in Belfast, commemorating William of Orange and the Battle of the Boyne The Orange Order celebrates the civil and religious privileges conferred on Protestants by
William of Orange, the of the
Dutch Republic who became
King of England,
Scotland, and
Ireland in the
Glorious Revolution of 1688. The Order regularly commemorates the victories of William III and his forces during the
Williamite War in Ireland in the early 1690s, especially the
Battle of the Boyne.
Formation and early years Since the 1690s commemorations had been held throughout Ireland celebrating key dates in the
Williamite War such as the
Battle of Aughrim,
Battle of the Boyne,
Siege of Derry and the
second Siege of Limerick. These followed a tradition started in
Elizabethan England of celebrating key events in the Protestant calendar. Here the number of Protestants and Catholics (in what was then Ireland's most populous county) were of roughly equal number, and competition between them to rent patches of land near markets was fierce. According to historian Jim Smyth:Later
apologists rather implausibly deny any connection between the Peep-o'-Day Boys and the first Orangemen or, even less plausibly, between the Orangemen and the mass wrecking of Catholic cottages in Armagh in the months following 'the Diamond' – all of them, however, acknowledge the movement's lower-class origins. The Order's three main founders were
James Wilson (founder of the Orange Boys), Daniel Winter and James Sloan. The first Orange lodge was established in nearby Dyan, and its first grandmaster was James Sloan of Loughgall. Its first-ever marches were to celebrate the Battle of the Boyne and they took place on 12 July 1796 in
Portadown,
Lurgan and
Waringstown.
United Irishmen rebellion The
Society of United Irishmen was formed by liberal Presbyterians and Anglicans in
Belfast in 1791. It sought reform of the Irish Parliament,
Catholic Emancipation and the repeal of the
Penal Laws. By the time the Orange Order was formed, the United Irishmen had become a revolutionary group advocating an independent Irish republic that would "Unite Catholic, Protestant and Dissenter". United Irishmen activity was on the rise, and the government hoped to thwart it by backing the Orange Order from 1796 onward.
Irish nationalist historians
Thomas A. Jackson and
John Mitchel argued that the government's goal was to hinder the United Irishmen by fomenting
sectarianism, thereby creating disunity and disorder under pretence of "passion for the Protestant religion". Mitchel wrote that the government invented and spread "fearful rumours of intended massacres of all the Protestant people by the Catholics". Historian Richard R Madden wrote that "efforts were made to infuse into the mind of the Protestant feelings of distrust to his Catholic fellow-countrymen". The United Irishmen saw the Defenders as potential allies, and between 1794 and 1796 they formed a coalition. Despite some seeing the Defenders as "ignorant and poverty-stricken
houghers and rick-burners", the United Irishmen were indebted to the Armagh disturbances as the Orangemen had scattered politicised Catholics throughout the country and encouraged Defender recruitment, creating a proto-army for the United Irishmen to utilise. with the Catholic and Protestant rebels ensuring none escaped, not even a child who it is claimed managed to break out only for a rebel to kill with his pike. One major outcome of the United Irishmen rebellion was the
1800 Act of Union that merged the Irish Parliament with that of Westminster, creating the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. Many Catholics supported the Act, but the Orange Order saw it as a threat to the "Protestant constitution" and 36 lodges in counties Armagh and Monaghan alone passed declarations opposing the Union. On 19 July 1823 the Unlawful Oaths Bill was passed, banning all oath-bound societies in Ireland. This included the Orange Order, which had to be dissolved and reconstituted. In 1825 a bill banning unlawful associations – largely directed at
Daniel O'Connell and his
Catholic Association, compelled the Orangemen once more to dissolve their association. When
Westminster finally granted
