings: Mary’s return to Edinburgh

1560

The Reformation

 mary_john_knox_labelled_s1

Historian Jenny Wormald outlines the legacy of the Reformation in Scotland. Clip: Scotland’s History Top Ten

The religious reformation sweeping across Europe takes hold in Scotland.

In Scotland, a Protestant uprising in 1559 combines with discontent over the nation’s status as a French satellite state. Queen Elizabeth of England sends troops to aid the Protestant rebels. In 1560, the Scottish parliament accepts a Protestant confession of faith. A treaty requires the removal of both English and French troops from Scottish soil. Mary maintains links with Catholic France but leading Protestant nobles in Scotland are now more open to alliance with Protestant England.

Patrick Hamilton, Scotland’s first Protestant martyr

1566

The birth of James VI

Dr Clare Jackson discusses James’s very royal bloodline. Clip: The Stuarts

Mary, Queen of Scots marries a Scottish noble, Lord Darnley and has a son, James.

As a great-grandson of Margaret Tudor, James is the nearest heir to England’s unmarried Queen Elizabeth. In 1567, Darnley is murdered. There are suspicions about Mary’s involvement and, when she marries the chief suspect, the Earl of Bothwell, she is forced to abdicate in favour of James. Mary flees to England and never sees James again. She is imprisoned by Elizabeth I and executed in 1587 for plotting to overthrow the English queen.

A turbulent life: Mary, Queen of Scots, mother of James

1603

The Union of the Crowns

After claiming the English throne, James rarely returned to Scotland and boasted that he ruled it “with a pen”. Clip: A History of Scotland

England’s Queen Elizabeth dies childless, ending the Tudor reign.

Elizabeth’s cousin, James VI of Scotland, inherits the crowns of England, Wales and Ireland. From his reign in Scotland James is known to be an effective and accomplished king. James VI, now James I of England, styles himself the King of Great Britain, but the English and Scottish parliaments resist proposals for formal union. Each country remains a separate sovereign realm.

How James VI claimed the throne of England

I will govern according to the common weal, but not according to the common will

King James I (James VI of Scotland), 1621

1637

Charles I’s prayer book and the Covenanters

Covenanter dissent threatens to tip Scotland into war against its king. Clip: The Sword and the Cross

With the Scottish king now in London, consultation with Scotland declines and discontent builds.

In 1637, James’s son, Charles I, introduces a prayer book for the Scottish church that many consider to be insufficiently Protestant. A revolt leads to the swearing of the National Covenant in 1638, creating a rebel movement in defence of the church. Armed rebellion follows and the Covenanters invade England to force the king to agree terms. A treaty is agreed, but by 1641 conflict is rising between Charles and the English parliament and a revolt begins in Ireland.

More about the Covenanters (bcw-project.org)

1643

The Solemn League and Covenant

In return for military assistance the Scots seek religious union. Clip: The Sword and the Cross

Civil war in England leads parliamentarian rebels to ask for armed assistance from Scotland.

The Covenanters in Scotland agree to help in return for promises that the churches of England and Ireland will be reformed on Presbyterian lines. The Solemn League and Covenant envisions a British Protestant union with the kingdoms united under the same monarch with similar, though not united, churches. The Solemn League has strong popular support in Scotland but much less in England and Ireland.

Web extra clip: the importance of the Battle of Edgehill

1652

Cromwellian Union

Statue of Oliver Cromwell

Hundreds of Scottish war prisoners were sent to the colonies as slaves by Cromwell

To Scotland’s outrage, Charles I, the son of James VI, is executed in 1649. England abolishes the monarchy but Scotland names Charles’s son as king.

Cromwell invades Scotland in response, inflicting a bloody defeat at Dunbar. By 1652 and under military occupation, Scotland accepts a Tender of Union leading to the formation of the united Commonwealth of England, Scotland and Ireland. Representatives from Scotland serve at Westminster. But with the death of Cromwell, Charles II is restored to his British crowns in 1660.

Who was Oliver Cromwell?

1688-90

Revolution and the Jacobites

How did a lullaby warn of an impending revolution? Clip: A History of Scotland

In 1685, the Catholic brother of Charles II takes the British thrones as James II and VII.

By 1688 English peers unhappy with his rule invite William of Orange, Protestant leader of the Netherlands, to invade. James flees to France and the parliaments of England and Scotland each offer the crown to William and his wife Mary. The Scottish parliament re-establishes Presbyterianism when bishops back James as the legitimate king of Scotland. Refusing to accept William, John Graham of Claverhouse leads a revolt – the first of many Jacobite attempts to restore James and his descendants.

