Maurice Dockrell (Unionist politician)
Sir Maurice Edward Dockrell (21 December 1850 – 5 August 1929) was an Irish businessman and politician from Dublin.
At the 1918 general election, he was elected as Irish Unionist Alliance Member of Parliament for Dublin Rathmines from 1918 to 1922.
The 1918 election was a watershed in Ireland. Following the Easter Rising in 1916, Sinn Féin had grown in popularity, eclipsing the Irish Parliamentary Party. Sinn Féin candidates treated the election as an Irish general election, pledging not to take their seats in the British House of Commons, but to unilaterally establish a separate parliament in Dublin.
At the election, the Dublin University constituency returned two Unionists, and Dockrell was the only other Irish Unionist returned outside Ulster. Rather than joining Sinn Féin in the First Dáil, Dockrell took his seat in the British House of Commons.
His son Henry Morgan Dockrell was later a Fine Gael Teachta Dála (TD), and Henry's sons Percy and Maurice were also long-serving Fine Gael TDs.
Maurice ran the Dockrell family business of builders' providers in Dublin.
See also
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References
- 1850 births
- 1929 deaths
- Businesspeople from County Dublin
- Irish Unionist Party politicians
- Members of the Parliament of the United Kingdom for Dublin constituencies (1801–1922)
- Politicians from County Dublin
- UK MPs 1918–22
- Members of the Parliament of the United Kingdom for Irish constituencies (1801–1922)
- Irish (UK) MP stubs
- Irish business biography stubs