James Craig, 1st Viscount Craigavon (born Jan. 8, 1871, Sydenham, Belfast, County Antrim, Ire. [now in Northern Ireland]—died Nov. 24, 1940, Glencraig, County Down, N.Ire.) was a soldier and statesman, a leading advocate of maintaining the union between Ireland and Great Britain, and the first prime minister of Northern Ireland (from June 22, 1921, until his death).
Craig became a stockbroker, served with an Irish unit in the South African (Boer) War, and in 1906 entered Parliament as a member of the Ulster Unionist Party. In the acute Irish Home Rule controversy after 1910, he emerged as a leader of the Ulster Unionists and worked with Edward Carson for the exclusion of Ulster from Home Rule. In addition to his part in the threats to establish a provisional government of Ulster, Craig was involved in gunrunning and in the organization of an Ulster volunteer force.
During World War I, Craig recruited and organized the 36th (Ulster) Division. He held various British government offices until 1920, when the Government of Ireland Act created the political entity of Northern Ireland—consisting of the six predominantly Protestant counties of Ulster—of which he became prime minister. For 19 years he led the Unionist Party to large majorities in every general election.
The civil war in the Irish Free State (1922–23) spread into Northern Ireland to some extent. Bombings, political murders, and sectarian violence, especially against Roman Catholics in Belfast, caused more than 200 deaths in 1922. In 1925 the Craig government signed an agreement with the Free State and Britain that maintained the existing boundary between Northern Ireland and the Irish Free State. His government also reformed the lower courts, nationalized road transport, and introduced new systems of education and agricultural marketing, but it failed to address the alienation of the nationalist minority.
Craig was created a baronet in 1918 and a viscount in 1927.