College Historical Society
Founded | 1770 |
---|---|
Home Page | TheHist.com |
President | Prof. David McConnell |
Officers of the College Historical Society, 247th Session[1] | |
Auditor | Ronan Mac Giolla Rua |
Treasurer | Paul Molloy |
Correspondence Secretary | Éamonn Sweeney |
Record Secretary | Meg Beare |
Censor | Alex Puiu |
Librarian | Jack Kennedy |
Debates Convenor | Peter O'Donovan |
Events Convenor | Catherine Prasifka |
Senior Member of Committee | Dermot Davern |
The College Historical Society (CHS) – popularly referred to as The Hist – is one of the two debating societies at Trinity College, Dublin. It was established within the college in 1770 and can be traced back to the club formed by the philosopher Edmund Burke in Dublin in 1747.[2][3][4] It is often cited as the oldest surviving undergraduate student society in the world.
The society occupies rooms in the Graduates' Memorial Building at Trinity College. Prominent members have included many Irish men and women of note, from the republican revolutionary Theobald Wolfe Tone and the author Bram Stoker, to founding father of the Northern Irish state Edward Carson and first President of Ireland Douglas Hyde, and in more recent times Government Ministers Mary Harney and Brian Lenihan.
History
Foundation
The first meeting of the College Historical Society took place on Wednesday, 21 March 1770,.[5] The society took into its care the minute book of Burke's Club, founded 1747, from which the Hist has since drawn inspiration. Its other precursor was the Historical Club, founded 1753, of which Henry Grattan was a member. James Reid became the first Auditor of the Hist later in 1770. It was a time of great change in Ireland and the Western world, at the height of the Enlightenment and before the American War of Independence and the French Revolution. From its inception it showed itself to be at the forefront of intellectual thought in Ireland, and many of its members later went into politics. In 1782, Lawrence Parsons was elected as an MP for the University of Dublin at 24, having served as Auditor of the Hist just the previous year.
Restrictions and expulsions
Theobald Wolfe Tone, later leader of the United Irishmen, was elected Auditor in 1785, and Thomas Addis Emmet was a member of the committee. The society was briefly expelled from the College in 1794, but readmitted on the condition that “No question of modern politics shall be debated”. In 1797, the poet Thomas Moore and the nationalist Robert Emmet were elected as members. Eight members of The Hist were expelled in 1798 in the run-up to the Rebellion, and a motion was later carried condemning the rebellion, against their former Auditor.
Tension between the society and the College flourished in the early nineteenth century with the Auditor being called before the Provost in 1810. In 1812 the Provost, Dr Thomas Elrington, objected vehemently to the question ‘Was Brutus justifiable in putting Julius Caesar to death?’. After a number of members were removed at the request of the College Board, the society left the college in 1815.
The Extern Society
The Society continued from 1815 as the Extern Historical Society. Among its members at this time were Isaac Butt, who tried unsuccessfully in 1832 to have the Society readmitted, Joseph Sheridan LeFanu, Thomas Davis and John Blake Dillon and many other notables of the nationalist cause. In 1843 the Society was reformed within the College after a student petition, again on the condition that no subject of current politics was debated. This provision remains in the Laws of the Hist as a nod to the past, but the college authorities have long since ceased to restrict the subjects of the society's debates.
The 19th century
The Society continued successfully after that with many lively debates, including the motion on June 10, 1857 ‘That the Reform Bill of Lord Grey was not framed in accordance with the wants of the country’, proposed by Isaac Butt and opposed by Edward Gibson. This era was considered by many to be the high point of the Society, with many of its members moving to high political positions. It was common for the Members of Parliament for the University to have served on the Committee of the Hist, such as Edward Gibson and David Plunkett, who were both Auditors, and Edward Carson, who was the Librarian. Bram Stoker, author of Dracula, became Auditor in 1872. In 1864 the Society collected money from its members to erect statues of Edmund Burke and Oliver Goldsmith at the Front Gate of College.
The Society moved to the Graduates' Memorial Building (GMB) in 1904, which it shares with the University Philosophical Society. The College Board relaxed its rules, allowing such motions as ‘That the Gaelic League is deserving of the support of every Irishman’ in 1905 and 1906.
