ABSTRACT

Michael Collins was a pivotal figure in the Irish struggle for independence and his legacy has resonated ever since. Whilst Collins’ role as a guerrilla leader and intelligence operative is well documented, his actions as the clandestine Irish government Minister of Finance have been less studied. The book analyses how funds were raised and transferred in order that the IRA could initiate and sustain the military struggle, and lay the financial foundations of an Irish state.

Nicholas Ridley examines the legacy of these actions by comparing Collins’ modus operandi for raising and transferring clandestine funds to those of more modern groups engaged in political violence, as well as the laying of foundations for Irish financial and fiscal regulation.

part I|16 pages

Violent undercurrents

chapter 1|10 pages

Violence in pre-1914 Europe

chapter 2|4 pages

Ireland

Peaceful, patient and hopeful

part 17II|66 pages

Michael Collins and the struggle for Irish independence

chapter 3|10 pages

Cork, London, Dublin

The 1916 débacle

chapter 4|3 pages

Collins reorganises the Volunteers …

chapter 5|6 pages

… and de Valera enlists America

chapter 6|16 pages

The Anglo-Irish War 1919–1921

chapter 7|15 pages

Collins’ Intelligence War

chapter 8|14 pages

Treaty and Civil War

part 83III|78 pages

The sinews of war

chapter 9|3 pages

Preparing in London, active in Dublin

chapter 10|17 pages

Filling the war chest

The National Loan

chapter 11|10 pages

Funds from America, funds in America

chapter 12|25 pages

Collins, Minister of Finance

chapter 13|4 pages

The Anglo-Irish Treaty

Ireland’s fiscal autonomy

chapter 14|6 pages

The North

part IV|28 pages

Later political violence and insurgency and their financing

part V|2 pages

Michael Collins

chapter |10 pages

Appendix I

Historians and de Valera’s United States funds

chapter |4 pages

Appendix II

Collins and Connolly