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Irish History Podcast

Taking the War to England: The IRA in Britain

Irish History Podcast

Fin Dwyer

History, Interviews, War Of Independence, Ireland, Norman Invasion, Vikings, Great Famine, Great Hunger, Irish History

4.71.8K Ratings

🗓️ 5 June 2026

⏱️ 34 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

'We are doing this because you are doing it in Ireland'.

These were the words of an IRA volunteer in Manchester explaining attacks in Britain during the Irish War of Independence.

During the conflict, Britain and particularly England became a major battlefield. Britain was not only geographically close to Ireland, it was also home to large Irish communities in many major cities. Between 1919 and 1922, the IRA made sustained efforts to bring the conflict across the Irish Sea, carrying out hundreds of attacks, most of them in England.

This forgotten front of the war included major attacks on the Liverpool docks, the targeting of Black and Tans in Britain and several high-profile incidents, most notably the killing of the British field marshal Sir Henry Wilson.

The war also consumed and divided British politics in a way few other issues did until Brexit nearly a century later. Political parties, trade unions and communities were split over what should happen in Ireland, while massive and sometimes violent demonstrations swept across Britain.


In this episode of Brothers in Pain, a global history of the Irish Revolution, Dr Brian Hanley explores the IRA’s campaign in Britain and how the wider question of Irish independence dominated British politics at the time.


This is the eight episode in the Brothers in Pain Series a groundbreaking Global history of the Irish War of Independence by Dr Brian Hanley


Written, Researched & Narrated by Dr Brian Hanley. Check out Brian's publications here https://www.tcd.ie/history/staff/brian-hanley.php

Producer: Fin Dwyer

Sound: Kate Dunlea


Note from Brian :

In researching these episodes I have been indebted to the work of the following scholars;

Anna Lively, Sam McGrath, Bruce Nelson, Terry Dunne, David Brundage, Niamh Coffey, Gerard Shannon, Maurice Casey, Kelly Anne Reynolds, Chris McNickle, Joe Doyle, Liz Gillis, FM Carroll, Patrick Mannion, Jimmy Yann, Niall Cullen, Pádraig Óg Ó Ruairc, Keith Jeffrey, Arthur Mitchell, John Borgonovo, Kate O’Malley, Michael Doorley, Robin Adams, Kevin Kenny, Fearghal McGarry, Catherine M. Burns, Síobhra Aiken, Patrick J. Mahony, Darragh Gannon, Matthew Pratt Guterl and James R. Barrett.


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

During the Irish War of Independence, Britain and particularly England became a major battlefield.

0:10.0

Although largely forgotten today, at the time British cities were not only geographically close to Ireland,

0:16.0

but also home to large Irish communities and over the course of the war they witnessed hundreds of IRA attacks.

0:22.6

Now this theatre of the war is largely forgotten today but between 1919 and 1922 the IRA made sustained efforts to bring the conflict across the Irish sea.

0:34.6

This resulted in major attacks on the Liverpool Docks, the targeting of black and tannes

0:39.6

in England, and most notably the killing of the British Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson. Indeed,

0:45.6

British society would find itself deeply divided by the Irish War. It brought decades-old tensions

0:51.7

to the fore in a way that few other issues have until Brexit,

0:55.7

nearly a century later. Political parties, trade unions and communities were split over what

1:01.3

should happen in Ireland, while massive and sometimes violent demonstrations swept across

1:07.0

Britain in support of Irish independence. This episode of Brothers in Pain, a series that explores the global history of the Irish

1:15.0

Revolution, looks at the war in Britain and how the wider question of Irish independence

1:20.0

dominated British politics at the time.

1:33.2

Hello and welcome to the Irish History podcast. My name is Finn DeWarer.

1:36.3

And this is the eighth part of Brothers in Pain.

1:42.2

Now this episode looks at what is a pretty overlooked aspect of the conflict and many forgotten figures. It reveals the scale of IRA activity in Britain

1:45.6

and the wider support for Irish independence. That really took me aback, as you're about to hear,

1:51.1

it was huge. The series is researched, written and presented by Dr Brian Hanley, who will

1:56.5

be familiar to most of you at this stage in the series, but if it is your first time tuning in,

2:01.3

Brian is a historian at Trinity College Dublin and one of the leading scholars in modern Irish history.

2:07.0

I've included a full list of his works below, but if you want to find out more about this period

2:11.8

and Irish revolutionary history in general, Brian has published extensively on the Irish Revolution,

...

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