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Edward John Newell

Edward John Newell (1771–1798), was an Irish sailor, glazier, artist, and portrait painter, notorious for role as a government informer during the political turmoil of the 1790s. Shortly after joining the republican Society of United Irishmen in 1796 he offered his services to the Crown authorities. Following the publication of a confessional autobiography, in 1798 he disappeared amidst rumours of assassination.

Edward John Newell
Born1771
Died1798 (aged 26–27)
NationalityIrish
Edward John Newell, from a sketch of his own featured in his autobiography, reproduced by F.W. Huffam in R.R. Madden's "United Irishmen"

Early life

Newell was born in Downpatrick on 29 June 1771 to parents Robert and Jane Newell.[1][2] He was of Scottish ancestry. As a child, he was prone to misbehavior.[3] In his youth, Newell put up a false facade in front of his friends to hide who he really was to them.[4][5]

Aynsworth Pilson wrote in his memoirs,[6] that Newell's parents lived in Dublin before they moved back to Downpatrick. Pilson also wrote that Robert Newell ran a perfumery in Dublin, and that Jane Newell operated a millinery business.

 
Edward John Newell's family tree, compiled by Philip Blair (2016) from the memoirs of Aynsworth Pilson (1777-1863).

When Newell was seventeen,[3] his father was seriously injured in a horse accident while he was away on business. Newell's mother left Edward in charge of the house while she attended to Robert. Newell later abandoned his younger brother and the house to visit his sick father at his uncle's home. His mother, who never showed much affection for Newell, was not pleased to see her son turn up.[3]

Employment

After the falling out with his mother, he sought work. Newell met Captain Johnson, who enlisted Newell as a seaman. Newell soon left port for Cadiz, Spain.[2] For about one year, Newell was at sea; he later described some of the hardships of that experience, including "a most dreadful storm" and living for six weeks "on raw meat, lying in wet clothes, and constantly working at our pumps."[7]

After returning home to Dublin and telling his father of his voyage, his father asked Newell to settle down and found him employment in a painting and glazing business, which Newell wrote that he begrudgingly followed for about a year until his "usual licentiousness occasioned a difference" with his employer.[8]

Newell soon became a glass-stainer for the next two years, before a falling out with his employer and his father.

Following an failed attempt to emigrate to America, he moved on to Limerick and Dublin,[9] trying to find a job but never holding one down for long. He found himself in almost complete poverty, and when he asked his parents for assistance, he was denied due to his enthusiastic support of the United Irishmen.

In 1796, Newell moved to Belfast, where he started his own portrait and miniature painting business.[10] Newell had never attempted miniature painting before, and he had received no instruction in the vocation.[11]

Two of Newell's known paintings are a self-portrait that he included in his later biography, and a portrait of Betsy Gray, who fought and died at the Battle of Ballynahinch.[12]

Informer among the United Irishmen

Newell officially joined the Society of United Irishmen in 1796.[13]

Newell neglected his business due to his over-enthusiasm for the United Irishmen, and he quickly began to raise the movement leaders' suspicions. His younger brother, Robert (not a United Irishman), described Newell as being "in the practice of going through the town of Belfast disguised in the dress of a light horseman, with his face blackened and accompanied by a guard of soldiers, pointing out certain individuals who have in consequence been immediately apprehended and put in prison".[14]

Through his business, he became acquainted with George Murdoch, and Newell painted the interiors and exteriors of Murdoch's house. Murdoch and Newell were opposites politically; their association increased distrust of Newell within the United Irishmen. Newell hired guards to protect Murdoch's house because of their friendship. Newell later wrote that Murdoch informed him that he know that Newell was a rebel. However, Newell's 1843 biographer, Madden, wrote that "he betrayed the secrets of the United Irish Society professedly to prevent the murder of an exciseman named Murdock".[15]

Under-Secretary of State for Ireland Edward Cooke brought Newell to Dublin Castle to be questioned.[8] Newell wrote that he was given a good reception and treated well and that he was even offered wine. Newell asked to be pardoned in exchange for his knowledge, which the Lord Lieutenant granted him in writing. Cooke initially questioned Newell for nine hours.

Newell was examined by a secret committee of the Irish House of Commons[16] in early 1797, where he was put on a high chair in order to be heard better by his audience. Newell later admitted that he deliberately exaggerated and fabricated his testimony in order to scare the committee.[2]

In 1798 Newell pretended that he showed remorse for his treachery and for making many enemies. Soon after, he told Cooke that he no longer wanted to be a spy.[2] It was decided that he should move to Worcester[2] under the false name of Johnson, where he would resume his painting career.

