By James Patton
At the start of the First World War, some Canadians wondered how their large population of Irish immigrants would respond to the Dominion’s call for volunteers. Irish Nationalist sentiment was fairly widespread and it was thought that many had left the homeland to avoid British domination. The answer came just a month after the declaration of war when a committee was formed in Montréal to create an all-Irish regiment in the Canadian militia. Behind this was a 36-year-old lawyer, H.J. Trihey (1877–1942). A graduate of Loyola College (Montréal), he had captained the Montréal Shamrocks team that won the Stanley Cup in 1899 and 1900.
The committee received approval at the end of August. Trihey was named the commanding officer and he designated the unit as the 55th Regiment, The Irish Canadian Rangers. Its badges would be distinctly Irish, with a shamrock on the cap and a harp on the collar. The Regiment specified “Irish descent” as a required qualification, but religion wasn’t specified.
| Harry Trihey |
There was another distinctive feature about Trihey’s Rangers: as militia they would not be sent overseas. The response to the first recruiting campaign was positive and the four authorized companies were soon filled. However, only the Adjutant, Major John Long, had any military service (Trihey had attended an officers school in Halifax). In mid-1915 the Rangers contributed “C” company, 60th (Victoria Rifles of Canada) battalion, Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF). This company was commanded by a Ranger, Dublin-born Capt. E.H. Knox-Lee, and. Major Long became the 60th ’s adjutant.
The Rangers also supplied volunteers to the Montréal Home Guard, a “composite” battalion made up of men from local militia regiments who had not volunteered for the CEF. These men guarded strategic infrastructure like locks on canals. In the winter of 1915-16 the Rangers were ordered to raise a whole overseas battalion, to be called the 199th Irish Canadian Rangers. All those willing to serve were discharged from the militia and enlisted in the CEF.
First they needed officers. Trihey was made a a lieutenant colonel and put in charge. He drew almost all of the officers from his 55th Militia Regiment. Most were Irish Catholics but born in Montréal. Four were also Loyola "old boys" They came from business, finance and the professions. Only one had any military experience, the now-Major Knox-Lee, who had returned from service in the 60th CEF.
The next task was recruiting and training NCO’s. There were many volunteers; most of whom had prior military experience, some in Imperial service, one with the U.S. volunteers in the Philippines and one even claimed to have fought with Pancho Villa. By the spring of 1916, the 199th was ready to begin general recruiting. The plan was to emphasize that all the Irish in Canada lived in unity. A recruiting poster featured a map of Ireland emblazoned with “All in One.” The Montréal Gazette said “that the 199th Irish Rangers were the Canadian exemplification of this new United Ireland.” This ideal was expressed by the motto “Quis Separabit,” (Who Shall Separate Us? ) which was shared with many other Irish formations, originating in 1793 with the 88th Foot, known as the Connaught Rangers.
By coincidence, the 199th began their recruiting on 24 April, Easter Monday, 1916, the very day of the Dublin uprising. For the next three months, while Irish Canadians were being called on to enlist, the newspapers carried stories of the uprising, its brutal suppression, of martial law and executions.
There was also a newsworthy scandal: the Quartermaster was caught selling the men’s civvies instead of storing them, and also embezzling the proceeds from the sale of leftover food. So, after all of this bad publicity, six month’s of effort had yielded a battalion that was still 100 men short, and a Montréal paper declared, “it has been a complete failure.” With the ranks not full, the recruiters had to range farther afield, stalking the Richelieu and Châteauguay valleys, the Eastern Townships and even places in Ontario.
This last move piqued the Mayor of Toronto, who declared that anyone from his city who joined a Montréal battalion would lose the insurance policy paid for by his city. In August 1916 the 199th gained a royal patron, an honor shared by only five other Canadian formations. The Prussian-born HRH Princess Louise, the Duchess of Connaught (1860–1917), the wife of the Governor-General (and the mother of THE Princess Patricia of the Canadian Light Infantry regiment) bestowed the honor. The 199th became The Duchess of Connaught’s Own Irish Canadian Rangers, thus acquiring distinctive new insignia. The Duchess herself embroidered the flag, and when it was presented, the salute was taken by the Duke (the third son of Queen Victoria). His concluding message was “You have one of the finest battalions I have ever reviewed in Canada.”
Despite the royal patronage, the spiffy badges and the Duke’s rhetoric, the battalion still couldn’t get up to full strength. The decline in recruiting seen in Montréal in the last half of 1916 was experienced in every military district of Canada. Many men who wanted to fight had already joined up. Others were distracted by the rising industrial wages of a war economy. Many of the volunteers were in poor physical condition; after three months of recruiting, about 1,000 men who had tried to enlist with the 199th had failed to pass the medical boards. In some weeks as many as three out of four were rejected.