Killiecrankie: Scotland’s first Jacobite rising

1695

Company of Scotland Act

18th century map depicting the isthmus of Panama. Mary Evans Picture Library

The isthmus of Panama was controlled by Spain and as such the Scottish plan risked Spanish hostility and aggression.

Though Scots are allowed to hold property in England as natives, they are denied access to England’s lucrative overseas colonies.

The Scottish Parliament launches a bold initiative to set up a national trading company, which in 1698 founds a colony at Darien, in Panama. Pressure from English traders prevents the Scots from raising capital in London, Amsterdam and Hamburg. But the Scottish public embraces the scheme, investing about a quarter of Scotland’s liquid capital in this high-risk venture.

A History of the World: the Darien Chest

1698

The Darien Scheme

The Darien trading scheme predates the Panama Canal by hundreds of miles. Scotland’s Empire: North America

The Darien Scheme is a disaster.

Many of the settlers die during the voyage and, on arrival, survivors face disease, revolt, sabotage by England and attacks from Spain. King William refuses to support the colony, creating huge discontent in Scotland and a feeling that Scottish sovereignty has been lost. Coming after several years of harvest failures due to extreme weather, the Darien failure worsens a serious credit crunch. Scotland’s financial losses are great.

Find out more about the Darien scheme

1702-1706

Succession Crisis & Union

Statue of Queen Anne

Anne’s father, James II, forfeited the throne due to his Catholicism

A succession crisis prompts Queen Anne to pursue a complete union between Scotland and England.

Leading English Tories sink a first attempt in 1702. In 1703 and 1704 the Scottish Parliament demands reform before it will name Anne’s successor. A Whig Parliament in 1705 forces the Scots into treaty talks by threatening to cut off trade. In 1706 terms are set for a united kingdom of Great Britain with 45 Scottish MPs in the House of Commons and 16 nobles in the House of Lords. It offers free trade across the nations and all colonies but under higher English customs and excise rates.

Who was Queen Anne, the last Stuart monarch?

Neither our sovereignty nor our antiquity are lost in an incorporating union with England

Sir John Clerk of Penicuik

1707

The Act of Union

Despite being unpopular, the signing of the Act did not result in widespread civil unrest. Clip: Scotland’s Empire: North America

The Scottish Parliament passes the treaty amidst great debate.

Unionists argue the treaty will create a strong Protestant realm able to counter the growing problem of Catholic France, supporter of James Stuart. Parliamentary supporters are secretly paid £20,000 by the government. Opponents express concern for the loss of the ancient Scottish kingdom and parliament. Presbyterian opposition in Scotland leads to an act preserving the Presbyterian church. The treaty is passed in England and on 1 May 1707, the United Kingdom of Great Britain comes into being.

Read the Articles of Union (parliament.uk)

Why should I be so sad on my wedding day?

Played by the bells of St Giles’ Cathedral, Edinburgh on 1 May, 1707
1 May
1707

Where next?

Read

Find out more about Scotland’s history

Feed your curiosity

Read

The early Stuarts: marriage is power

Why Stirling Castle is the bloody heart of Scotland

Watch

Six key moments during the Battle of Bannockburn

17072011

Scotland’s road to referendum

The Scottish Covenanters – Introduction

knox

The Scottish Covenanters – Introduction.

Seven Lessons from Guy Fawkes Day

Seven Lessons from Guy Fawkes Day.

County Grand Lodge of Antrim Annual Meeting

The County Grand Lodge of Antrim held their Annual Meeting in ILOI Headquarters Edward Street Ballymoney on Saturday 15th November 2014 at 6.30pm. The CGM Wor Bro James Anderson welcomed all to the meeting.

Normal business was discussed including an invitation from Ballymoney District ILOL No 1 to hold the County Demonstration on the 13th July 2015. The Election of Officers was carried out by Wor Bro R J Johnston PIGM and the Installation by Wor Bro Cyril Glass PCGM PIGM IGL.

The five main officers were all re-elected CGM Wor Bro James Anderson, DCGM Wor Bro David Johnston, CGC Wor Bro Derek McFarland, CGS Wor Bro William Fenton and CGT Wor Bro Roy Wilson. After all business was conducted the meeting was closed and supper served.

McNeillstown ILOL 46 would like to congratulate the County Officers upon their election and wish them well and God’s richest blessing in the ensuing year. It will no doubt see the same success and  progress as previous terms of office.

