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Belfast Harp Societies

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Belfast Harp Society (1808), Irish Harp Society (1819).

The Belfast Harp Society (1808-1813) and its successor, the Irish Harp Society (1819-1839), were philanthropic associations formed in the town of Belfast, Ireland, for the purpose of sustaining the music and tradition of itinerant Irish harpists, and secondarily, of promoting the study of the Irish language, history, and antiquities. For its patronage, the original society drew upon a diminishing circle of veterans of the patriotic and reform politics of the 1780s and '90s, among them several unrepentant United Irishmen. In a town, increasingly hostile in its sectarian division to Protestant interest in distinctive Irish culture, the society reconvened as the Irish Harp Society in 1819 only as a result of a large and belated subscription raised from expatriates in India. Once that source was exhausted, the new society ceased its activity.

Belfast Harp Society

Subscribers

Inaugurated at meeting held St. Patrick's Day, 1808, the Belfast Harp Society was an initiative of members of the Society for Promoting Knowlege (the Linen Hall Library). Rules were drawn up by the town physicians James MacDonnell, Samuel Bryson and Robert Tennent. The declared aims were:[1]

preserving the national music and national instrument of Ireland by instructing a number of blind children in playing the Irish harp, and also procuring and disseminating information relative to the language, history and anitquities of Ireland.

Heading the list of 191 people pledging for this purposes between one guinea and twenty guineas annually,[2] was town's proprietor, the Marquess of Donegall.[3] Yet among the subscribers in the largely Presbyterian town were many who, as United Irishmen, had challenged Donegall's Anglican establishment and his right to have the town represented in parliament by his personal nominees. The society counted on the support of Dr. William Drennan who had proposed the union of Catholic and Protestant to overturn the Anglican Ascendancy; Francis, John, and Mary Ann, McCracken, brothers and sister to Henry Joy McCracken who had been hanged in the High Street as a rebel in "'98"; Robert Tennent's brother William, a former state prisoner; and Thomas McCabe, whose son William Putnam McCabe was forced into French exile after seeking with Robert Emmet to renew the republican insurrection in 1803.

The creation of the society harkened back to Belfast's first Harp Festival in July 1792 This had been staged for the benefit of the Belfast Charitable Society but coincided with the town's Bastille Day celebrations. These had been complete with parades by local Volunteer corps, and resolutions, carried by the new-formed United Irishmen, in favour of Catholic Emancipation and Parliamentary Reform.[4]

Music and language

The 1792 Harpers's Festival had been organised, again, by members of the Belfast Society for Promoting Knowledge: James MacDonnell, Henry Joy, Robert Bradshaw and Robert Simms.[5] Encouraged by MacDonnell and supported by his adoptive family, McCrackens, the musician and collector Edward (Atty) Bunting notated the music of the ten performers.In 1808 he was appointed musical director of the new society, with Mary Ann McCracken acting informally as his secretary.[6] Bunting's master tutor was the most celebrated of the 1792 performers, Arthur O'Neill of Dungannon, now 75. O'Neill was to instruct poor children from the age of ten, blind like himself, with a view both to perserving his musical legacy and, as harpists, to save his charges from a life of destitution.

In July 1809, the Society extended its programme to include classes in the Irish language. Provided by James Cody, these were particulary welcome by Mary Ann McCracken (who is known to have studied from Charles Vallency's Irish grammar),[7][8] and by her Gaeilgeoir friends, and fellow subscribers, the poetess Mary Balfour of Limavady and the brothers Samuel and Andrew Bryson.[9] Dr MacDonnell, Robert James Tennent (the son of Robert Tennent), and the engineer Alexander Mitchell contributed to an additional subscription to support Cody's efforts.[3]

In December of that year, O'Neill was led by his twelve blind pupils into dinner marking publication of the second volume of Bunting's Ancient Music of Ireland. Met "with most entusiastic applause", their musical performances were celebrated as a triumph.[10] From this highpoint, the affairs of the Society did not run smoothly

Demise

In February 1810, O'Neill laid charges against his only female pupil, a Miss Reilly, of having "an improper connection" with another student. While she was cleared on investigation, the scandal was followed up by the dismissal of two of O'Neill's class as being "incapable by nature of learning the harp".[11] Subscribers began to withdraw their support. A season of six fund-raising balls held under the patronage of the Marchioness of Donegall failed to make up the loss. In 1813, the school closed.[3]

The difficulties of the Society were compounded by the arrest in August 1813 of its treasurer, Robert Tennent. Pushing forward at a town meeting to protest two killings by a relatively new element in the life of the town, parading Orangemen, Tennent was accused assaulting Lord Donegall's brother-in-law and Anglican vicar of Belfast, Edward May. He was sentenced to three months.[12]

Legacy

The Irish antiquary, George Petrie, argued that the Society had been flawed in conception:[13]

The effort of the people of the North to perpetuate the existence of the harp in Ireland by trying to give a harper’s skill to a number of poor blind boys was at once a benevolent and a patriotic one; but it was a delusion. The harp at the time was virtually dead, and such effort could give it for a while only a sort of galvanised vitality. The selection of blind boys, without any greater regard for their musical capacities than the possession of the organ of hearing, for a calling which doomed them to a wandering life, depending for existence mainly if not wholly on the sympathies of the poorer classes, and necessarily conducive to intemperate habits, was not a well-considered benevolence, and should never have had any fair hope of success.