Catholic Emancipation in 1829, Roman Catholics were free to take seats as MPs (and take up various other positions of influence and power from which they had been excluded) and play a part in framing the laws of the land. The likelihood of Irish Catholic members holding the balance of power in the Westminster Parliament further increased the alarm of Orangemen in Ireland, as O'Connell's 'Repeal' movement aimed to bring about the restoration of a separate Irish Parliament in Dublin, which would have a Catholic majority, thereby ending the Protestant Ascendancy. From this moment on, the Orange Order re-emerged in a new and even more militant form. In 1835 Parliament conducted an enquiry into Orangeism and declared the oaths of the Orange Order to be illegal and prohibited their demonstrations and parades. In 1836 the Order was accused of plotting to place
Ernest Augustus, Duke of Cumberland and Imperial Grand Master of the Orange Order, on the throne in place of
Victoria when King
William IV died; once the plot was revealed the House of Commons called upon the King to disband the Order. Under pressure from
Joseph Hume,
William Molesworth and
Lord John Russell, the King indicated measures would have to be taken and the Duke of Cumberland was forced to dissolve the Orange lodges. Hume laid evidence before the House of Commons of an approach in July 1832 to
Lord Londonderry. A letter from Lieutenant-Colonel W. B. Fairman, Deputy Grand Secretary of the Orange Institution of Great Britain, advised the Marquess that following "a death of importance" (the passing of the King), the Orangemen would abandon their policy of "non-resistance" to the present "Popish Cabinet, and democratical Ministry" (the
parliamentary reform ministry of
Earl Grey) and that "it might be political to join" them. Londonderry demurred: he had no doubt that the Duke of Cumberland would be persuaded that "the present state of liberal Whig feeling in this very Whig county ... entirely preclude the possibility of successful efforts at this juncture". In 1845 the ban was again lifted, but the notorious
Battle of Dolly's Brae between Orangemen and Ribbonmen in 1849 led to a ban on Orange marches which remained in place for several decades. This was eventually lifted after a campaign of disobedience led by
William Johnston of Ballykilbeg, Sovereign Grand Master of the
Royal Black Institution, a senior Orange fraternity. Since the
Fenian-organised funeral in Dublin for
Terence McManus in 1861, Johnston had been asking: "If Nationalists are allowed such mobilisation, why are loyal Orangemen not allowed to march freely". On the
Orange Twelfth 1867, he forced the issue by leading a large procession of Orangemen from
Bangor to
Newtownards in
County Down. The contravention of the
Party Procession Act earned him a two-month prison sentence. The following year, as the standard bearer of United Protestant Working Men's Association of Ulster, Johnston was returned to Parliament for Belfast.
Revival By the late 19th century, the Order was in decline. However, its fortunes were revived in the 1880s after its embrace by the landlords in opposition to both the
Irish Land League, presided over by
nationalist leader Charles Stuart Parnell, and
Home Rule. In response to
Gladstone's first
Irish Home Rule Bill 1886,
Colonel Edward Saunderson, a landowner who had represented
Cavan as a Liberal and who had ridiculed the order's "big drums", donned an Orange
sash. Saunderson, who went on to lead the
Irish Unionist Alliance at Westminster, had concluded that "the Orange society is alone capable of dealing with the condition of anarchy and rebellion which prevail in Ireland". After
Gladstone's
first Home Rule Bill was defeated in the
House of Commons on 8 June 1886,
Irish Home-Rule MPs in the House accused the Order's Belfast Grand Master, the
Church of Ireland rector
Richard Rutledge Kane of fomenting the
violent rioting in Belfast that took 32 lives.
RIC constables had been brought in from other parts of Ireland, many of them Catholic, when revellers, celebrating the defeat, had begun attacking Catholic homes and businesses. Kane did not counter the rumour that they were on a punitive mission for the
Liberal government, declaring that, unless they were disarmed, 200,000 armed Orangemen would relieve them of their weapons. At the same, in 1895 Kane was a patron of the branch in Belfast of the
Gaelic League, which in the decade to follow was to become indissolubly linked with
Irish nationalism.As a patron of the League's promotion of the
Irish language, he was in company of
Henry Henry, the
Catholic Bishop of Down and Connor, but also
Thomas Welland, the Church of Ireland
Bishop of Down, Connor and Dromore, and George Raphael Buick,
Moderator of the Presbyterian Church and branch vice president. The Branch president was Kane's parishioner, Dr.