County Grand Lodge of Antrim Officers 2014/15

Battle of the Diamond 1795 – An Eye Witness Account

Written by Joseph Atkinson

(This account is written in Joseph Atkinson’s hand on the rear of an account ledger commencing 1752 which, along with other Atkinson estate pages, was donated to Armagh County Museum in 1969 and is referred to as ARM126 1969. In addition there is another torn letter in copperplate handwriting in the ledger dated March 16 1825 giving a similar account.)

For several days prior to 21st September 1795 this neighbourhood was disturbed by riots of Defenders and on the 18th day of said month, they took possession of the gravel pit of Annaghmore, their position amounting I should suppose to about 500 men and having a white flag hoisted; on which the whole neighbourhood of good loyal Protestants became alarmed and assembled on the hill of Cranagil opposite to Annaghmore – on the morning of the said day a skirmish took place in the townland of Teaguy in which there was a man killed of the name McCan a Defender who had previously declared he would violate one of the prettiest Protestant girls in the Parish of Tartaraghan. Sometime on the day Archdale Cope, Robert C. Cope his brother, John Hardy, Counsellor Archdale with priests Tagart, McPartlin and Trainor came to my house [Crowhill] and we all went to the Protestants where they were stationed on Cranagil.

963-Cottage1

Archdale Cope and priest Tagart proposed to me to make the Protestants lay down their arms, whereupon I proposed that they should not do so until the Papists first lay down theirs, as I considered that the former were entitled to carry arms, whereas the others were not, on which Tagart spoke out and said they should fight it out to which I replied ‘with all my heart’ – we however then rode over to Papist party where an old woman shouted: ‘there is Atkinson the traitor’ and immediately one of the party levelled his gun at me when a tenant, a woman who lived on my land caught the gun and declared her Landlord should not be shot, on which we rode off and got round to my house when it was proposed that priest Tagart should secure the Papists and I would secure the Protestants in £500 each. The preliminaries were drawn up by Counsellor Archdale and signed and witnessed by me, the priest [Tagart?] this money was to be forfeited by either of the parties breaking the truce. This day I kept the priests to dine with me and at night they proposed staying at my house. I told them I had not beds for them, but said we might sit up all night, which we did and during the night several Protestants came to my house and declared the opposite party was firing on their houses. I said then in presence of the priests, not to fire a shot, as it would gain me £500, but if they should attack their houses then to put them to death if possible.

On Saturday they were skirmishing through the neighbourhood. No lives lost this day, on Sunday all was perfectly quiet and remained so all night.

I rose up on Monday 21st at about 5 o’clock and immediately after the firing commenced on the Protestant houses at the Diamond, this we did not expect, numbers came flying to my house. I gave out all the ammunition I had and set out immediately with my family for the Fort of Charlemont, as I was well aware that their great object was to destroy my house – on the road I heard that the Protestants were winning. I then made my family return. I went on to Charlemont myself. I got Capt. [Villiers?] and 60 invalids to accompany me and when we arrived at the Diamond the battle was over. The man who commanded was Captain McGarry from the White Cross above Armagh. There were about 300 of the Defenders well armed and all strangers. Quigly did not appear but I understand that he was the person who conducted them there. McGarry and about 16 were killed. Afterwards I heard there were a great many more – this ended the Diamond fight which is in Rudock’s Grange about a short [mile from my house?] and these are the facts that cannot be contradicted.

Transcribed by Jack Redmond and reviews by Trevor Geary and Sean Bardon at Armagh County Museum on 1st Feb 2012

Vandals daub church in Antrim with pro-IRA graffiti

Local MP Commemorated

Commemoration service for first British MP to die in WW1

Lord Eames, former Church of Ireland Primate, conducts the commemoration service for Captain Arthur O'Neill at Westminster
Lord Eames, former Church of Ireland Primate, conducts the commemoration service for Captain Arthur O’Neill at Westminster

A local Ulster MP Cpt Arthur O’Neill was the  first British MP to die in World War One. His life  has been commemorated at Westminster on the 100th anniversary of his death.

The service for Capt Arthur O’Neill, who was elected as the Ulster Unionist Party MP for Mid-Antrim in 1910, was conducted by former Church of Ireland primate of All Ireland, Archbishop Robin Eames.

Capt O’Neill, father of former Northern Ireland Prime Minister Terence O’Neill, and the lodges local MP died while fighting with the 2nd Life Guards regiment at Zillebeke Ridge in Flanders on 6 November 1914, aged 38.

Arthur O’Neill, the elder son and heir of the second Baron O’Neill and Lady O’Neill of Shanes Castle, County Antrim, was educated at Eton. He was gazetted to the 2nd Life Guards from the Militia in 1897 and served in the earlier part of the South African War, taking part in the relief of Kimberley and operations in the Orange Free State at Paardeberg, the action at Dreifontein, and the action at Colesberg.

