Everything about Ada English totally explained
Dr
Ada (Adeline) English (1873–
27 January 1944) (
Irish:
Eithne Inglis) was an
Irish revolutionary politician and
psychiatrist.
Born to Patrick and Nora (Malvey) in
Mullingar,
Co Westmeath, she'd four siblings, including two brothers, Pierce (who became a doctor in
Castlerea) and Frank (who became a bank official). Her father was a pharmacist and a member of the Mullingar Town Commissioners while her grandfather, Richard, had been Master of the Old Castle Workhouse in the town.
Medical career
She was educated at the Loreto Convent in Mullingar and graduated from the
Royal University of Ireland (she attended Queen's College Galway) in 1903, reputedly as one of the first female psychiatrists in Ireland. She served at the
Mater, Richmond, and Temple Street hospitals in
Dublin. For a short period, she'd an appointment at a London hospital before, in 1904, taking the position of assistant RMS at Ballinasloe Lunatic Asylum (now St Bridget's Hospital), Ballinasloe, and also worked part-time in Castlerea Mental Hospital. She developed
occupational therapy to a high degree and under her direction Ballinasloe was the first mental hospital in Ireland to use
electric convulsive therapy. In October 1914, she was appointed to a lecturership in mental disease in
University College Galway, a position she retained until February 1943. In 1921, she was offered the position of RMS of
Sligo Mental Hospital by
Austin Stack,
Secretary of State for Home Affairs, but she decided to stay in Ballinasloe, where she was later appointed, in 1941, to the position of RMS. She retired from this position in December 1943.
Political career
Through her contacts with people like
Thomas McDonagh,
Patrick Pearse (who had once tutored her in the
Irish language),
Arthur Griffith and
Liam Mellows, her belief in
Irish nationalism grew and her rational and passionate arguments in its favour had a profound influence on the future
Bishop of Clonfert, Dr. John Dignan, who arrived in Ballinasloe in the same year as English.
She was Medical Officer for the
Irish Volunteers from its inception and worked at
Athenry during the
1916 Rising. She was also a prominent member of
Cumann na mBan. She was arrested in 1920 by Crown forces, spending six months in Galway Jail (she had been sentenced to nine months but was released due to ptomaine poisoning before completing her sentence).
In May 1921, she was elected unopposed to
Dáil Éireann for the
NUI constituency as a
Sinn Féin representative.
She voted against the
Anglo-Irish Treaty, voicing her opposition to it in the Dáil on
4 January 1922. She began by stating her opposition to the position of the British monarch in the agreement:
» I credit the supporters of the Treaty with being as honest as I am, but I've a sound objection to it. I think it's wrong; I've various reasons for objecting to it, but the main one is that, in my opinion, it was wrong against Ireland, and a sin against Ireland. I don't like talking here about oaths. I've heard about oaths until my soul is sick of them, but if this Treaty were forced on us by England — as it's being forced — and that paragraph 4, the one with the oath in it were omitted, we could accept it under force; but certainly, while those oaths are in it, oaths in which we're asked to accept the King of England as head of the Irish State, and we're asked to accept the status of British citizens—British subjects—that we can't accept. As far as I see the whole fight in this country for centuries has centred round that very point. We are now asked not only to acknowledge the King of England's claim to be King of Ireland, but we're asked to swear allegiance and fidelity in virtue of that claim ... Ireland has been fighting England and, as I understood it, the grounds of this fight always were that we denied the right of England's King to this country.
She was also one of the few speakers to voice her opposition to the
Partition of Ireland:
» The evacuation of the English troops is one of the things that are being held up to us as being one of the very good points in the Treaty. It would be a very desirable thing, indeed, that the English troops evacuated this country, if they did evacuate it, but I hold that Ulster is still part of Ireland and I've not heard a promise that the British troops are to evacuate Ulster. They are still there. I understand they're to be drawn from the rest of Ireland and, as I read the Treaty, there isn't one word of promise in it about the evacuation of the British troops.
In the course of the same speech she also explained that she'd been elected as an
Irish republican and would remain so:
» I credit my constituents with being honest people, just as honest as I consider myself — and I consider myself fairly honest — they sent me here as a Republican Deputy to An Dáil which is, I believe, the living Republican Parliament of this country. Not only that, but when I was selected as Deputy in this place I was very much surprised and, after I got out of jail, when I was well enough to see some of my constituents, I asked them how it came they selected me, and they told me the wanted someone they could depend on to stand fast by the Republic, and who wouldn't let Galway down again. That is what my constituents told me they wanted when they sent me here, and they've got it.
She also rejected the claim made by male supporters of the Treaty that women were opposed to it for emotional reasons:
» I think that it was a most brave thing to-day to listen to the speech by the Deputy from Sligo [referringto Alexander McCabe] in reference to the women members of An Dáil, claiming that they only have the opinions they've because they've a grievance against England, or because their men folk were killed and murdered by England's representatives in this country. It was a most unworthy thing for any man to say here. I can say this more freely because, I thank my God, I've no dead men to throw in my teeth as a reason for holding the opinions I hold. I should like to say that I think it most unfair to the women Teachtaí because Miss MacSwiney had suffered at England's hands.
She stood again for the National University of Ireland in the
Irish general election, 1922, to elect the
Third Dáil but lost her seat, being replaced by the independent William Magennis. She assisted anti-Treatyites during the
Irish Civil War and reportedly served with
Cathal Brugha in the Hamman Hotel in Dublin in July 1922. She maintained her opposition to the Treaty and refused to recognise the legitimacy of the
Irish Free State. Along with other members of the rump
Second Dáil, she played a part in
Comhairle na dTeachtaí during the 1920s which saw itself as the "true" government of the
Irish Republic.
She died in 1944 in Ballinasloe and is buried in Creagh Cemetery.
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