The 20th and 21st centuries
The society continued well through the twentieth century, although the First World War hit it badly, with 136 of its former members killed. Eoin O'Mahony was elected Auditor in 1930 and faced impeachment when he raised a toast to Ireland instead of the King. Interestingly, Eoin O'Mahony offered Lord Carson the Presidency of the Society in 1931, although Carson declined due to ill health, recommending that the position be offered to former Gold Medallist and future President of Ireland Douglas Hyde, who was elected to the position. The current President is Prof. David McConnell, a former Librarian and Auditor of the Society and a winner of The Irish Times Debating Competition, and now Chairman of The Irish Times Trust and one of Europe's foremost geneticists.
Women had been refused membership of the society until 1969. Soon after the change in the rules, the society debated the motion ‘That this House reveres the memory of Mrs Pankhurst' with Rosaleen Mills participating (the motion, however, was defeated). The first female Auditor, future Tánaiste Mary Harney, was elected in 1976. Since then the Society has had four female Auditors. The Society's Bicentennial Meeting in 1970 was addressed by US Senator Edward Kennedy at which he called the Society "the greatest of the school of the orators" .
Recent developments have seen the re-opening of the Resource Library, operated in conjunction with the Phil, which holds over 200 books and is made available as a general study area and library for the use of the members of the Society. The Society has also extensively re-developed the Conversation Room with the addition of better facilities such as wireless Internet access.
Chamber debating
The main business of the society is the weekly debates held each Wednesday Night during term time. Chamber debating, including the debates (known as Public Business Meetings) with invited guest speakers for which the Society is best known, tends to be less formalised (even if more formal) than competitive debates, and the manner of delivery is closer to public speaking, with audience engagement far more important.
The Weekly Debate is the second of the Society's weekly meeting, with the Private Business Meeting being the first. In this, the internal business of the society is conducted by the General Committee with an Ordinary Member chairing: motions internal to the Society may be put to the House and debated, questions asked to the Committee and Officers, and Fines contested and administered. The Minutes read at both this and the Public Business Meeting are usually comedic, with the Record Secretary making a speech that has little, if any, relation to the previous week's meeting.
The Meeting then moves to Public Business, where an invited guest, usually someone of expertise or involvement in the matter being debated, chairs the debate in which both student and guest speakers from the Proposition or Opposition bench take the floor. During speeches, Points of Information may be offered from the floor or opposing bench. Shorter, impromptu Floor Speeches may also be given if there is interest from the student audience. At the debate's conclusion, the motion is put to the House followed by a speech from the Chair who usually offers their thoughts on how the debate proceeded. Students and guests then proceed to a reception where discussion of the matter is usually continued.
The motions are varied and wide-ranging, giving students an opportunity to debate with experts on the specific motion chosen, usually based on an important issue taking place in current affairs. The Society addresses controversial issues. In 2005, over 500 people attempted to gain access to a debate on abortion which was targeted by Youth Defence protesters and a debate on euthanasia was recorded for an upcoming documentary on the pro-euthanasia group Dignitas for the Canadian Discovery Channel.
Prominent politicians such as David Ervine, Jeffrey Donaldson and Nobel Peace Prize winner John Hume have spoken in debates on Northern Ireland. In 2005 the Minister for Justice, Michael McDowell T.D. unveiled proposals for reform of the legal profession at a Hist debate on the matter. The Inaugural Meeting of the 236th Session in 2006 was addressed by Dr. Mary Robinson, a former President of Ireland, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights and Chancellor of the University of Dublin. The Society has the distinction of having been addressed by every Taoiseach and President of the Ireland.
Competitive debating
The Society's best debaters compete nationally and internationally against other societies in competitions, most usually of the British Parliamentary debating style with the notable exception being the prestigious Irish Times public-speaking competition. The Society regularly fields one of the most successful teams in Ireland having been represented in the Grand Final of The Irish Times Debating Competition in 2006, and winning it in three consecutive years, in 2007, 2008 and 2009, and has now won this competition on both the individual and team positions more times than any other debating society in Ireland. It is also a force internationally, competing regularly at foreign Inter-Varsities and at both the World Universities Debating Championship and European Universities Debating Championships (the Society having hosted the former in 1992).
