Dublin election riot
The Dublin election riot occurred during the contested Irish General Election of 1713.
It concerned the Dublin City constituency, which returned two members to the Irish Parliament. One of the Whig candidates was John Forster, a leading member of the party and a former Attorney General. An undertone of the election was the prospect of the Hanoverian Succession which the Whigs supported. The Tory candidates enjoyed a great deal of popularity with the Catholic Jacobites in the city.
Traditionally the voting took place at the Blue Coat School on the north side of the River Liffey, but this time it was held at the Tholsel in the centre of the city, considered a stronghold of the Whigs. On polling day they took over almost the entire building, shutting out the Tory supporters. This provoked a group of Tories to storm the building and begin smashing up the platform.[1]
A detachment of the Irish Army was called out to restore order. They were attacked, with planks of wood from the dismantled platform being hurled at them. The troops responded by opening fire, killing one man and wounding several others. A compromise was organized by the authorities in which the Whigs and Tories could vote in separate buildings. The Whigs then secured both seats in what was otherwise a national victory for the Tories.[2] Many of the Tories who had cast their votes were proved to not be eligible to do so under the Penal Laws.
Blame for the incident was eventually placed on James Cotter, a Catholic Jacobite from Cork. The role of an associate of a leading Tory Constantine Phipps, the Lord Chancellor of Ireland, was also highlighted.[3]
References
Bibliography
- Dickson, David. Dublin: The Making of a Capital City. Profile Books, 2014.
- Simms, J.G. War and Politics in Ireland, 1649-1730. Hambledon Press, 1986.
- v
- t
- e
- Timeline of Dublin
- Timeline of the Troubles in Dublin
- Dublin Corporation
- Local government in Dublin
- Lord Mayor of Dublin
- Sheriff of Dublin City
- Historical maps of Dublin
- Battle of Clontarf
- Dublin slave market
- Bridge of Dublin
- Early Scandinavian Dublin
- History of Dublin to 795
- Kingdom of Dublin
- Riding The Franchises (1192-1780s)
- Trinity College Dublin (Est. 1592)
- Dublin Gunpowder Explosion (1597)
- Battle of Rathmines (1649)
- Siege of Dublin (1649)
- The Brazen Head (Est. 1661)
- Dick's Coffee House (1698-1780)
- Georgian Architecture in Dublin (1700s)
- The Great South Wall (1700s) and Bull Wall (1820s)
- Dublin Election Riot (1713)
- Drapier's Letters (1724-5)
- The Linenhall (1728-1916)
- The Hell Fire Club (1735-1741)
- Premiere of Handel's Messiah (1742)
- Daly's Club (1750-1823)
- Wide Streets Commission (1758-1851)
- Guinness Brewery (Est. 1759)
- The Royal Exchange (1779)
- Kildare Street Club (Est. 1782)
- Richard Crosbie's Balloon Ascent (1785)
- The Grand Canal and Royal Canal (Early 1800s)
- Dublin Quays (1800s)
- Irish Rebellion of 1803 (1803)
- Martello Towers (1808)
- Military Road (1809)
- Dún Laoghaire Harbour (1842)
- Great Industrial Exhibition (1853)
- Monto (Red Light District) (1860s-1950s)
- Wellington Monument (1861)
- International Exhibition of Arts and Manufactures (1865)
- Dublin tramways (1872-1959)
- Dublin Whiskey Fire (1875)
- Phoenix Park Murders (1882)
- Dublin Castle Scandal (1884)
- Irish International Exhibition (1907)
- Theft of the Irish Crown Jewels (1907)
- Dublin Lock-out (1913-14)
- Bachelor's Walk massacre (1914)
- Howth gun-running (1914)
- Easter Rising (1916)
- Introduction of Dublin Postal Districts (1917)
- Bloody Sunday (1920)
- The Liffey Swim (Est. 1920)
- Burning of the Custom House (1921)
- Battle of Dublin (1922)
- Assassination of Kevin O'Higgins (1927)
- Bombing of Dublin in World War II (1941)
- Bloomsday commemorations (Est. 1954)
- Destruction of Nelson's Pillar (1966)
- Dublin Fires (1970)
- Hosting of the Eurovision Song Contest (1971, 1981, 1988, 1994, 1995, 1997)
- Burning of the British Embassy in Dublin (1972)
- Mountjoy Prison helicopter escape (1973)
- Dublin and Monaghan Bombings (1974)
- Dublin Airport Bombing (1975)
- GUBU (Malcolm MacArthur) (1982)
- Dublin Area Rapid Transit (1984)
- Hurricane Charley flooding (1986)
- European Capital of Culture (1991)
- Assassination of Veronica Guerin (1996)
- Dublin Millennium celebrations (2000)
- Spire of Dublin (2003)
- Luas (2004)
- May Day protests (2004)
- Dublin Riots (2006)
- Dublin Port Tunnel (2006)
- 2008 Ireland floods (2008)
- Bank of Ireland Robbery (2009)
- M50 motorway (2010)
- The Beast from the East (2018)
- Dublin Riots (2023)
- James "Lugs" Branigan
- Lady on the Rock
This Ireland-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e