Erskine H. Childers (born Dec. 11, 1905, London, Eng.—died Nov. 17, 1974, Dublin, Ire.) was an Irish politician, a member of the Fianna Fáil party who served as the fourth president of Ireland (1973–74). He was the second Protestant to hold the office, the first being Douglas Hyde (1938–45).
Childers was the son of Robert Erskine Childers, a leading figure in the struggle for Irish independence who was minister for publicity in the republican government of 1919 and was executed on Nov. 24, 1922. Erskine Childers was educated in England and read history at Trinity College, Cambridge. He returned to Ireland in 1932 and became advertising manager of the Irish Press, the newly founded newspaper owned by the family of Eamon de Valera.
Childers’s political debut was as a successful Fianna Fáil candidate for a seat in Dáil Éireann (the lower house of the Oireachtas, the Irish parliament) in 1938. He became a junior minister in 1944 and was later minister for posts and telegraphs (1951–54), of lands, forestry, and fisheries (1957–59), and of transport and power (1959–69). Childers also served as tánaiste (deputy prime minister) and minister for health (1969–73). He supported Taoiseach (Prime Minister) Jack Lynch’s condemnation of the violence in Northern Ireland and Lynch’s advocacy of a European role for the Irish republic within the European Economic Community (now European Community, embedded in the European Union).
After his election as president in 1973, Childers’s early death frustrated his hope of making the presidency a platform for noncontroversial pronouncements and intellectual debate.