The Society jointly hosts the Trinity Women's Open, the Robert Emmet Invitational summer Open, and Dean Swift Intervarsity (Trinity IV), the largest and most prestigious Irish Inter-varsity, with the University Philosophical Society. The Society also fosters development and competition within itself, running frequent workshops and internal competitions: most notably its Maiden Speaker Competition and the Wolfe Tones's Public Speaking Competition.
It also plays a prominent role in providing Secondary School Level Debating, jointly running the esteemed Leinster Schools' Debating Competition with the Literary and Historical Society and its own Schools' Mace.
Notable speakers
The Society has a long history of hosting international figures, intellectuals and personalities.
Political figures and public intellectuals
- Gordon Brown, former British Prime Minister [6]
- Sir Winston Churchill, former British Prime Minister
- Edward Kennedy, United States Senator
- Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, former French President
- Clement Attlee, former British Prime Minister
- Sir Alec Douglas-Home, former British Prime Minister
- Sir John Major, former British Prime Minister
Paul Henri Spaak, one of the founders of the European Union.
- F. W. De Klerk, former President of South Africa, Nobel Laureate
- Bob Geldof, organiser of Live Aid and Live 8
- Bertie Ahern, former Taoiseach of Ireland
- Mary Robinson, former President of Ireland, former United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
- Charles Haughey, former Taoiseach
- Desmond Tutu, Archbishop, Nobel Laureate
- Liam Cosgrave, former Taoiseach
- John Hume, Nobel Laureate
- Rev. Ian Paisley, former First Minister of Northern Ireland
- Dr Garret FitzGerald, former Taoiseach
- Albert Reynolds, former Taoiseach
- Shirin Ebadi, Human Rights Lawyer, Nobel Laureate
- Rev. Jesse Jackson, Civil Rights activist
- Dr Sein Win, Prime Minister in Exile of Burma
- Paddy Ashdown, Former Leader of the Liberal Democrats
- Laurent Fabius, Former Prime Minister of France
- John Bruton, Former Taoiseach of Ireland, European Union Ambassador to the United States
- Jeffrey Sachs, Nobel Laureate, Special Advisor to Ban Ki-moon, Secretary General of the United Nations
- Noam Chomsky, Political theorist and public intellectual
- Joseph Stiglitz, former Chief Economist of the World Bank, Nobel Laureate
- Justice Antonin Scalia, United States Supreme Court Justice
- Rt. Hon. Baroness Valerie Amos, UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs.
- Dr William Perry, US Secretary of Defense under Bill Clinton
- Prof. Martha Minow, Dean of Harvard Law School and Jeremiah Smith Jr. Professor of Law
- Roméo Dallaire, humanitarian and Force Commander of UNAMIR
- José Manuel Barroso, President of the European Commission
- Michael D. Higgins, President of Ireland
- Judith Butler, Philosopher and Gender Theorist
- Cass Sunstein, Legal scholar and Behavioral Ecnonomist
- Angus Deaton, Economist, Nobel Laureate
Arts and Entertainment
- Sir Salman Rushdie, Booker Prize winner and author of Midnight's Children
- William Butler Yeats, Poet, Nobel Laureate
- Sir John Mortimer, author of Rumpole of the Bailey
- Jung Chang, author of Wild Swans and Mao: The Unknown Story
- Joseph Heller, author of Catch 22
- John Banville, Booker Prize winner and author of The Sea
- Paul Howard, author of Ross O'Caroll-Kelly series
- Jeremy Irons, Academy Award, Screen Actors Guild Award, Tony Award, Golden Globe Winner
- Ben Kingsley, Academy Award, BAFTA Award, Golden Globe, Screen Actors Guild Award Winner
- Ralph Fiennes, Tony Award, NYFCC Award, BAFTA Award Winner
- James Cromwell, Academy Award Nominee
- Patrick Stewart, actor
- Ardal O'Hanlon, actor and comedian
- Joshua Jackson, actor
- Tommy Tiernan, comedian
- Dermot Morgan, actor and comedian
- Neil Hannon, singer songwriter
- Damien Rice, singer songwriter
- Bill Bryson, author
- Joe Randazzo, author
- Sir Andrew Motion, Poet, Nobel Laureate
- Prof Alexander McCall Smith, author, medial law professor
- Steven Moffat, head writer of Doctor Who, co-creator of Sherlock, BAFTA Awards winner
- Hilary Mantel, Booker Prize winner and author of Wolf Hall
- Katherine Lynch, comedian
- Ken Loach, Director
- Robert Sheehan, actor, BAFTA Awards winner
- Dan Brown, author The Da Vinci Code and Angels and Demons
- Evanna Lynch, actress
- Patti Smith, singer-songwriter, poet and visual artist
Governance of the Society
The Society is headed by a President, usually a senior academic of the College and respected public figure, who ceremonially presides over the Society such at its Inaugural meeting but is uninvolved in the day-to-day running of the society. Several Vice-Presidents, usually distinguished Honorary Members of the Society, also serve the Society in a largely ceremonial position. The vast majority of the society's operation and management is conducted by the General Committee made up of the President; ex-Auditor; the Officers of the session (Auditor, Treasurer, Correspondence Secretary, Record Secretary, Censor, Librarian, Debates Convenor, Events Convenor and Senior Member of Committee), ex-officio and fourteen other members of the Society.