In 1818, it was reported that “several blind minstrels educated in the seminary at Belfast" were "wandering through different parts of the country", and, by "affording a pleasing and harmless amusement to the people who hear them", were able to support themselves.[14]

The Dublin society

The Belfast Harp Society predated, and was briefly to survive the Harp Society in Dublin. John Bernard Trotter (who had been the secretary of the radical Whig, Charles James Fox) brought to the Irish capital a man who vied with Arthur O'Neill for consideration as "the last of the ancient race of harpers", Patrick Quinn, a blind harper from Portadown. Inaugurated in July 1809, society counted among its benefactors, Sir Walter Scott and Thomas Moore. Within two months it had mounted a grand "Carolan Commemeration" in the city, but then faded along with Trotter's personal finances. He went bankrupt in 1812.[15]

Irish Harp Society

The Bengal Subscription

Arthur O'Neill retired to County Tyrone on a £30 pension volunteered by James MacDonnell and his brother Alexander, both of whom had themselves been instructed on the harp by O'Neill in their youth.To the consternation of those who had come to regard the blind harper as a national treasure, the Society itself had made no provision for his final years. An account of O'Neill's plight and of the Society's financial difficulties was submitted to the Belfast Commerical Chronicle on 8 June 1814, and this eventually reached Irish expatriates in the then capital of British India, Calcutta. As a result, almost five years later former members of the board found themselves in receipt of subscription of more than £1,000 "to revive the Harp and Ancient Music of Ireland".[16] As O'Neill was then three years dead, the funds were devoted to a renewed effort employing O'Neill's former pupils.[11][17]

The new Irish Harp Society procured a small number of harps and again selected pupils, "without reference to religious distinctions",[18] from among "the blind and the helpless".[19] In 1823, the new master was Valentine Rennie of Cushendall. He had been committed to O'Neill as pupil by James MacDonnell, and had performed for King George IV on the occasion of his visit to Ireland in 1821.[20]

The News Letter, 15 April 1828, published a glowing tribute to the Society's academy, and of "the inimitable Rainey", that had appeared in the Calcutta newspaper The Bengal Hurkaru and Chronicle

We can confidently assure the friends and benevolent supporters of the patriotic and humane establishment, that the prosperity of the Institution has never for a moment been forgotten or unattended to. The contributors, by all accounts, have now the satisfaction of knowing, that they have effectually restored the ancient melodies, the nearly lost airs of the Emerald Isle, by the encouragement given by them to the long–neglected and forgotten Harper.

The News Letter conceded that the Society's friends in Ireland, were not able "to contend" with the generosity with which its patrons in India responded to such reports. It noted that while the resident Whig grandee, the Marquis of Downshire, "with his usual characteristic patriotism, in the encouragement of every thing useful and liberal" made an annual subscription of £10, the list of subscribers in India was headed by the Governor General, the late Marquess of Hastings, at more than £31, and by a further eight of "our patriotic countrymen" (army officers for the most part), each contributing more than £12.[21]

Rennie, who "on liberal terms" had been invited to India, died in 1837,[22] and the "benevolent, liberal and patriotic" impetus behind the "Bengal subscription" appears to have been spent,[18] In 1839, the Society closed its academy in Cromac Street.[3]

Decline in local interest

John McAdam, the Society's secretary (and fluent Irish speaker), noted there was not sufficient local interest to sustain its activity. In the wake of the Act of Union and subsequent removal of many landowning families to England, the gentry in Ireland were "too scarce, and too little national, to encourage itinerant harpers, as of old."[17]

McAdam was also to suggest that, "like all other fashions," "the taste and fashion of music ... must give way to novelty.".[23] From 1809 Irish harps were purchased by many titled women in Ireland. But after the year 1835, the "'fad' went out". Charles Egan's workshop in Dublin, the main supplier, went out of business. Irish harp was ousted in both country houses, and popular meeting places, by the pianoforte and violin.[24]

Other current may currents may also running against interest in the harp and its symbolism. Robert Tennent's son, Robert James Tennent, a subscriber to the Irish Harp Society, took up the first opportunity provided by Reform Act of 1832 to challenge the nominees of Lord Donegall in a parliamentary election. Failing to commit himself on an issue that increasingly was to associate interest in Irish culture with Catholic-majority separatism, repeal of the Act of Union, he lost by a wide margin.[25]

In 1856, The Illustrated London News, reported that the "ancient national music of Ireland is kept alive by a few practitioners of a very humble kind, who wander about in their own country chiefly playing to parties assemble in taverns". The only "gentleman harper" remaining was Partick Byrne, of Farney, County Monaghan, who some years previously had had the honour of performing before the Queen Victoria at Balmoral.[26] Byrne had graduated from the Irish Harp School in Belfast in 1821.[27]

The Linen Hall Harp Festival of 1903

In 1903, a week-long harpers' festival, originally intended by the members of the Linen Hall Library for the centenary of the 1792 festival, was held in Belfast. Such large crowds attended that, afer the first night, the concert was moved from the library's new premises to one of the city's larger halls. The first Ulster branch of the Gaelic League had been formed in 1895 in east Belfast under the active patronage (until he left to become Church of Ireland Lord Bishop of Ossory) of the Rev. John Baptiste Crozier and the presidency of his parishioner, Dr. John St Clair Boyd, both unionists.[28] It marked a renewal of interest in Irish studies among the educated middle class[29] that briedly straddled the sectarian divide.

