Terence Marne O'Neill, Baron O'Neill of the Maine, PC (10 September 1914–12 June 1990) was the fourth Prime Minister of Northern Ireland.
Background
Terence O'Neill was born on the
10 September 1914 at 29 Ennismore Gardens,
Hyde Park,
London. He was the youngest son of Lady Annabel Hungerford Crewe-Milnes (daughter of the
Marquess of Crewe and Captain
Arthur O'Neill of
Shane's Castle,
Randalstown, the first
MP to be killed as a result of
World War I. Despite bearing the name of O'Neill, this line of the family in fact assumed the surname by Royal license in lieu of their original name Chichester. In turn, the Chichesters can trace their lineage to the name O'Neill through Mary Chichester, daughter of Henry O'Neill, of Shane's Castle. O'Neill, who grew up in London, was educated at
West Downs School in
Winchester and
Eton College; he only spent Summer holidays in Ulster. Following school he spent a year in France and Germany and then took work in the City of London, as well as Australia. In May 1940 he received a commission to the
Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. During
World War II he served in the
Irish Guards.
On 4 February 1944 he married Katharine Jean (b. 16 January 1915 - d. 15 July 2008), the daughter of William Ingham Whitaker, of Pylewell Park, Lymington, Hampshire. They had one son, Patrick (b. 1945), and one daughter, Penelope (b. 1947).
Politics
At the end of 1945 O'Neill and his family finally went to live in Northern Ireland, in Glebe House, a converted Regency rectory near
Ahoghill, Co. Antrim and in a by-election in 1946 he was elected as a
Unionist MP for the
Bannside constituency in the Stormont parliament. Lord O'Neill served in a series of junior positions. He was Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Health and Local Government from February 1948 until November 1953, when he was appointed Chairman of Ways and Means and Deputy Speaker of the House of Commons. He was Minister of Home Affairs from April to October 1956 when he was appointed Minister for Finance.
Prime Minister
In 1963 he succeeded
Viscount Brookeborough as
Prime Minister. He introduced new policies that would have been unheard of with Brookeborough as Prime Minister. He aimed to end sectarianism and to bring Catholics and Protestants into working relationships. A visit to a convent proved controversial among many
Protestants. He also had great aspirations in the industrial sector. In January 1965 O'Neill invited the
Taoiseach of the
Republic of Ireland,
Seán Lemass, for talks in
Belfast. O'Neill met with strong opposition from within his own party mainly because he informed very few of the visit and from
Ian Paisley, who rejected any dealings with the Republic of Ireland. Paisley and his followers threw snowballs at Lemass' car during the visit. In February O'Neill visited Lemass in
Dublin. Opposition to O'Neill's reforms was so strong that in 1967
George Forrest, the MP for
Mid Ulster who supported the Prime Minister, was pulled off the platform at the
Twelfth of July celebrations in
Coagh,
County Tyrone, and kicked unconscious by fellow members of the
Orange Order.
In 1968 the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association (NICRA) began street demonstrations. The march in Derry on 5 October 1968, banned by William Craig, the Minister of Home Affairs was met with violence from the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC), who batoned protesters, among them prominent politicians. This violence was caught by television cameras and broadcast worldwide. The date of this march is taken by many historians as being the start of the Northern Ireland troubles. In May 1968, O'Neill was pelted with eggs, flour and stones by members of the Woodvale Unionist association who disapproved of his perceived conciliatory policies.
In response to this bad publicity O'Neill introduced a Five Point Reform Programme. This granted the NICRA a number of the concessions they had demanded, but most importantly, it did not include one man one vote. Despite this, the NICRA felt they had made some ground and agreed to postpone their marches. Things were expected to improve, but many in the Catholic community felt let down by the limited reforms. A student group was formed by Bernadette Devlin and Michael Farrell, which they named the People's Democracy. A four-day march from Belfast to Derry began on the 1st of January 1969. On the fourth day the march was ambushed at Burntollet Bridge by around 200 hardline unionists. Although many RUC men were present during the attack, none intervened. It later emerged that many of the assailants were in fact off-duty policemen themselves. Thirteen marchers required hospital treatment as a result of their injuries. The Burntollet attack sparked several days of rioting between the RUC and Catholic protesters in the Bogside area of Derry.
In February 1969 O'Neill called a surprise general election because of the turmoil inside the Ulster Unionist Party caused by ten to twelve anti-O'Neill dissident members of the Unionist Parliamentary Party and the resignation of Brian Faulkner from O'Neill's Government.
Resignation
The electorate was faced with a simple choice: pro- or anti-O'Neill. However, from O'Neill's point of view, the election results were inconclusive. O'Neill in particular was humiliated by his near defeat in his own constituency of Bannside by
Ian Paisley. He resigned as leader of the
Ulster Unionist Party and as Prime Minister in April 1969 after a series of bomb explosions on Belfast's water supply by the
Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) brought his personal political crisis to a head.
In an interview with the Belfast Telegraph, published in May 1969, he stated "It is frightfully hard to explain to Protestants that if you give Roman Catholics a good job and a good house, they will live like Protestants...they will refuse to have 18 children.... If you treat Roman Catholics with due consideration and kindness, they will live like Protestants in spite of the authoritative nature of their Church."
Retirement
He retired from Stormont politics in January 1970 when he resigned his seat, having become the
Father of the House in the previous year. In that year he was created a
life peer as
Baron O'Neill of the Maine, of Ahoghill in the County of Antrim.
He spent his last years at Lisle Court, Lymington, Hampshire, though he continued to speak on the problems of Northern Ireland in the House of Lords, where he sat as a cross-bencher. He was also a trustee of the Winston Churchill Memorial Trust. He died at his home of cancer on 12 June 1990, survived by his wife, son, and daughter. His estate was valued at £443, 043: probate, 28 Aug 1990, CGPLA England and Wales.
Ancestors
References
Other references
- Terence O'Neill, Ulster at the crossroads, Faber and Faber, London, 1969.
- Terence O'Neill, The autobiography of Terence O’Neill, Hart-Davies, London, 1972.
- Marc Mulholland, Northern Ireland at the crossroads: Ulster Unionism in the O'Neill years 1960-9, Macmillan, London, 2000.
See also