The Roles of these Officers are as follow (in descending order of seniority): The Auditor leads the Committee, is responsible for the final accounts of the society and delivers an address at the Societies annual Inaugural Meeting on a subject of their choosing. The Treasurer oversees the society's expenditure and income, membership subscriptions, fines and the Billiards rooms. The Correspondence Secretary organises the Society's Wednesday night debates, inviting guest speakers and selecting members to give speeches. The Record Secretary is charged with the keeping of the Society's Records, Laws and Membership lists, correspondence with the Society's Honorary Members, running of the internal Maidens competition and reading/taking of minutes at all meetings of the society and committee. The Censor publicises the Society's activities to its Members and College, organising the writing and publication of the Society's annual magazine, the HistOracle. The Librarian manages the Society's library, runs its secondary school debating competitions and takes attendance before debates. The Debates Convenor encourages and develops competitive debating within the society, sending teams to external competitions and co-convening the Trinity IV and Open with their counterpart in the Phil. This position is appointed by the new committee of the society following each annual election. The Events Convenor organises social events for the members of the society, including the receptions after the Wednesday night debates. The Senior Member of Committee is responsible for coordinating the work of the fourteen general members of committee including setting up before debates, tidying the society's rooms, cleaning glasses after receptions etc.
Presidents and Vice-Presidents
Presidents of the Society since 1843
Term | President | Hist record | Other roles |
---|---|---|---|
1843–1851 | Rev. Franc Sadleir | Provost of Trinity College 1837–51 | |
1852–1854 | Rev. Richard MacDonnell | Provost of Trinity College 1851–67 | |
1854–1883 | Sir Joseph Napier, bt | Lord Chancellor 1858–59 | |
1883–1913 | Lord Ashbourne | Auditor | Lord Chancellor 1885–86, 1886–92, 1895–1905 |
1913–1925 | Sir John Ross, bt | Lord Chancellor 1921–22 | |
1925–1931 | Lord Glenavy | Lord Chancellor 1918–21, Cathaoirleach of Seanad Éireann 1922–28 | |
1931–1949 | Douglas Hyde | [President of Ireland]] 1937–45 | |
1950–1952 | Sir Robert W. Tate | Senior Fellow of Trinity College | |
1952–1983 | Frederick Boland | Medallist | President of the UN General Assembly 1960–61, Chancellor of the University 1963–1982 |
1983–2003 | Dr Conor Cruise O’Brien | Medallist | Minister for Posts and Telegraphs 1973–77 |
2003– | Prof. David John McConnell | Auditor, Medallist | Senior Fellow of Trinity College |
Current Vice-Presidents
- Stephen G. Harris, B.A.
- Mary Robinson, M.A., LL.d., H.F.T.C.D., S.C., Chancellor of the University of Dublin, former President of Ireland,
- Professor Gary H. Holbrook, B.A., M.A., Professor Emeritus The Metropolitan State University Denver, Colorado.