Jeffrey Donaldson MP laid a wreath during the service of Capt O'Neill
Jeffrey Donaldson MP laid a wreath during the service of Capt O’Neill
Foyle MP Mark Durkan was among those gathered at Westminster to commemorate Capt O'Neill
MPs from several parties gathered at Westminster to commemorate Capt O’Neill

Afterwards, he served in Cape Colony, south of the Orange River, and took part in several actions, for which he was awarded the Queen’s Medal with three clasps. He was promoted to captain in 1902.

In 1902, he married Lady Annabel Hungerford Crewe-Milnes. Two of their sons were to die in action in World War Two.

Capt O’Neill represented Mid-Antrim from the general election of January, 1910 and took an active part in the formation of the Ulster Volunteer Force. Like many of the great unionist families he was anti-Home Rule and, along with Sir William Adair and the Youngs of Galgorm Castle, played a key role in the establishment of the local Ulster Volunteer Force. His military background was invaluable in establishing drilling and training regimes for recruits.

aoneill

Arch in Henry Street, Harryville, erected to support Captain Arthur O’Neill in his campaign for election to Westminster in 1910. Capt O’Neill can be seen in the centre and George Young is the tall man beside him.

He rejoined his regiment only three weeks before his death. He was killed in action at Klein Zillebeke ridge in Belgium during a bayonet charge while serving with A Squadron, 2nd Life Guards and was the first sitting member of the British Houses of Parliament to be killed during the Great War.

The following is an extract from the Regimental War diary of the events of that time

” The Regt was placed in Reserve in the woods near the 4th Guards Bde H Q. At about 3.30 pm the Bde was urgently sent for and hurried towards ZILLEBEKE to support the French on the right of the Guards Bde who had been driven out of their trenches by a most determined attack.

The Regiment was dismounted under fire close to the above mentioned village and was ordered to establish iteself on the KLEIN ZILLEBEKE ridge keeping touch with the 1st Life Guards on the right who were to ? the line on the right of the Guards Brigade. Maj. the Hon. H. DAWNAY ordered the ‘B’ squadron to advance ? across the open and ? the high ground in front. ? the ‘D’ squadron was send across the ZILLEBEKE – ZWARTETEN road to ? the right flank by moving parallel to the railway. The ‘C’ troop and machine guns were kept in reserve ready to support the ‘B’ squadron. This latter squadron succeeded in reaching the edge of the wood on the ridge after ? fighting owing to the ? bring in ? of ? in?ted horses. Almost at? once the right flank of the ‘B’ became exposed to an enfilade? fire which caused Maj. DAWNAY to order the squadron to fall back slowly by troops. This order was shortly afterwards countermanded owing to French reinforcements appearing. The squadron was then ordered to fix bayonets and charge the wood which the C troop was taken by the C O to fill the gap which had occurred in between the two squadrons. This troop ? attacked the village of ZWARTETEN using the bayonet with great effect and taking a certain number of prisoners. The ‘B’ sqdn meanwhile drove back the enemy several? hundred yards and occupied a ditch 200* from their position. Owing to the trench infantry again falling back the ‘B’ sqdn and the Blues were ordered by the Brigadier to move across the ZWARTETEN – VERBRANDEN-MOLEN road and support the ‘C’ troop which was occuping a single ridge S E of the hamlet. The fighting in this vicinity became very involved owing to the somewhat precipitate retreat of the French and in consequence severe casualties were incurred. Part of the ground gained including a portion of ZWARTETEN was lost?. The situation which was becoming somewhat critical was restored by the ? of the 22nd Infantry Bde which took over the trenches held by the Bde. During these operations the ‘D’ sqdn did not fall back but retained their ground till relieved by the 60th Rifles. The confusion that occurred at one period apart from the aforementioned reason may be attributed to the very severe casualties amongst the officers / 17 in the Bde, Lord Cavan [Brigadier-General the Earl of Cavan] commanding 4th Guards Bde reported that the Bde had behaved in a most gallant manner, and that its prompt and vigorous action had saved what threatened to be a most critical situation.

MARGIN NOTES

Ref. Sheet 28
BELGIUM

*The other 3 troops of ‘C’ squadron were posted on 30th Oct at ZANBE?

Casualties
Killed
Maj. The Hon. H. DAWNAY
Maj. The Hon. A. O’NEIL[L]
2 Lieut. W. PETERSEN
Wounded
2 Lieut. T. JOBSON
Lieut. Q. SANDYS
2 Lieut. A. HOBSON

38 rank and file killed, wounded and missing

3 horses killed
The entry for this eventful day looks to have been hastily written, and is therefore difficult to read in places.