Portrait of Betsy Gray

 
Miniature of Betsy Gray attributed to "Newell of Downpatrick"[17]

Among "Other Stories and pictures of '98", the Mourne Observer reproduces "a miniature of Betsy Gray" which was attributed (possibly apocryphally)[18] to "Newell of Downpatrick".[17]

This miniature of Betsy Gray, which is in the possession of Mr. C. J. Robb, Spa, was first published in the 1920's in a booklet "Out in '98". It was reproduced from a painting by a man called Newell of Downpatrick, who posed as a United Irishman prior to 1798, but who was, in fact, in the pay of the Government.

According to a number of published accounts (some contemporary) and to popular ballads, Elizabeth, "Betsy" or "Bessie" Gray, was the daughter of a County Down Presbyterian farmer, and a "wondrous beauty" (the "Pride of Down"), killed by government Yeomanry following the rout of the United Irish host a Ballynahinch. She is depicted as riding into the fray carrying the green rebel flag, and being subsequently executed by "Yeos" (her "glove hand" severed, and shot through the head) alongside her brother George and "her sweetheart, Willie Boal".[19][20][21] No connection appears to be drawn between her fate and Newell's treachery. In the years that followed "a rough map representing the battle scene" with Gray "mounted on a pony and bearing a green flag" was reportedly "seen hanging in many a cottage".[19]

Autobiography

Shortly after Cooke interviewed Newell for the last time, Newell published The Life and Confessions of Newell, the Informer, his autobiography,[2] which was claimed to be printed in London but was really printed in Belfast in private by printer John Storey.[2] Newell wrote his autobiography during his hiding-out period in Doagh, a few miles from Belfast. Newell claimed that £2,000 was given to him as a reward for causing 227 innocent men to be confined to cells, bastilles, or tender holds, and that many of the men died in confinement. He also acknowledged that one of his victims, the Rev. Sinclair Kelburn, was barely known to Newell save for a brief conversation they had on the street. Newell's book was dedicated to John Fitzgibbon, 1st Earl of Clare, and contained a self-portrait. Newell's book had a large sale and it gained much attention.[22]

Attempted escape and disappearance

Newell began an affair with the wife of his friend George Murdoch while he was in Belfast Lough.[23] Newell persuaded her to leave her husband and to move near his own house. Twelve days later, Newell found that a ship that would take him to America was nearby on the Lough, so he wrote to George Murdoch telling him his wife's whereabouts and of her decision to return to him.

Newell most likely did not move to America, as there are several differing accounts of his death in 1798 at the age of 27. These accounts of Newell's death all share one thing in common: that the United Irishmen assassinated him.[23]

Madden records that around 1828, partly uncovered human bones that are said to be of Edward John Newell were found on the beach of Ballyholme, Bangor, County Down, indicating that he drowned there.[24]

