The Effects of the Penal Laws Upon Irish Society
As 18th century progressed, the anti-Catholic penal laws were strengthened and had a profound effect upon all aspects of Irish society.
The great Gaelic lords were gone and the clans beaten and subdued. The Catholic Old English were totally excluded from all the upper positions of social and political life. Except for a few Presbyterian members, the Parliament was Church of Ireland (Anglican).
The House of Lords in it’s entirety was composed of the Anglican hierarchy and nobility. This became known as the Protestant Ascendancy, a name first used in 1782, and they were to become an extremely wealthy and elite class of people who owned most of the property of Ireland.
A few Catholic families had managed to hold on to their lands but as the century progressed many, turned Protestant to protect their interests. By the time Queen Anne died in 1714, Catholic ownership of land had fallen to 14% of the total. In 1780 that percentage reached as low as 5%. The percentage of Catholic in the population terms was 75%.
It is interesting to note that one Catholic who had turned Protestant was to become the wealthiest man in Ireland. He was William Connelly the son of a Donegal innkeeper and a lawyer who dealt in buying confiscated lands.
As Britain started to expand its empire abroad the Ascendancy class invested heavily in Dublin turning it into the second city of the empire after London. Many new and impressive buildings were erected. Broad thoroughfares laid down and beautiful parks established. Large and impressive houses were built on estates throughout the country. Life was extremely good to them.
As for the Catholics, and increasingly, the non-conforming sects such as the Presbyterians, life was not so pleasant. By refusing to take the Eucharist test of 1704 the dissenting Protestants were excluded from any major role in the governance or wealth of the country. Although they had fought in the Cromwellian and Williamite wars against the Catholics they were now cobbled to them in their misfortune as victims of the penal laws. These laws were described by Edmund Burke as “ a machine of wise and deliberate contrivance, as well fitted for the oppression, impoverishment and degradation of a people, and the debasement of human nature itself, as ever proceeded from the perverted ingenuity of man.”