“O’NEILL, Arthur E. B., Captain, 2nd Life Guards, was KIA on the 4th [sic] November 1914. He was aged 38 and was the 2nd son of Baron O’Neill of Shane’s Castle, Randalstown.. He was the MP for Mid-Antrim and was the first MP to die in the war. He is commemorated on the Ypres Memorial (Menin Gate), Belgium.” (from Ballymena 1914-1918)

More on the officers killed on this day from Ballymena 1914-1918

His younger brother Hugh, later Baron Rathcavan, succeeded him as MP for Mid-Antrim.

Westminster commemoration service Capt O’Neill was killed three weeks after rejoining his regiment

Remembrance Sunday

Today the lodge joins with the nation in remembrance of our glorious war dead. As Ulstermen stop to pay tribute to the great loss in the Great War we pay silent tribute. The events at cenotaphs across the country will today be the focus of remembrance.

image

Remembrance Sunday: Nation falls silent as Queen leads the Nation
The Queen is leading commemorations as the UK remembers service personnel who have died during conflicts.

A two-minute silence is being observed ahead of the monarch laying a wreath in central London, the focal point of the UK’s Remembrance Sunday.

Events are being held across the UK and abroad, including in Afghanistan.

This year marks the 100th anniversary of the start of World War One, 70 years since the D-Day landings and the end of Britain’s conflict in Afghanistan.

David Cameron said the anniversaries made the commemorations “particularly poignant”.

Security is visibly tighter in central London this year.

Scotland Yard said there would be “appropriate and proportionate” policing at the Cenotaph after four men were arrested on Thursday in west London and High Wycombe in connection with an alleged Islamist terrorism plot on British soil. Sadly we in Northern Ireland know the tragic reality of terrorist attacks upon a Remembrance Sunday Service as Sinn Fein / IRA bombed the Poppy Day ceremony in Enniskillen. We pray that Islamic terrorists do not stoop as low as Roman Catholic terrorists and that our Remembrance Sunday is a safe day for us all.
image

Band plays in central London
Gen Sir Nicholas Houghton, Chief of the Defence Staff, said celebrations would have a “different feel this year”.

‘Intensity and poignancy’
He told the Andrew Marr Show the anniversary of the start of WW1 and the D-Day landings, as well as the withdrawal of UK troops from Afghanistan, meant there would be added “intensity” and “poignancy” to events.

He also said “the proximity of the sense of threat for this weekend” had “intensified” security levels.

The queue may have been stretching down almost to Westminster Bridge, but those waiting to get onto Whitehall were happy to wait.

The security measures saw airport-style scanners used on everyone wanting to witness the Remembrance Sunday commemorations, as well as bags being searched by police officers.

There were also armed police on Whitehall, and officers lining the street.

The increased security did not put people off from attending the annual event – with many saying they welcomed the measures.

Waiting in the queue, Karen Wright, from Kingston-on-Thames, said: “This is our seventh year coming down here. There’s always a handbag search, but nothing like this.” Her husband Adrian added: “We put up with this because of the current situation – we don’t mind at all.”

Monty Wild, 70, from Droitwich, said: “We expected to queue, with there being a higher threat.

“I’m just glad we live in a country that takes all these precautions and does it so well.” But “we’ve just got to keep continuing our normal life,” he said.

“The last thing that we at all would want to do is succumb to any sense that there is a terrorist threat there that is at all going to stop the British way of life.”

‘Tremendous debt’
Mr Cameron said: “Today we stand united to remember the courageous men and women who have served our country, defended our freedoms and kept us safe.

“We remember all those who have fallen and those who have risked their lives to protect us.

“We owe each and every member of our armed forces and the families who support them a tremendous debt – one that can never be repaid – and I pay huge tribute to their bravery .

The Queen will be joined by the Duke of Edinburgh for the wreath-laying ceremony at the Cenotaph in Whitehall, along with the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall, and the Earl and Countess of Wessex.

After dusk falls, images of falling poppies are to be projected on to Big Ben, officially known as Parliament’s Elizabeth Tower.

strong>
The Queen and Prince Philip
The Queen and Prince Philip attended a remembrance event at the Royal Albert Hall
image

On Saturday, the Queen and other members of the Royal Family joined veterans and the public at the Royal British Legion’s annual Festival of Remembrance at the Royal Albert Hall in London.

Elsewhere on Sunday, a service will also be held at the National Memorial Arboretum in Staffordshire.

In Glasgow, a two-minute silence will be observed at the cenotaph in George Square, while in Edinburgh a parade will take place from the castle esplanade to the city’s stone of remembrance.

