Abstract
This article reviews public and political debates on the Gaeltacht in the Irish Free State/Saorstát Éireann between 1925 and 1937. Despite the rhetorical commitment to the revival of the Irish language, successive governments were regularly criticised for failing to address the serious economic and social challenges of Irish-speaking districts. It utilises contemporary newspaper sources, parliamentary debates and contributions from politicians, native speakers and intellectuals from across the political spectrum to explore how the Gaeltacht was simultaneously romanticised as the authentic heartland of Irish culture, yet marginalised as a site of poverty, emigration and rural under-development. Key themes explored are the binary opposition of cultural symbolism and material neglect; the failure of the Gaeltacht Commission of 1925-6; demands for local empowerment and housing reform; the effects of emigration and land scarcity; and limited state initiatives such as the Gaeltacht Housing Act. Cumann na nGaedheal, Fianna Fáil, Labour and hardline republican critics all had a similar theme in their views: ambitious proposals were often watered down or rejected on the grounds of cost and administrative convenience. This study asserts that these early debates set a pattern of symbolic support and practical inaction that would come to characterise Irish language policy for decades to come. It concludes that the survival of Irish as a collective, community-focused language demanded more than educational or cultural measures; it required sustained economic development and a genuine political prioritisation of Gaeltacht communities.