- Shane Ross, M.A., T.D., ex-Record Secretary, Leader of the Independent Alliance
- Senator David Norris, M.A., Senator for the University of Dublin.
- Mary Henry, M.D., former Senator for the University of Dublin.
- Eric Lowry, M.A., ex-Auditor
- The Hon. Mr. Justice Declan N. O. Budd, M.A., LL.B., ex-Record Secretary, Medallist, former Justice of the High Court
- David O'Sullivan, M.A., ex-Auditor, Medallist, European Union Ambassador to the United States
- Dr Patrick Geoghegan, M.A., F.T.C.D., F.R.H.S., Professor in Modern History at Trinity College, Dublin
- Professor Ivana Bacik, LL.B., LL.M., F.T.C.D., Senator for the University of Dublin
- The Hon. Mr. Justice Michael Hanna, ex-Auditor, Justice of the High Court
- Dr Sean Barret, F.T.C.D, Senator for the University of Dublin
- Professor David F. Ford, ex-Auditor, M.A., B.D., PhD., D.D., S.T.M., Regius Professor of Divinty at the University of Cambridge
- Mary Harney, 1976–77, Leader of the Progressive Democrats 1993-2006, Tánaiste 1997-2006 and Cabinet Minister 1997-2011
- The Hon. Mr. Justice Peter Charleton, ex-Auditor, Justice of the Supreme Court
- The Hon. Ms. Justice Iseult O'Malley, Justice of the Supreme Court
- Donal Donovan, ex-Treasurer, former Deputy Director of the International Monetary Fund
- Adrian Langan, ex-Auditor, PR Consultant, first Irish winner of Young European of the Year
- Ross Hinds, ex-Librarian, Director of Operations and Technology at the International Post Corporation, Director of Hinds Publishing
- Richard Clarke, ex-Record Secretary, Archbishop of Armagh
Notable Auditors
- Theobald Wolfe Tone, 1785–86, Leader of the Society of the United Irishmen
- Richard Wilson Greene 1811-12, Attorney-General for Ireland and Baron of the Exchequer.
- Isaac Butt, 1832–33, Leader of the Home Rule League 1874-1880
- Joseph Sheridan LeFanu, 1838–39
- Edward Gibson, 1858–59, later Lord Ashbourne, Lord Chancellor of Ireland
- Bram Stoker, 1872–73, author of Dracula
- T. C. Kingsmill Moore, Justice of the Supreme Court of Ireland
- James Kilfedder, 1950–51, Leader of the Ulster Popular Unionist Party 1980-1995
- Declan Kiberd, 1974-1975, Public Intellectual
- David O’Sullivan, M.A., ex-Auditor, Medallist, Current EU Ambassador to Washington, Ex-Auditor General of the European Union
- Sir Donnell Deeny
- Mary Harney, 1976–77, Leader of the Progressive Democrats 1993-2006, Tánaiste 1997-2006 and Cabinet Minister 1997-2011.
Peter Charleton 1977-1978 Supreme Court judge
Other notable members
- Jaja Wachuku, former officer; first Speaker of the Nigerian House of Representatives and first Foreign Affairs Minister of Nigeria
- Thomas Addis Emmet, United Irishman
- Thomas Moore, Poet
- Robert Emmet, Revolutionary
- Oscar Wilde, writer and poet
- Thomas Davis, Politician and poet
- John Blake Dillon, Irish Patriot
- John Pentland Mahaffy, Classicist
- William Edward Hartpole Lecky, MP and historian
- Edward Carson, Leader of the Unionist Party 1910-1921
- Samuel Beckett, Playwright Nobel laureate
- Brian Lenihan, Former Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform and former Minister for Finance
- Ernest Walton, former Vice-President of Society, Physicist Nobel laureate
- His Grace, the Most Rev'd. Dr Richard Clarke, Lord Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland
References
- ↑ http://groupspaces.com/TheHist/e/340663?s=89d48160&utm_medium=email&utm_source=group-mail&utm_term=group-mail-6204
- ↑ Martin Cullen speech
- ↑ Bertie Ahern speech
- ↑ Burke Statue
- ↑ The Hist Page, CSC Archived February 27, 2012, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/ireland/2010/1211/1224285303520.html
- ↑ ,