Scotland’s First Minister Alex Salmond will be among those laying wreaths, and a ceremonial gun will be fired.

In Wales, the national service will take place at the Welsh National War Memorial in Cardiff.

And Secretary of State Theresa Villiers will lay a wreath on behalf of the government at the Cenotaph at Belfast City Hall.

Earlier this week, David Cameron announced that a key part of the World War One poppy display at the Tower of London is to remain in place until the end of November.

The installation of ceramic poppies, entitled Blood Swept Lands And Seas Of Red, is to be dismantled on 12 November. But the Wave segment will now stay in place until the end of the month before being sent on a tour across the UK until 2018, when it will be joined by the installation’s Weeping Window
image

Background to the Gunpowder Plot

England’s Gunpowder Plot of 1605


5/11 The Greatest Act of Religious Terrorism in History.

Forget 9/11 or ISIS the most dangerous and ambitious terrorist plot was planned in Britain by a group of religious fanatics. They were not Islamic fundamentalists but Roman Catholic community leaders inspired by the hate message of their church.

Cloaked with zeale of Superstitious Religion,
aymed in deed at the Subversion of the State,
and to induce an horrible confusion of all things.


Proclamation of James I against the Gunpowder Plotters,
7 November 1605.

It used to be common in England that as the fifth of November approached, children would stand on street corners with stuffed figures of a man and ask passers-by the question, “A penny for the Guy?” The Guy in question was an effigy of the arch-traitor Guy Fawkes. When the evening of November 5th arrived, the Guyall the Guys would be taken to an area of bonfires and burned in ceremony.

The holiday
known as Guy Fawkes Day commemorates the foiling of a plot by Guy Fawkes and other Catholic extremists to blow up King James I and his Parliament in 1605. To this day yeoman warders search the Houses of Parliament at the opening of Parliament for explosives. This holiday and its rituals have been repeated in differing forms for over four centuries, but they have their origins in a very tense and nervous time in English history.

War, Depression, Famine, Disease

In 1600 England was facing an uncertain future fraught with various dangers. It was a time of bad news on multiple fronts.

The war with Spain began in 1588 with the great victory over the Spanish Armada, but the conflict had continued to drag on for over a decade with fading hopes of decisive victories.

Economic depression developed as the war drained England’s manpower and treasure while it stifled trade.

Bad weather caused poor harvests, and poor harvests lead to famine. Famine weakened the population’s resistance, leading to epidemics of contagious disease.

England’s war with Spain prompted the restive Irish to rebel in 1594 under the leadership of Hugh O’Neill, the earl of Tyrone. His skillful leadership prevented the English fromthe dashing onesuppressing the rebels. Even Queen Elizabeth’s favorite, the dashing Robert Devereux, the earl of Essex, proved unequal to the task of defeating Tyrone. Instead he let Tyrone wear down his army of sixteen thousand men in a matter of twenty-one weeks during 1599 and promptly abandoned his command to return to London, much to the dismay of Elizabeth I.

Ireland appeared lost,
but thanks to the generalship of Charles Blount, Lord Mountjoy, both the Irish and a relief expedition of Spanish troops were defeated at Kinsale in 1603. Ireland remained an English possession but just barely.

the QueenMeanwhile, Elizabeth
in 1600 had been queen for over forty years and was now in her late sixties. Yes, she had lived significantly longer than her grandfather, father, brother, and sister. But that didn’t matter much to the queen, who raged against old age and refused to admit that her death was approaching. She also refused to clarify her wishes concerning the issue of succession, choosing to spend her energy in a May-December flirtation with the Earl of Essex. Many of her subjects were scandalized, while others were positioning themselves for the succession. Most people assumed her successor would be James VI of Scotland, although other plausible claimants waited their opportunity.

Elizabeth I had lingered too long on the stage of history. Her people longed for a change.

 

International Religious Conflict – Pits Protestant against Catholic

England’s war with Spain symbolized a wider struggle between Protestant and Catholic powers in Europe. Within England, a Catholic minority kept the Protestant majority nervous. Were the Catholics traitors in the midst of their own country? Would they help cruel Spanish armies to invade England and reestablish Catholicism? Most English Catholics vehemently denied these charges, but a few harbored irreconcilable grievances.

The English government was also divided by the competition between William Cecil and his son Robert on the one side and the ambitious and arrogant Earl of Essex on the other. By 1600 Essex’s star was fading. His failure and dereliction of duty inCecilIreland had lost him the regard and favor of Queen Elizabeth, who began to rescind the privileges and sources of wealth she had bestowed on him.

