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Promoting Irish Culture and History from Little Rock, Arkansas, USA


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Founding of the Irish White Cross

The Irish White Cross is established during a meeting in Dublin’s Mansion House on February 1, 1921, as a mechanism for distributing funds raised by the American Committee for Relief in Ireland for the purpose of assisting with relief and reconstruction in the country.

It is envisaged that the Irish White Cross will act in cooperation with similar relief committees that have been established in the United States.

The meeting, presided over by the Lord Mayor of Dublin, Laurence O’Neill, hears that the Society of Friends in New York has already contributed $50,000 to help launch the initiative.

Among those to welcome the new organisation is Sinn Féin President, Éamon de Valera, who promises all the support he can offer. Cardinal Michael Logue, Catholic Primate of Ireland, also offers his assistance: “Even if peace were restored, of which there seems little prospect at present, all the help which can be obtained shall be necessary, to restore the country from the wreck to which it has been reduced, and to help those who have been left destitute by the murder of those on whom they depended, or ruined by the destruction of their property.”

Cardinal Logue becomes president of the new organisation, the trustees of which include William Walsh, Archbishop of Dublin, Arthur Griffith, Sinn Féin TD, Molly Childers, Jennie Wyse Power and Tom Johnston. The Executive Committee includes Hanna Sheehy Skeffington, Kathleen Clarke and Mary Kettle.

Barry Egan, deputy Lord Mayor of Cork, says that the moral effect of the organisation will be incalculable.

The Irish White Cross is managed by the Quaker businessman, and later Irish Free State senator, James G. Douglas. The organisation continues to operate until the Irish Civil War and its books are officially closed in 1928. From 1922, its activities are essentially wound down and remaining funds divested to subsidiary organisations. The longest running of these aid committees is the Children’s Relief Association which distributes aid to child victims of this troubled period, north and south of the border, until 1947. The head of the Children’s Relief Association is Áine Ceannt, the widow of Éamonn Ceannt who is perhaps one of the least known signatories of the 1916 Proclamation of the Irish Republic.