References

  1. ^ Dawson, Kenneth L. "Newell, Edward John". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/20004. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Leslie, Stephen (1894). Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography, 1885–1900. Vol. 40 Myllar–Nicholls. London: Elder Smith & Co.
  3. ^ a b c Newell, Edward John (1798). The Life and Confessions of Newell the Informer.
  4. ^ Madden, Richard Robert (1843). The United Irishmen; Their Lives and Times. London.
  5. ^ Harwood, Philip (1844). History of the Irish Rebellion of 1798. Ireland: Chapman & Elcoate. p. 129. to every friend or party he connected himself with he was false.
  6. ^ Pilson, Aynsworth (2016). Notable Inhabitants of Downpatrick. Downpatrick: Lecale & Downe Historical Society. ISBN 9790957671828.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ignored ISBN errors (link)
  7. ^ Madden, Richard Robert (1843). The United Irishmen; Their Lives and Times. London. p. 118.
  8. ^ a b Borohme, Brian (1843). Ireland, as a Kingdom and a Colony; or a Historical, political, and military . Nabu Press. p. 394. ISBN 9781287904175.
  9. ^ Strickland, Walter. "Edward John Newell, Miniature Painter – Irish Artists". Library of Ireland. Dictionary of Irish Artists (1913). Retrieved 1 December 2018.
  10. ^ Sirr, Henry Charles; Reynolds, Thomas; Newell, Edward John; O'Brien, J (1846). The Mercenary Informers of '98: Containing the History of E. Newell, Major Sirr, J. O'Brien, and T. Reynolds. With the Secret List of the Blood Money Paid by the English Government from 1797 to 1801. MS. Notes.
  11. ^ Madden, Richard Robert (1843). The United Irishmen; Their Lives and Times. London. p. 541.
  12. ^ Lyttle, W. G.; Rowlinson, Derek A. (26 April 2015). Betsy Gray or Hearts of Down A Tale of Ninety-Eight (Reprint ed.). Books Ulster. p. 159. ISBN 978-1910375211.
  13. ^ Newmann, Kate. "Edward John Newell". Dictionary of Ulster Biography. Dictionary of Ulster Biography. Retrieved 1 December 2018.
  14. ^ "The United Irishmen: Informers, Informants & Information". History Ireland. 6 (2). Summer 1998.
  15. ^ Harwood, Philip (1844). History of the Irish Rebellion of 1798. Ireland: Chapman & Elcoate. p. 272.
  16. ^ Gilbert, Sir John Thomas (2017) [1893]. Documents Relating to Ireland, 1795–1804: Official Account of Secret Service. Forgotten Books. p. 104. ISBN 978-1527825581.
  17. ^ a b "Betsey Gray or Hearts of Down Other Stories and Pictures of '98. as collected by and published in The "Mourne Observer"". Lisburn.com. Retrieved 6 November 2020.
  18. ^ "Betsy Gray miniature, Mourne Observer, 5 July 1968, p. 9; originally published in an obscure publication in the 1920s and attributed apocryphally to the notorious informer Edward Newell". HistoryHub. University College Dublin School of History & Archives. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
  19. ^ a b M'Comb's Guide to Belfast. The Giant's Causeway and Adjoining Districts of The Counties of Antrim and Down with A Map of Belfast [Fist Published 1861] (PDF). Belfast: SR Publishers Limited. 1970. pp. 129–132. Retrieved 7 November 2020.
  20. ^ M'Skimin, Samuel (1849). Annals of Ulster, or, Ireland fifty years ago. Belfast: J. Henderson.
  21. ^ Lyttle, W. G. (1968). Betsy Gray or, Hearts of Down: a Tale of Ninety-Eight (PDF). Newcastle, Northern Ireland: Mourne Observer Limited. Retrieved 6 November 2020.
  22. ^ Newman, Kate. "Edward John Newell (1771–1798): Artist & Informer". Directory of Ulster Biography.
  23. ^ a b Infield, H. J. (1883). The Oracle. Vol. 8. H. J. Infield. p. 369.
  24. ^ Maxwell, William Hamilton (1854). History of the Irish rebellion in 1798: with memoirs of the union, and Emmett's insurrection in 1803. London: H.G. Bohn. p. 272.