Threatened with ruin,Essex decided to purge Elizabeth’s government of his enemies through acoup d’etat, even if it meant taking her prisoner. His preparations aroused suspicion, forcing him to launch his coup without much hope of success on 8 February 1601. It failed in a single day. The authorities arrested Essex, who was swiftly tried and just as swiftly executed on 25 February.

With the elimination of Essex, Robert Cecil became the supreme power in the Elizabethan court. But the attempted coup and its violent aftermath had severely shaken the Queen’s health. She began to deteriorate noticeably, even as she remained in denial about her mortality, and doggedly clung to life. When at last she died on 24 March 1603, the succession of James VI as James I of England proceeded smoothly on the surface. Underneath raged a torrent of discontent and intrigue.

James I, like Elizabeth I, faced the problem of war with Spain, a costly and lingering conflict with no apparent end in sight. The new king had some difficulty recognizing that England was notJames Inearly as wealthy a kingdom as he thought it was.

Unlike Elizabeth,
James I bore the political problem of being Scottish. Adversaries for centuries, England and Scotland disliked one other intensely, harboring deep cultural prejudices and widespread political mistrust. James also bore the burden of hope that accompanies any major political change. The coming of a new monarch created optimism among both English Catholics and radical Protestants that James I would change their circumstances for the better. They were bound to be disappointed.

The first Catholic  plan, known as the Bye Plot, originated with the secular priest William Watson, who was profoundly disappointed by James I’s failure to immediately reduce the penal laws that oppressed English Catholics. The plan envisioned the kidnapping of James I, who would be forced during captivity to overturn the oppressive laws against Catholics. An uprising was planned to coincide with the kidnapping.

The plot failed after Jesuits betrayed the conspirators to government officials. The traitors were tried and convicted — and this time, James I showed no mercy. The Catholic conspirators, the priest Watson, and sympathizer George Brook were savagely executed.

With plots against his rule launched by both Catholics and Protestants, King James I, somewhat timid to begin with, became seriously apprehensive about his security.

the conspirators

1604 brought peace with Spain but no legal relief to the Catholic minority of England, although James I was not particularly interested in persecution. Still, a small group of Catholic extremists remained disgruntled and alienated from their government and their countrymen. Hence the third and most memorable plot, the one that gave rise to a lasting holiday.

Although Guy Fawkes is the plotter commonly remembered today, the real leader of the conspiracy was Robert Catesby. A member of a Catholic family of Warwickshire, he was also a descendent of William Catesby, the minister of Richard III who was executed in the aftermath of the Battle of Bosworth Field. Robert had good reason to resent the crown.

Robert Catesby had paid dearly for his participation in the Essex Rebellion of 1601, suffering imprisonment and ruinous fines on his estates. The persecutions of his fellow Catholics also aroused his ire. When the accession of James I brought no relief, Catesby conceived a plan to blow up James I and the English Parliament. In the aftermath of death and destruction, he would rise from the ashes to reestablish Catholic rule.

Let’s Blow ‘Er Up.

On 20 May 1604 he unveiled his scheme to other disgruntled Catholics at the Duck and Drake Inn along the Strand in London. His fellow conspirators at that time were Thomas Winter, John Wright, Thomas Percy, and Guy Fawkes.

Fawkes was born into a Protestant family, but he converted to Catholicism and fought in the Spanish army against the Dutch rebels in the Netherlands. Most importantly to the conspiracy, Fawkes was a man who knew gunpowder.

The group ultimately expanded to the ill-omened number of thirteen.

Thomas Percy, one of the thirteen, was a relative of Henry Percy, the ninth earl of Northumberland. Thomas also collected rents for the Earl, making him a trusted servant. In fact, the Earl secured Thomas Percy a position as a gentleman pensioner without having Thomas swear the Oath of Allegiance, something that would have presented a genuine ethical dilemma for a good Catholic. That favor would come back to haunt the Earl, who would eventually be accused of being part of the Gunpowder Plot and punished with imprisonment in the Tower of London for sixteen years — all for doing a favor for a relative. Let it be a salutary lesson for us all.

The plotters sought to rent a house next to the Houses of Parliament so they could tunnel under the building and place gunpowder underneath it. This plan represented a significant and difficult mining operation. Fortunately for Catesby and his fellows, they got an opportunity to rent a storage room right under the Parliament building, which saved them from having to complete their tunnel. Gradually they filled the room with gunpowder, which was in great surplus because the war with Spain had recently ended with the signing of the Treaty of London.  What weaker allegiance than an arms merchant?

