Jack White (Irish socialist)

Jack White
Personal details
Born(1879-05-22)22 May 1879
Broughshane, County Antrim, Ireland
Died2 February 1946(1946-02-02) (aged 66)
Belfast, Northern Ireland
Political partyUlster Liberal Association (1912-1913)
Workers Socialist Federation (1918-1924)
Irish Worker League (1923-1926)
Irish Worker's Party (1926-1927)
Revolutionary Workers' Groups (1930-1933)
Republican Congress (1934-1936)
Other political
affiliations
Irish Transport and General Workers' Union
Irish Citizen Army
Irish Volunteers
Secular Society of Ireland
FAI-CNT London Bureau
Military service
Branch/serviceBritish Army
Years of service1899-1907
RankCaptain
UnitGordon Highlanders
Battles/warsSecond Boer War
AwardsDistinguished Service Order

Captain James Robert "Jack" White, DSO (1879–1946) was an Irish republican and libertarian socialist. After colonial service in the British military, he entered Irish politics in 1913 working with Roger Casement in Ulster to detach fellow Protestants from Unionism as it armed to resist Irish Home Rule, and with James Connolly to defend the Irish Transport and General Workers' Union in the great Dublin lock-out. White rallied to the defence of those condemned for the 1916 Easter Rising, but the combination of his socialism and anti-clericalism placed him at odds with the principal currents of Irish republicanism. Until experience of Republican Spain in 1936 convinced him of the anarchist critique of the party-state, he associated with a succession of communist-aligned groups. His last public appearance was in 1945, at an Orange Hall in his home town of Broughshane, County Antrim, where he proposed himself as a "republican socialist" candidate in the upcoming United Kingdom general election.