[Ireland In The New Century by Horace Plunkett]@TWC D-Link bookIreland In The New Century CHAPTER VIII 10/19
A committee which, though informal and self-appointed, might fairly claim to be representative in every material respect, was thus constituted on the lines laid down. Truly, it was a strange council over which I had the honour to preside. All shades of politics were there--Lords Mayo and Monteagle, Mr.Dane and Sir Thomas Lea (Tories and Liberal Unionist Peers and Members of Parliament) sitting down beside Mr.John Redmond and his parliamentary followers.
It was found possible, in framing proposals fraught with moral, social, and educational results, to secure the cordial agreement of the late Rev.Dr.Kane, Grand Master of the Belfast Orangemen, and of the eminent Jesuit educationist, Father Thomas Finlay, of the Royal University.
The O'Conor Don, the able Chairman of the Financial Relations Commission, and Mr.John Ross, M.P., now one of His Majesty's Judges, both Unionists, were balanced by the Lord Mayor of Dublin, and Mr.T.C.Harrington, M.P., who now occupies that post, both Nationalists.
The late Sir John Arnott fitly represented the commercial enterprise of the South, while such men as Mr.Thomas Sinclair, universally regarded as one of the wisest of Irish public men, Sir William Ewart, head of the leading linen concern in the North, Sir Daniel Dixon, now Lord Mayor of Belfast, Sir James Musgrave, Chairman of the Belfast Harbour Board, and Mr.Thomas Andrews, a well-known flax-spinner and Chairman of the Belfast and County Down Railway, would be universally accepted as the highest authorities upon the needs of the business community which has made Ulster famous in the industrial world. Mr.T.P.Gill, besides undertaking investigation of the utmost value into State aid to agriculture in France and Denmark, acted as Hon. Secretary to the Committee, of which he was a member. The story of our deliberations and ultimate conclusions cannot be set forth here except in the barest outline.
We instituted an inquiry into the means by which the Government could best promote the development of our agricultural and industrial resources, and despatched commissioners to countries of Europe whose conditions and progress might afford some lessons for Ireland.
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