Nevertheless, at the end of November, the 199th was inspected prior to deployment. The Inspector-General’s report didn’t echo the governor-general’s glowing praise. The 199th was 200 men short and 66 were absent without leave. Lt. Col. Trihey was allowing a company sergeant major who was under arrest to parade under arms. The report’s conclusion: “On the whole the unit is only fit for drafts [backfill] and will require a lot of work to make them fit at that.”
Despite this, the 199th still prepared to depart. In a farewell address, their honorary Colonel, the Minister of Justice C.J. Doherty (1865–1931), repeated the recruiting campaign theme, “you show that in this country all races and creeds live together in amity.” It was decided to show off this feature of Canada in the 199th’s first and only "tour" of duty overseas. It was literally a tour—of Ireland. The Canadian-born British Colonial Secretary, Andrew Bonar Law (1858–1923), requested it of Prime Minister Sir Robert Borden (1854–1937), “With a view of helping recruiting in Ireland.” After the Easter Rising and its aftermath, Irish recruitment had collapsed and, of course, conscription was off-limits. Some in Whitehall thought that Irishmen might be more receptive to serving in the Canadian Army, since it was more egalitarian than the British, and the Canadian pay scale was very attractive—CD$1.10 per day—over four times the value of the British one shilling per day. Some estimate that 300 to 400 Irishmen did volunteer for the Canadian Army as a result of the parades.
The 199th left Halifax on 21 December 1916 and arrived in Liverpool on New Year’s Eve. During the voyage Trihey turned thirty-nine and his residence in Westmount burned down, and that was not to be the only bad news. The 199th had been assigned to the 15th Brigade in the new 5th Division, but on 5 January 1917, at the urging of Maj. Gen. Arthur Currie, the decision was made to stand down the 5th Division, and the 199th was assigned to the 23rd (Reserve) battalion CEF, which backfilled the 5th Brigade, 2nd Division. For its brief life thereafter, the 23rd would carry the honor The Duchess of Connaught’s Own.
The Rangers had not been singled out, but Trihey and Doherty believed theirs to be a special case, since the former Minister of Militias Sir Sam Hughes (1853–1921) had promised them that the 199th would serve together with its own officers, but the decision stood. Trihey and his second in command then resigned and Lieut. Col. John O’Donahoe, a veteran officer with 15 months of service with the 87th CEF, was appointed commander.
| The Irish Rangers Marching in Cork |
However, the recruiting tour of Ireland was still on. From 25 January to 2 February 1917, the 199th visited Dublin, Belfast, Armagh, Cork, and Limerick. Splendidly housed, the men were feted everywhere by the municipal corporations and local dignitaries.
They were inspected by the Lord-Lieutenant Ivor Guest, Baron Wimbourne (1873-1939) and blessed by Cardinal Michael Logue (1840–1924), the Catholic Primate of Ireland. The seemingly endless orations repeated the themes of unity and sacrifice for a just cause. Here is one example, from Sir James Gallagher( 1860–1925), the Lord Mayor of Dublin:
It is a great gratification to me to see such a fine body of men who have responded voluntarily to the call of duty and donned the uniform of the King in order to defend those rights and liberties which we so dearly love. I understand you are Irish by birth or descent, and that you embrace amongst your ranks men of all shades of religious and political opinion. You have set a fine example of what Irishmen can do if they only come together for one cause — the cause of liberty and humanity.
On 14 March the 199th lost their royal patron. To many her death was the symbolic end f the 199th, which had been the only all-Irish battalion in the CEF, compared to 47 Scottish battalions, although many weren’t exclusively populated with Scots. It is reported in a contemporaneous writing that men who began service with either the 55th or the 199th were awarded one Military Cross five Distinguished Conduct Medals and 36 Military Medals, but I can’t verify this. The 55th Regiment was re-designated in the militia as The Irish Canadian Rangers on April 1st , 1920, and the battle honors Hill 70, Ypres 1917 and Amiens were bestowed due to the first battalion, which perpetuated the 199th .
The colors of the 199th were eventually laid up in the Loyola College Chapel (now part of Concordia University) in 1933. The Irish Canadian Rangers were disbanded in 1936.
Sources include:
Canada to Ireland: The Visit of the Duchess of Connaught’s Own, Drysdale, A.M., London 1917; The Montreal Irish and the Great War by Burns, Robin B. (Bishop’s University), CCHA Historical Studies, 52 (1985), 67-81, from the University of Manitoba website; Digital Collections, McGill University Library. Great War Forum 2004 thread.