Abstract
The 1920s and the creation of the Irish Free State was one of attempted recovery for the agricultural sector and the dairy industry was to prove a cornerstone of that effort. This study explores contemporary debates on agricultural modernisation as expressed in pro-Treaty newspapers such as ‘The Irish Statesman,’ the ‘Free State’ and the ‘Freeman’s Journal’ between 1920 and 1929. With underperforming milk yields, hygiene problems and inefficient organisation of creameries, commercial farmers and policy makers called for a pragmatic combination of scientific improvement, education, selective breeding and co-operative organisation. This analysis traces three interwoven strands of reform: efforts to boost productivity through cow-testing and herd improvement; the passing of regulatory legislation, notably the Dairy Produce Act 1924, which imposed quality standards and pasteurisation; and Minister Patrick Hogan’s reorganisation programme for creameries, which included the transfer of proprietary facilities to farmer-owned dairy co-operatives and a reduction in wasteful competition. These projects represented a particular Free State approach to things, which was a mix of farmer voluntarism and strategic state intervention. It ultimately resulted in higher butter exports and improved industry standards by the late 1920s. This piece argues that these debates illustrate how Ireland’s commercial farming classes sought to anchor the new state through practical economic modernisation rather than continued political agitation, laying important foundations for the development of Irish dairying in the interwar period.