The Irish People (16 September 1899 – 7 November 1903), was the first of three newspapers published by William O'Brien. Its object to support his new agrarian reform organisation, the
United Irish League. It was a
Dublin based politically oriented weekly newspaper, its managing editor Tim McCarthy, previous editor of the ''Freeman's Journal''. The paper was financed principally by William O'Brien's wife
Sophie, sister of poet and socialite
Marc André Sebastian Raffalovich and daughter of the Russian Jewish banker, Hermann Raffalowich, domiciled in Paris.
The Irish People ceased publication abruptly with O'Brien's resignation from public life on 4 November 1903, after he had been alienated from the
Irish Parliamentary Party . He had successfully negotiated and won the
Land Purchase (Ireland) Act 1903 which settled the age-old Irish
Land Question, but denounced in an Irish party attack launched by
John Dillon MP rejecting his policy of conciliation with landlords. The paper's editor Tim McCarthy only learnt of his demise a day later. As a future editor of the Belfast
Irish News he later became one of O'Brien's bitterest critics. The machinery of the
Irish People was bought by
John O'Donnell MP and moved to Galway, where he set up the
Connaught Champion (1904–1911).
The Irish People (30 September 1905 – 27 March 1909) was re-published in
Cork after O'Brien's return to public life in 1904, its editor John Herlihy. The paper aimed at furthering O'Brien's concept of national conciliation and promoting full-scale implementation of the Land Act, by encouraging tenant land purchase and extolling its benefits. This through an alliance with the
Land and Labour Association which had become the
Munster base for O'Brien's renewed political activities.
The Irish People, O'Brien's prime political media, propagated from 1906 the cottage building programmes won under the
1906 Labourer (Ireland) Act. Its editorials, usually penned by
D. D. Sheehan MP, condemned in regular rhetorical exchanges with the Irish party's ''Freeman's Journal'', the party's relentless campaign against land purchase.
The Irish People ceased publication finally in March 1909 when O'Brien travelled abroad to recover from the December 1908
Baton Convention sickened by
Devlinite thuggery and corruption, but not before it praised
Sinn Féin as honest youngsters, who could yet be won over by a great new national movement. ==
The Cork Accent==