John St Clair Boyd. (Kane's memorial at the Clifton Street Orange Hall over whose opening he had presided in 1885, commends him as a "Loyal Irish Patriot").
Tenant right, labour and the Independent Orange Order Famously, when in 1880, as part of its campaign for the
Three Fs (fair rent, fixity of tenure, and free sale) and of resistance to evictions, the
Land League organised the withdrawal of labour from Captain
Charles Boycott, a
land agent in
County Mayo,
Orangemen from
County Cavan and
County Monaghan, under military and police protection, helped bring in the harvest on his employer's estate. But among Orangemen there was tenant-farmer support for reform. One reason the majority
Irish Conservatives at
Westminster did not oppose Gladstone's 1881
Land Act conceding the
three F's was their recognition that "the land grievance had been a bond of discontent between Ulster and the rest of Ireland and in that sense a danger to the union". Quite apart from participation in local
tenant-right associations, they had reports of Orangemen in the west (in counties
Armagh,
Cavan,
Fermanagh and
Tyrone) actually joining the national League. Tension between tenants and landowners, nonetheless, continued within the Order, the focus shifting from tenant right to "compulsory purchase" (the right of tenants to buy out their landlords at fixed valuations). Particularly in north
Antrim, where their organisation was strong, from 1903 tenant farmers began to defect to a new
Independent Orange Order (IOO). Within the year, the Independents had nine lodges in
Ballymoney alone. The split had first occurred in Belfast. In laying the foundation stone of the Working Men's Institute in Belfast in 1870,
William Johnston had welcomed Catholics and Protestants uniting "around the flag of 'The United Working Classes of Belfast' determined to show that there are times and circumstances when religious differences and party creeds must be forgotten". Others within the Order regarded such unity as tantamount to religious and national
ecumenism. Such differences came to a head in 1902, in the contest to succeed Johnston as MP for
Belfast South (and at time when four fifths of lodge masters in the city were workingmen).
Thomas Sloan established the Independent lodges after he had been expelled by the Order for running as the nominee of the
Belfast Protestant Association against the official unionist candidate, one of the city's largest millowners. For at least some of his supporters, the split was a protest against what they saw as the co-optation of the Orange Order by unionist political leaders and their alignment with the interests of landlords and employers (the "fur coat brigade"). With other independents, in the great
Belfast Lockout of 1907 Sloan was to speak on platforms with the
Irish Transport and General Workers' Union leader,
James Larkin. The Grand Master of the Independents,
R. Lindsay Crawford outlined the new order's democratic manifesto in
Orangeism, its history and progress: a plea for first principles (1904). However, his subsequent call in the Magheramorne Manifesto (1904) on Irish Protestants to "reconsider their position as Irish citizens and their attitude towards their Roman Catholic countrymen" proved too much for Sloan and most of the membership, and Crawford was eventually expelled. In 1912, the
Third Home Rule Bill was introduced in the
House of Commons. However, its introduction would be delayed until 1914. The Orange Order, along with the
British Conservative Party and unionists in general, were inflexible in opposing the bill. The Order helped to organise the 1912
Ulster Covenant – a pledge to oppose Home Rule which was signed by up to 500,000 people. In 1911, some Orangemen began to arm themselves and train as militias. In 1913, the
Ulster Unionist Council decided to bring these groups under central control, creating the
Ulster Volunteer Force, an Ulster-wide militia dedicated to resisting Home Rule. There was a strong overlap between Orange Lodges and UVF units. A large shipment of rifles was imported from
Germany to arm them in April 1914, in what became known as the
Larne gun-running. However, the crisis was interrupted by the outbreak of the
World War I in August 1914, which caused the Home Rule Bill to be suspended for the duration of the war. Many Orangemen served in the war with the
36th (Ulster) Division, suffering heavy losses, and commemorations of their sacrifice are still an important element of Orange ceremonies. The Fourth Home Rule Act was passed as the
Government of Ireland Act 1920; the six northeastern counties of Ulster became
Northern Ireland and the other twenty-six counties became
Southern Ireland. This time period saw intense cross community conflict/violence which took place intermittently and mostly in Belfast. (see
The Troubles in Ulster (1920–1922)) This self-governing entity within the United Kingdom was confirmed in its status under the terms of the
Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1921, and in its borders by the
Boundary Commission agreement of 1925. Southern Ireland became first the
Irish Free State in 1922 and then in 1949 a
Republic.
