The Stranded Tribe

by Kenneth R Dodds


Formats

Softcover
$22.38
E-Book
$5.99
Softcover
$22.38

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 4/18/2012

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 395
ISBN : 9781469198897
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 395
ISBN : 9781469198903

About the Book

“The Stranded Tribe” is the neglected story of the Ulster Unionists who were compelled to become part of the new Catholic and Gaelic Irish Free State in 1922. It follows the lives of the Presbyterian working-class Vance family, especially the two sons, William and Jamie, in the turbulent period of Irish history between 1895 and 1923. They live and work in East Donegal where one becomes involved with a local Ulster Volunteer unit and the other becomes a local railway official. In 1914 William Vance responds to the Empire’s call to fight Germany and joins the Ulster Division. As a member of the 11th Inniskilling Fusiliers, he takes part in the unbelievable slaughter of the first day of the Battle of the Somme in 1916. Later, his brother joins the same regiment and is badly wounded during the Battle of Messines. Following a long recovery he takes on security work on the Donegal Railways and plays a significant part in trying to forestall guerrilla attacks by the IRA on its services. The brother of Jamie’s Catholic girlfriend is an IRA leader in Donegal. In the Civil War he is on the Anti-Treaty side and both he and Jamie are drawn into the conflict in West Fermanagh where the IRA invades Northern Ireland’s territory in an attempt to destabilise the six-county statelet. The Loyalists in the three mainly Nationalist and Catholic Ulster counties not included in the new Northern Ireland have most of their links with the UK broken and some of them suffer persecution. Death threats against Jamie Vance and his family force him to take a temporary job in Scotland. Here, he finds himself struggling against a desperate, high-level assassination plot which threatens to destroy the shaky relationship between Britain and the new Irish Free State which is struggling to rout the Irregular forces in Ireland. The book outlines the brutal struggle between the two conceptions of Ireland – the nationalist Catholic and Gaelic one and the unionist pro-British and monarchical one. But it also takes some of the simplicity out of this division by showing the many variations on both sides. The great majority of the incidents in the book are based upon real events gleaned from books and newspapers of the period. Research for the book took five years as well as significant time in the area itself. “The Stranded Tribe” is not only about the drawing of a new boundary in Ireland between mainly Protestant and Catholic states. It is also about political, religious and community responses to a world facing unprecedented social and technological change.


About the Author

Born on Tyneside , Kenneth Dodds studied History at Leicester and Durham Universities. He taught in four secondary schools in the North of England and two in the West of Scotland. Retiring from a headship, he concentrated on part-time teaching Spanish to adults as well as researching and writing history. In 2001 he published a non-fi ction work “Western Designs: A History of the British in Central America”. From 2008 he has visited North West Ireland each year and joined the County Donegal History Association, publishing three articles in its annuals. “The Stranded Tribe” is his fi rst work of fi ction.