top of page
Falling Leaves_edited.jpg

Rotten Prod - The Life of James Baird




This episode needs a bit of an introduction. While the term Rotten Prod, short for Rotten Protestant, sounds like a sectarian slur, the phrase has a very different and fascinating history.


It actually originated within the Protestant community in Ulster to describe a person considered disloyal to Unionism. At the turn of the 20th century, the majority of Ulster Protestants were Unionists, meaning they supported Ireland remaining in the United Kingdom.


However a largely forgotten minority, many of whom were Protestant working class socialists, rejected this view. Believing a United Ireland of one kind or another was better for workers, this left them alienated from their own community. Labelled Rotten Prods, they not only faced vilification but often violence from their neighbours and workmates.


In this podcast, I interview Emmet O’Connor historian in the University of Ulster and author of the book Rotten Prod, the unlikely career of Dongaree Baird. Our discussion focused on the life of James 'Dongaree' Baird a man who lived and worked in the epicentre of sectarian violence in 1920s Ireland - the Belfast Shipyards.


Emmet's book Rotten Prod, the unlikely career of Dongaree Baird is available here



“From the creator of the Irish History Podcast comes the story of Modern Ireland and its people written in death” 

​

​

  • Hardback

  • Audio

  • Ebook

The Irish Times Top 5 Bestseller

Screen Shot 2023-01-19 at 10.43.57.png

Get access to bonus episode's, get access to upcoming series, get a back catalogue of hours of exclusive content and much much more!

Patreon Logo.png

Subscribe to Patreon

bottom of page