became the leader of Clan na Gael following splits mirroring those in Ireland caused by the Irish Civil War The objective of Clan na Gael was to secure an independent Ireland and to assist the Irish Republican Brotherhood in achieving this aim. To this end, the Clan was prepared to enter into alliances with any nation allied against the British; with the outbreak of the
First World War in 1914, the Clan found its greatest ally in
Imperial Germany. A delegation led by Devoy met with the German ambassador in the US Count
Johann Heinrich von Bernstorff and his aide
Franz von Papen in 1914. This was followed by an emissary
John Kenny, sent on a mission to Berlin to discuss how the German war effort and Irish Nationalism could cooperate.
Roger Casement wrote a petition to the
Kaiser asking that freedom for Ireland be included in the declared war aims of the
Central Powers. A controversial pro-German and Irish lecture was given in December 1914 to Clan na Gael on Long Island by the
Celtologist Kuno Meyer. Devoy, along with Roger Casement and
Joseph McGarrity, was able to bring together both Irish-American and German support in the years prior to the
Easter Rising. However the German munitions never reached Ireland as the ship
Aud carrying them was scuttled after being intercepted by the
Royal Navy. Clan na Gael became the largest single financier of both the Easter Rising and the
Irish War of Independence. Imperial Germany aided Clan na Gael by selling those guns and munitions to be used in the uprising of 1916. Germany had hoped that by distracting Britain with an Irish uprising they would be able to garner the upper hand in the war and effect a German victory on the
Western Front. However, they failed to follow through with more support. Clan na Gael was also involved via McGarrity and Casement in the abortive attempt to raise an "
Irish Brigade" to fight against the British. Some
Sikhs held talks with Clan Na Gael, which led to authorities in Great Britain and
India fearing
Irish-Americans and Sikhs uniting against the
British Empire. Clan Na Gael supported the primarily Sikh
Ghadar Party, and played a supportive role in the
Hindu German Conspiracy in the United States during
World War I, which led to the
Hindu German Conspiracy Trial in
San Francisco in 1917–18. Clan Na Gael largely controlled the
Irish Race Conventions from 1916, and its affiliated group the
Friends of Irish Freedom. The
Irish War of Independence led to a split in Clan na Gael which was precipitated in June 1920 by
Éamon de Valera, who as President of the Irish Republic became involved in a dispute with Devoy and
Judge Cohalan over lobbying US presidential candidates on the issue of American recognition for the
Irish Republic. To punish
Woodrow Wilson for his apparent lack of support, the Clan backed Harding in the
1920 United States presidential election. In October, 1920,
Harry Boland stated that the
IRB in Ireland had terminated connections between the Clan and the parent body in Ireland until the will of
Dáil Éireann was mirrored in Clan na Gael. Devoy and Cohalan refused to accept this but McGarrity disagreed, believing that without IRB support, the Clan was not legitimate, which led to a split. McGarrity, whose faction went by the name Reorganized Clan na Gael, supported the Anti-Treaty forces during the Civil War while Devoy and Cohalan supported the Free State. After 1924, when the IRB and the Devoy-Cohalan Clan na Gael both voted to disband, McGarrity's faction became the sole Clan na Gael. In 1926, the Clan na Gael formally associated with the reorganized Irish Republican Army in the same fashion as it had with the IRB. McGarrity continued to provide support and aid to the
IRA after it was outlawed in Ireland by de Valera in 1936 but became less active in the 1940s and 1950s following McGarrity's death in 1940. The organization grew in the 1970s and played a key part in
NORAID, which was a prominent source of finance and weapons for the
Provisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA) during
the Troubles in
Northern Ireland in 1969–1998. However, it provided only a tiny portion of the PIRA's total income and dried up because of the steep decline of sympathy among Irish Americans due to PIRA atrocities, and the investigation and prosecution by U.S. authorities of IRA supporters of gunrunning. The Clan na Gael still exists today, much changed from the days of the
Catalpa rescue and as recently as 1997 another internal split occurred as a result of the IRA shift away from using physical force as a result of the 1998
Good Friday peace accords. ==Presidents of the Clan na Gael==