Unbought Tenants' Association and Unpurchased Tenants' Association were labels for agrarian pressure groups in Ireland in the 1910s and 1920s. Under the Irish Land Acts, most farmers in the preceding decades had bought the freehold to their farms; the Association represented the interests of remaining tenant farmers.[1]
In the House of Commons in 1913, William O'Brien mentioned "a map prepared by the Unpurchased Tenants' Association of East Down, showing how the districts purchased at greatly reduced annuities are surrounded on all sides by townlands still unpurchased, where the farmers suffer from high rents and uncertainty as to the future".[2]
In 1920,[3] the Irish Farmers' Union (IFU) founded an All-Ireland Unpurchased Tenants' Association to agitate for purchase and organise rent strikes.[4][5] This created tension in the Irish Free State among the large landowners in the IFU, between unionists anxious to sell up and emigrate to Great Britain and those who wished to remain on their Irish estates.[4] The Unpurchased Tenants' Association's opposition to the Free State's Land Act 1923 was more extreme than that of the Farmers' Party;[6] James Hoban ran unsuccessfully in Galway in the 1923 general election under the "Unpurchased Tenants' Association" label, against Farmers' Party candidates.[7]Michael Heffernan was a member of the Unpurchased Tenants' Association when elected for the Farmers' Party in the same election.[8]
^Dinneen, John (6 April 1927). "PRIVATE BUSINESS. - LAND BILL, 1927.—REPORT". Dáil Éireann debate. Retrieved 11 August 2018. Deputies of the House can remember that when the big slump came in prices of cattle and all other agricultural produce in 1920 there was an Unpurchased Tenants' Association formed, the members of which were paying much higher rents than their neighbours who had the benefit of purchase for years.
^ abO'Connor, Emmet (1980). "Agrarian Unrest and the Labour Movement in County Waterford 1917-1923". Saothar. 6: 40–58 : 47. JSTOR23193892.
^Dooley, Terence A. M. (2004). 'The Land for the People': The Land Question in Independent Ireland. University College Dublin Press. pp. 39–56. ISBN9781904558156.