edward, john, newell, 1771, 1798, irish, sailor, glazier, artist, portrait, painter, notorious, role, government, informer, during, political, turmoil, 1790s, shortly, after, joining, republican, society, united, irishmen, 1796, offered, services, crown, autho. Edward John Newell 1771 1798 was an Irish sailor glazier artist and portrait painter notorious for role as a government informer during the political turmoil of the 1790s Shortly after joining the republican Society of United Irishmen in 1796 he offered his services to the Crown authorities Following the publication of a confessional autobiography in 1798 he disappeared amidst rumours of assassination Edward John NewellBorn1771Died1798 aged 26 27 NationalityIrishEdward John Newell from a sketch of his own featured in his autobiography reproduced by F W Huffam in R R Madden s United Irishmen Contents 1 Early life 2 Employment 3 Informer among the United Irishmen 4 Portrait of Betsy Gray 5 Autobiography 6 Attempted escape and disappearance 7 ReferencesEarly life EditNewell was born in Downpatrick on 29 June 1771 to parents Robert and Jane Newell 1 2 He was of Scottish ancestry As a child he was prone to misbehavior 3 In his youth Newell put up a false facade in front of his friends to hide who he really was to them 4 5 Aynsworth Pilson wrote in his memoirs 6 that Newell s parents lived in Dublin before they moved back to Downpatrick Pilson also wrote that Robert Newell ran a perfumery in Dublin and that Jane Newell operated a millinery business Edward John Newell s family tree compiled by Philip Blair 2016 from the memoirs of Aynsworth Pilson 1777 1863 When Newell was seventeen 3 his father was seriously injured in a horse accident while he was away on business Newell s mother left Edward in charge of the house while she attended to Robert Newell later abandoned his younger brother and the house to visit his sick father at his uncle s home His mother who never showed much affection for Newell was not pleased to see her son turn up 3 Employment EditAfter the falling out with his mother he sought work Newell met Captain Johnson who enlisted Newell as a seaman Newell soon left port for Cadiz Spain 2 For about one year Newell was at sea he later described some of the hardships of that experience including a most dreadful storm and living for six weeks on raw meat lying in wet clothes and constantly working at our pumps 7 After returning home to Dublin and telling his father of his voyage his father asked Newell to settle down and found him employment in a painting and glazing business which Newell wrote that he begrudgingly followed for about a year until his usual licentiousness occasioned a difference with his employer 8 Newell soon became a glass stainer for the next two years before a falling out with his employer and his father Following an failed attempt to emigrate to America he moved on to Limerick and Dublin 9 trying to find a job but never holding one down for long He found himself in almost complete poverty and when he asked his parents for assistance he was denied due to his enthusiastic support of the United Irishmen In 1796 Newell moved to Belfast where he started his own portrait and miniature painting business 10 Newell had never attempted miniature painting before and he had received no instruction in the vocation 11 Two of Newell s known paintings are a self portrait that he included in his later biography and a portrait of Betsy Gray who fought and died at the Battle of Ballynahinch 12 Informer among the United Irishmen EditNewell officially joined the Society of United Irishmen in 1796 13 Newell neglected his business due to his over enthusiasm for the United Irishmen and he quickly began to raise the movement leaders suspicions His younger brother Robert not a United Irishman described Newell as being in the practice of going through the town of Belfast disguised in the dress of a light horseman with his face blackened and accompanied by a guard of soldiers pointing out certain individuals who have in consequence been immediately apprehended and put in prison 14 Through his business he became acquainted with George Murdoch and Newell painted the interiors and exteriors of Murdoch s house Murdoch and Newell were opposites politically their association increased distrust of Newell within the United Irishmen Newell hired guards to protect Murdoch s house because of their friendship Newell later wrote that Murdoch informed him that he know that Newell was a rebel However Newell s 1843 biographer Madden wrote that he betrayed the secrets of the United Irish Society professedly to prevent the murder of an exciseman named Murdock 15 Under Secretary of State for Ireland Edward Cooke brought Newell to Dublin Castle to be questioned 8 Newell wrote that he was given a good reception and treated well and that he was even offered wine Newell asked to be pardoned in exchange for his knowledge which the Lord Lieutenant granted him in writing Cooke initially questioned Newell for nine hours Newell was examined by a secret committee of the Irish House of Commons 16 in early 1797 where he was put on a high chair in order to be heard better by his audience Newell later admitted that he deliberately exaggerated and fabricated his testimony in order to scare the committee 2 In 1798 Newell pretended that he showed remorse for his treachery and for making many enemies Soon after he told Cooke that he no longer wanted to be a spy 2 It was decided that he should move to Worcester 2 under the false name of Johnson where he would resume his painting career Portrait of Betsy Gray Edit Miniature of Betsy Gray attributed to Newell of Downpatrick 17 Among Other Stories and pictures of 98 the Mourne Observer reproduces a miniature of Betsy Gray which was attributed possibly apocryphally 18 to Newell of Downpatrick 17 This miniature of Betsy Gray which is in the possession of Mr C J Robb Spa was first published in the 1920 s in a booklet Out in 98 It was reproduced from a painting by a man called Newell of Downpatrick who posed