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MICHAEL D HIGGINS will become the ninth President of Ireland this morning – but he won’t be the first poet to take residence in the Áras.
The State’s very first President, Douglas Hyde, was also a scholar, a writer and a poet – and a fierce activist for the preservation of the Irish language. Although Hyde was born the son of a Church of Ireland rector in Castlerea, Co Roscommon, his family came from Castlehyde, Fermoy, Co Cork (yes, that Castlehyde of Michael Flately residence fame).
Hyde was President from June 1938 to June 1945 and was the first to live in the building previously known as the Viceregal Lodge in the Phoenix Park under its new name, Áras an Uachtaráin. As a non-Catholic but also a staunch defender of Irish cultural heritage, he was seen as a unifying figure for the young Irish state.
Unfortunately, Hyde suffered a stroke in 1940 which led to him being confined to a wheelchair. However, he still managed to twice invoke the Presidential power under Article 26 to refer proposed legislation to the Supreme Court, once in 1940 and once in 1942. He was 89 when he died in 1949.
As a Gaeilgeoir, poet, academic (and physically, he was apparently a man of small stature), Hyde has much in common with our President-elect. While we will be posting a slideshow of Michael D Higgins’s inauguration later today, we thought you might enjoy a flash back to the inauguration of Douglas Hyde in 1938.
The order of ceremonies on that pleasant Saturday morning in June 1938 pretty much set the template for future Presidential inaugurations, with the exception of the separate religious worship for different faiths at the start of the day.
It went as follows on 25 June 1938:
All pictures appear courtesy of Independent Newspaper (Ireland) Collection at the National Library of Ireland. Thanks to Carol Maddock in the NLI for her sterling research on the ceremony and in the picture archives.
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