The band of thirteen managed to place some thirty-six barrels of gunpowder in the storage room. After being some eighteen months in the making, it appeared for a brief moment that the plot might work, that the Parliament buildings would be obliterated, that the neighborhood around it in Westminster would be devastated, and that the path to power would be paved in a thundering flash of fire and smoke.

Events both human and political soon spoke otherwise, turning and twisting in unexpected ways against the gunpowder plotters.

Some of the conspirators faced issues of will brought about by qualms about blowing up the Catholic lords who would be in Parliament on the fateful day. Someone went so far as to warn the Catholic Lord Monteagle by sending him a letter on 26 October 1605. The shaken young lord promptly took the letter to Robert Cecil, the earl of Salisbury and James I’s chief minister. Although Cecil did not take the warning particularly seriously at first, the government’s suspicions were aroused.

Then on the night of 4 November and the early morning of 5 November, a search party lead by Sir Thomas Knyvett discovered Guy Fawkes in the storage room with all that gunpowder. A great act of terror had been prevented.

dead guysAs the authorities interrogated Fawkes under torture, they began to gather details of the conspiracy. Their information led them to the village of Holbeach, where the conspirators had decided to make a stand. During the ensuing fight, Thomas Percy, Robert Catesby, and some others were killed or mortally wounded. The rest were taken prisoner. They would later be tried and gruesomely executed by hanging, drawing, and quartering.

For James I and the EnglishProtestants, death and loss of power were averted. They had been saved again. And a frightful resurgence of Catholicism in England had been prevented.

The Gunpowder Plot ended in a stillbirth, but it was not to be forgotten. In late January 1606, Parliament passed a statute entitled “An Act for a Public Thanksgiving to Almighty God Every Year on the Fifth Day of November.” It began a tradition of celebrating the deliverance of England from the Gunpowder Plot that has lasted to the present.

For the British people of the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries, the Fifth of November served to build and preserve their national and Protestant identities. It should also remind us in our age of Islamic terrorism and global economic collapse that things could be, and once were, worse.

We yield thee our unfeigned thanks and praise, for the wonderful and mighty Deliverance of our gracious Sovereign King James the First, the Queen, the Prince, and all the Royal Branches, with the Nobility, Clergy, and Commons of England, then assembled in Parliament, by Popish treachery appointed as sheep to the slaughter, in a most barbarous and savage manner, beyond the examples of former ages. From this unnatural Conspiracy, not our merit, but thy mercy; not our foresight, but thy providence delivered us.

—“Prayer of Thanksgiving to be used yearly upon  the Fifth Day of November,” The Book of Common Prayer.

Remember Remember

Today we mark the Great Protestant Anniversary of 5th November which marks both the birth on the 4th as well as the landing of William of Orange and the preservation of the Crown and Parliament against the Catholic terrorist plot known as the Gunpowder Plot.

hvxLjS7

Members of McNeillstown ILOL 46 joined with other lodges at Lisnagaver Installation Night, Rasharkin to mark the traditional Thanksgiving Day when our Protestant Crown and Parliament were saved from the greatest act of religious terrorism the world has ever seen. Forget ISIS the Gunpowder plotters planned to topple the government of the day in a 5/11 Plot.

 

5th of November

 

REMEMBERING OUR DELIVERANCE

images-2Such was the miraculous deliverance of the government that they passed a law to annually mark the day with acts of religious devotion and thanks giving. This developing into a national day of celebration and thanksgiving, know more commonly as Guy Fawkes night or Bonfire night.

Sadly in the last century in Ireland the event which also marked the landing of William of Orange, has been forgotten by both church and state. While it remains popular in England we wish to see its revival here in Ireland. It is a day unlike any other in a nations history. While America and other new nations can look to an Independence day when their state was created or secured, we in the UK can llok to this this day on which not once but twice in history God saw fit to deliver this nation from its greatest foe.

remember

 

The day is still marked by the Independent Orange institution, and an act of devotion was carried out when the Worshipful Master of Lisnagaver Bro. William Fenton read from our Laws and Ordinances the decree to remember and give thanks. Sadly a nation which forgets so marvelous a deliverance will be forced to repeat the peril from which it was once preserved. Today as terrorism still threatens democracy we remember that it was the Church of Rome which first created the concept of political terrorism  in Europe. Sadly we see that while in those days such Catholic terrorists were punished as traitors, today they appear to be rewarded.

 

Tonight our Grand Master spoke of the significance of this great memorial and announced that we would be making special efforts to mark it in the years to come with plans already in motion to make next years event a bigger and more prominent event. We intend to see how the Day is marked in England and how historically it was used as a holiday for the entire community.

Customs and Traditions - Bonfire Night - Lewes