References

  1. ^ Magee, John (1992). The Heritage of the Harp: the Linen Hall Library and the Preservation of Irish Music. Belfast: Linen Hall Library. p. 20. ISBN 0950898554.
  2. ^ Killen, John (1990). A History of the Linen Hall Library, 1788-1988. Belfast: The Linen Hall Library. p. 184. ISBN 9780950898544.
  3. ^ a b c d Salmon, John (1895). "Belfast's first Irish Harp Society,1808" (PDF). Ulster Journal of Archeology. 1:2: 151.
  4. ^ Boydell, Barra (1998). "The United Irishmen, Music, Harps, and National Identity". Eighteenth-Century Ireland / Iris an dá chultúr. 13: (44–51) 47. ISSN 0790-7915. JSTOR 30064324.
  5. ^ Magee (1992), p. 9
  6. ^ O'Byrne, Cathal (1946). As I roved out. Dublin: At the Sign of the Three Candles. p. 192.
  7. ^ Vallancey, Charles (1782). A Grammar of the Iberno-Celtic, or Irish language. Dublin: R. Marchbank.
  8. ^ Gray (2020), p. 22
  9. ^ Courtney (2013), p. 53
  10. ^ Killen (1990), p. 185
  11. ^ a b Killen (1990), p. 186
  12. ^ Maguire, W.A. (2009). "Tennent, Robert | Dictionary of Irish Biography". www.dib.ie. Retrieved 2022-02-15.
  13. ^ O’Curry, Eugene (1873), Manners and Customs of the Ancient Irish, vol. iii., Williams and Norgate, London, p. 298.
  14. ^ Warburton, John; Whitelaw, James; Walsh, Robert (1818). History of the City of Dublin, from the Earliest Accounts to the Present Time. Dublin: T. Cadell and W. Davies. p. 767.
  15. ^ Grattan Flood, William H (1905). "Irish Harp Festivals and Harp Societies (2)". www.libraryireland.com. Retrieved 2022-02-25.
  16. ^ Magee (1992), p. 22
  17. ^ a b Neill, Lily (2019). "A Celebration of the Belfast Linen Hall Library's Beath Collection and the Bicentennial of the Irish Harp Society of Belfast (1819-39)". www.mustrad.org.uk. Retrieved 2022-02-21.
  18. ^ a b "Old News Clippings: Belfast News–Letter (Belfast, Ireland) April 9, 1833". www.wirestrungharp.com. Retrieved 2022-02-22.
  19. ^ Flood, William Henry Grattan (1906). A History of Irish Music. Belfast and Cork: Browne and Nolan, limited. p. 321.
  20. ^ Chadwick, Simon (2021). "Irish Harpers particularly from Belfast". Belfast Archives. Retrieved 2022-02-22.
  21. ^ "Old News Clippings: Belfast News–Letter (Belfast, Ireland) Tuesday, April 15, 1828". www.wirestrungharp.com. Retrieved 2022-02-22.
  22. ^ "Old News Clippings: Belfast News–Letter (Belfast, Ireland) Tuesday, September 26, 1837". www.wirestrungharp.com. Retrieved 2022-02-22.
  23. ^ Neill, Lily (2019). "A Celebration of the Belfast Linen Hall Library's Beath Collection and the Bicentennial of the Irish Harp Society of Belfast (1819-39)". www.mustrad.org.uk. Retrieved 2022-02-21.
  24. ^ "Cristo Raul. The Story of the Harp. REVIVAL OF THE IRISH HARP". www.cristoraul.org. Retrieved 2022-02-22.
  25. ^ Wright, Jonathan Jeffrey (2012). The 'Natural Leaders' and Their World: Politics, Culture and Society in Belfast, c. 1801-32. Liverpool University Press. p. 136. ISBN 9781846318481.
  26. ^ "Old News Clippings: The Illustrated London News, (London, England) October 11, 1856. page 371". www.wirestrungharp.com. Retrieved 2022-02-22.
  27. ^ Pádraigín Ní Uallacháin, (2003) A Hidden Ulster – people, songs and traditions of Oriel. Dublin: Four Courts Press Ltd., p. 353.
  28. ^ "The Gaelic Revival Movement in East Belfast – Great War Gaeilgeoirí of East Belfast". Retrieved 2021-03-14.
  29. ^ Magee (1992), p. 29