as a United Irishman prior to 1798 but who was in fact in the pay of the Government According to a number of published accounts some contemporary and to popular ballads Elizabeth Betsy or Bessie Gray was the daughter of a County Down Presbyterian farmer and a wondrous beauty the Pride of Down killed by government Yeomanry following the rout of the United Irish host a Ballynahinch She is depicted as riding into the fray carrying the green rebel flag and being subsequently executed by Yeos her glove hand severed and shot through the head alongside her brother George and her sweetheart Willie Boal 19 20 21 No connection appears to be drawn between her fate and Newell s treachery In the years that followed a rough map representing the battle scene with Gray mounted on a pony and bearing a green flag was reportedly seen hanging in many a cottage 19 Autobiography EditShortly after Cooke interviewed Newell for the last time Newell published The Life and Confessions of Newell the Informer his autobiography 2 which was claimed to be printed in London but was really printed in Belfast in private by printer John Storey 2 Newell wrote his autobiography during his hiding out period in Doagh a few miles from Belfast Newell claimed that 2 000 was given to him as a reward for causing 227 innocent men to be confined to cells bastilles or tender holds and that many of the men died in confinement He also acknowledged that one of his victims the Rev Sinclair Kelburn was barely known to Newell save for a brief conversation they had on the street Newell s book was dedicated to John Fitzgibbon 1st Earl of Clare and contained a self portrait Newell s book had a large sale and it gained much attention 22 Attempted escape and disappearance EditNewell began an affair with the wife of his friend George Murdoch while he was in Belfast Lough 23 Newell persuaded her to leave her husband and to move near his own house Twelve days later Newell found that a ship that would take him to America was nearby on the Lough so he wrote to George Murdoch telling him his wife s whereabouts and of her decision to return to him Newell most likely did not move to America as there are several differing accounts of his death in 1798 at the age of 27 These accounts of Newell s death all share one thing in common that the United Irishmen assassinated him 23 Madden records that around 1828 partly uncovered human bones that are said to be of Edward John Newell were found on the beach of Ballyholme Bangor County Down indicating that he drowned there 24 References Edit Dawson Kenneth L Newell Edward John Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 20004 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b c d e f g Leslie Stephen 1894 Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography 1885 1900 Vol 40 Myllar Nicholls London Elder Smith amp Co a b c Newell Edward John 1798 The Life and Confessions of Newell the Informer Madden Richard Robert 1843 The United Irishmen Their Lives and Times London Harwood Philip 1844 History of the Irish Rebellion of 1798 Ireland Chapman amp Elcoate p 129 to every friend or party he connected himself with he was false Pilson Aynsworth 2016 Notable Inhabitants of Downpatrick Downpatrick Lecale amp Downe Historical Society ISBN 9790957671828 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint ignored ISBN errors link Madden Richard Robert 1843 The United Irishmen Their Lives and Times London p 118 a b Borohme Brian 1843 Ireland as a Kingdom and a Colony or a Historical political and military Nabu Press p 394 ISBN 9781287904175 Strickland Walter Edward John Newell Miniature Painter Irish Artists Library of Ireland Dictionary of Irish Artists 1913 Retrieved 1 December 2018 Sirr Henry Charles Reynolds Thomas Newell Edward John O Brien J 1846 The Mercenary Informers of 98 Containing the History of E Newell Major Sirr J O Brien and T Reynolds With the Secret List of the Blood Money Paid by the English Government from 1797 to 1801 MS Notes Madden Richard Robert 1843 The United Irishmen Their Lives and Times London p 541 Lyttle W G Rowlinson Derek A 26 April 2015 Betsy Gray or Hearts of Down A Tale of Ninety Eight Reprint ed Books Ulster p 159 ISBN 978 1910375211 Newmann Kate Edward John Newell Dictionary of Ulster Biography Dictionary of Ulster Biography Retrieved 1 December 2018 The United Irishmen Informers Informants amp Information History Ireland 6 2 Summer 1998 Harwood Philip 1844 History of the Irish Rebellion of 1798 Ireland Chapman amp Elcoate p 272 Gilbert Sir John Thomas 2017 1893 Documents Relating to Ireland 1795 1804 Official Account of Secret Service Forgotten Books p 104 ISBN 978 1527825581 a b Betsey Gray or Hearts of Down Other Stories and Pictures of 98 as collected by and published in The Mourne Observer Lisburn com Retrieved 6 November 2020 Betsy Gray miniature Mourne Observer 5 July 1968 p 9 originally published in an obscure publication in the 1920s and attributed apocryphally to the notorious informer Edward Newell HistoryHub University College Dublin School of History amp Archives Retrieved 9 November 2020 a b M Comb s Guide to Belfast The Giant s Causeway and Adjoining Districts of The Counties of Antrim and Down with A Map of Belfast Fist Published 1861 PDF Belfast SR Publishers Limited 1970 pp 129 132 Retrieved 7 November 2020 M Skimin Samuel 1849 Annals of Ulster or Ireland fifty years ago Belfast J Henderson Lyttle W G 1968 Betsy Gray or Hearts of Down a Tale of Ninety Eight PDF Newcastle Northern Ireland Mourne Observer Limited Retrieved 6 November 2020 Newman Kate Edward John Newell 1771 1798 Artist amp Informer Directory of Ulster Biography a b Infield H J 1883 The Oracle Vol 8 H J Infield p 369 Maxwell William Hamilton 1854 History of the Irish rebellion in 1798 with memoirs of the union and Emmett s insurrection in 1803 London H G Bohn p 272 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edward John Newell amp oldid 1082265461, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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