Michael Collins letter to fetch €8,000 at auction

A political letter from Michael Collins written after the signing of the Treaty is expected to fetch more than €8,000 at an auction…

A political letter from Michael Collins written after the signing of the Treaty is expected to fetch more than €8,000 at an auction in Dublin tomorrow.

Buyers from across the world will bid for the letter, which is described as one of the most important pieces of correspondence from Collins.

Quote
It would be far better to fix our minds for a time on a united Ireland, for this course will not leave minorities which would be impossible to govern
Unquote
Extract from the letter by Michael Collins

He sent the three-page document to prominent Derry republican Louis J Walsh in 1922, telling him about his opposition to partition.

Replying to a letter from Walsh, Collins outlined his position regarding negotiations with Winston Churchill and unionist leader James Craig.

READ MORE

It was written after he returned to Dublin from a meeting in London with Churchill and Craig.

Collins states in the letter that Craig's stance on partition was seen as "an unreasonable one and not ours".

"All the British statesmen are agreed that it was most disastrous on Craig's part to talk about agreeing to nothing less than the six county area," he wrote.

He expresses his belief that ties will increase between leaders in the north and south, leading to a united Ireland in the long term.

He told Walsh that he was "no lover of partition, no matter what form it appears", and that any form of partition was "distasteful" to him.

"It would be far better to fix our minds for a time on a united Ireland, for this course will not leave minorities which would be impossible to govern," he wrote.

Collins also said he hoped that one day a multi-denominational party might be formed in the north east, developing links with the Free State and destabilising the northern administration.

Auction cataloguer Mr Peter Sheen said the document was extremely important since political letters from Collins were few and far between.

"So far as Michael Collins' correspondence is concerned virtually nothing survived," Mr Sheen said.

"All that survived is his love letters and a few brief snippets, but there is very little in terms of political correspondence

He said this meant it was likely to go under the hammer for more than the expected €8,000.

"I wouldn't like to say how much it's going to fetch," he said.

He said there had been interest from buyers as far away as the United States, Australia and the United Kingdom, as well as in Ireland.

"I'm amazed at the interest," Mr Sheen said. "A chap phoned me up from the States expressing an interest. He's crazy about the subject and will be bidding by phone for it tomorrow."

The letter spent decades in the Walsh family but is now being sold by a private collector who purchased it a number of years ago.

"You can sense the urgency in the letter," Mr Sheen added. "It's very, very meaty, there's no waffle. It's the most important individual piece of Michael Collins correspondence that's come to light."

The document is on display at Adams Auctioneers in St Stephen's Green in Dublin and will be auctioned from 3 p.m. tomorrow.

PA