Since 1921 , the first Prime Minister of Northern Ireland The Orange Order had a central place in the new state of Northern Ireland. From 1921 to 1969, every
prime minister of Northern Ireland was an Orangeman and member of the
Ulster Unionist Party (UUP); all but three
Cabinet ministers were Orangemen; all but one unionist
senators were Orangemen; and 87 of the 95 MPs who did not become Cabinet Ministers were Orangemen.
James Craig, the first Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, maintained always that Ulster was in effect Protestant and the symbol of its ruling forces was the Orange Order. In 1932, Prime Minister Craig maintained that "ours is a Protestant government and I am an Orangeman". This was in response to a speech the year before by
Éamon de Valera in the Irish Free State claiming that Ireland was a "Catholic nation" in a debate about protests against Protestant woman
Letitia Dunbar-Harrison being appointed as County Librarian in
County Mayo. Two years later he stated: "I have always said that I am an Orangeman first and a politician and a member of
this parliament afterwards ... All I boast is that we have a
Protestant Parliament and a Protestant State". At its peak in 1965, the Order's membership was around 70,000, which meant that roughly 1 in 5 adult Ulster Protestant males were members. Since 1965, it has lost a third of its membership, especially in Belfast and Derry. The Order's political influence suffered greatly after the unionist-controlled government of Northern Ireland was abolished in 1973. After the outbreak of "
the Troubles" in 1969, the Grand Orange Lodge of Ireland encouraged Orangemen to join the Northern Ireland
security forces, especially the
Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) and the British Army's
Ulster Defence Regiment (UDR). The response from Orangemen was strong. Over 300 Orangemen were killed during the conflict, the vast majority of them members of the security forces. Some Orangemen also joined
loyalist paramilitary groups. During the conflict, the Order had a fractious relationship with loyalist paramilitary groups, the
Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), the
Independent Orange Order and the
Free Presbyterian Church. The Order urged its members not to join these organisations, and it is only recently that some of these intra-unionist breaches have been healed. The residents have sought to re-route the march away from this area, seeing it as "triumphalist" and "
supremacist". There have been intermittent violent clashes during the march since the 19th century. The onset of
the Troubles led to the dispute intensifying in the 1970s and 1980s. At this time, the most contentious part of the march was the outward leg along Obins Street. and a "siege". During this time, supporters of the Orangemen murdered at least six Catholic civilians. In 1995 and 1996, residents succeeded in stopping the march. This led to a standoff at Drumcree between the security forces and thousands of
loyalists. Following a wave of loyalist violence, the march was allowed through. In 1997, security forces locked down the Catholic area and forced the march through, citing loyalist threats. This sparked
widespread protests and violence by Irish nationalists. From 1998 onward the march was banned from Garvaghy Road and the Catholic area was sealed-off with large barricades. For a few years, there was an annual major standoff at Drumcree and widespread loyalist violence. Since 2001, things have been relatively calm, but the Order still campaigns for the right to march on Garvaghy Road. The dispute led to a short-lived boycott of businesses owned by Orangemen and their supporters elsewhere in the region.
Membership rates Membership of the Order was historically lower in areas where Protestants are in the majority, and vice versa. In
County Fermanagh, where the Catholic and Protestant populations are close to parity, membership in 1971 was three times as high as in the more Protestant counties of Antrim and Down, where it was just over 10% of adult Protestant males. Other factors that are associated with high rates of membership are levels of unemployment that more closely match Catholic levels, and low levels of support for the
Democratic Unionist Party among unionists. == Global expansion ==