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Fenian

The word Fenian (/ˈfniən/) served as an umbrella term for the Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB) and their affiliate in the United States, the Fenian Brotherhood. They were secret political organisations in the late 19th and early 20th centuries dedicated to the establishment of an independent Irish Republic. In 1867 they sought to coordinate raids into Canada from the United States with a rising in Ireland.[1][2] In the 1916 Easter Rising and the 1919–1921 Irish War of Independence, the IRB led the republican struggle.

Supplement given with the Weekly Freeman of October 1883

Fenianism edit

Fenianism (Irish: Fíníneachas), according to O'Mahony, embodied two principles: firstly, that Ireland had a natural right to independence, and secondly, that this right could be won only by an armed revolution.[3] The name originated with the Fianna of Irish mythology—groups of legendary warrior-bands associated with Fionn mac Cumhail. Mythological tales of the Fianna became known as the Fenian Cycle.[4]

In the 1860s, opponents of Irish nationalism within the British political establishment sometimes used the term "Fenianism" to refer to any form of mobilisation among the Irish or to those who expressed any Irish nationalist sentiments, or questioned the Protestant Ascendancy (such as by advocating for the rights of tenant farmers). The political establishment often applied the term in this sense—inaccurately—to the unrelated Tenant Right League, the Irish National Land League and the Irish Parliamentary Party, who did not advocate explicitly for an independent Irish Republic or for the use of force. The establishment warned people about a perceived threat to turn what they saw as "decent civilised" society on its head by movements such as trade unionism seeking to change the existing social order in the United Kingdom.[5][need quotation to verify]

Ireland edit

 
Fenian Plot, Glasnevin, Dublin

James Stephens, one of the "Men of 1848" (a participant in the 1848 revolt), had established himself in Paris, and was in correspondence with John O'Mahony in the United States and other advanced nationalists at home and abroad. This would include the Phoenix National and Literary Society, with Jeremiah O'Donovan (afterwards known as O'Donovan Rossa) among its more prominent members, which had been formed recently at Skibbereen.

Along with Thomas Clarke Luby, John O'Leary and Charles Kickham he founded the Irish Republican Brotherhood on 17 March 1858 in Lombard Street, Dublin.

The Fenian Rising in 1867 proved to be a "doomed rebellion", poorly organised and with minimal public support. Most of the Irish-American officers who landed at Cork, in the expectation of commanding an army against the British, were imprisoned; sporadic disturbances around the country were easily suppressed by the police, army and local militias. In the aftermath, Fenian assassination circles were active in Cork and in Dublin and were responsible for shooting two officers of the Dublin Metropolitan Police on duty in October 1867.[6]

In 1882, a breakaway IRB faction calling itself the Irish National Invincibles assassinated the British Chief Secretary for Ireland Lord Frederick Cavendish and his Permanent Under-secretary (chief civil servant), in an incident known as the Phoenix Park Murders.

United States edit

The Fenian Brotherhood, the Irish Republican Brotherhood's US branch, was founded by John O'Mahony and Michael Doheny, both of whom had been "out" (participating in the Young Irelander's rising) in 1848.[7] In the face of nativist suspicion, it quickly established an independent existence, although it still worked to gain Irish American support for armed rebellion in Ireland. Initially, O'Mahony ran operations in the US, sending funds to Stephens and the IRB in Ireland.

In 1865, O'Mahony's leadership was challenged and the movement was split by a faction led by William B. Roberts, a wealthy New York City dry-goods merchant, more closely allied with the Democratic-Party machine. It was Roberts' faction that sponsored the plan to invade Canada and hold it hostage for the liberation of Ireland.[8] In 1867 there was a further challenge to O'Mahony from the new IRB exile David Bell, and his weekly the Irish Republic. In contrast to Roberts, Bell, committed to black suffrage and to Reconstruction, was allied to the Republicans and was calling a "cleansing" of the spirits of the Irish in America: "Let our people fling off the scales of bigotry and declare that all men are entitled to 'life, liberty, and happiness.'"[9]

John Devoy records that, in the course of 1866, various conferences to reunite the various factions were held. Their efforts were to elect James Stephens as president of a united organisation. Stephens had escaped the round-up of the IRB leadership in Dublin the previous year, but still promised that "The Irish flag—the flag of the Irish Republic—will float in an Irish breeze before New Year's Day, 1867." At the close of 1866, a conference of the refugees of the IRB and many of the American officers who had been in Ireland was held in New York and presided over by Stephens, at which the decision was taken that the fight should be made early in 1867. Some thousands of rifles were afterwards sent to Ireland, but arrived too late to be of any use in the Rising.[10]

Canada edit

 
The Battle of Ridgeway was the largest engagement of the Fenian Raids.

In Canada, Fenian is used to designate a group of Irish radicals, a.k.a. the American branch of the Fenian Brotherhood in the 1860s. They made several attempts to invade some parts of the British colonies of New Brunswick (i.e., Campobello Island) and Canada (present-day Southern Ontario and Missisquoi County[11]), with the raids continuing after these colonies had been confederated. The ultimate goal of the Fenian raids was to hold Canada hostage and therefore be in a position to blackmail the United Kingdom to give Ireland its independence. Because of the invasion attempts, support or collaboration for the Fenians in Canada became very rare even among the Irish.

Francis Bernard McNamee, the man who started the Fenian movement in Montreal (and who was later suspected of being a government spy), was a case in point. In public, he proclaimed his loyalty to the queen and called for an Irish militia company to defend Canada against the Fenians. In private, he wrote that the real purpose of an Irish militia company would be to assist the Fenian invasion, adding for good measure that if the government denied his request he would raise the cry of anti-Irish Catholic discrimination and bring more of his aggrieved countrymen into the Fenian Brotherhood.[12]

A suspected Fenian, Patrick J. Whelan, was hanged in Ottawa for the assassination of Irish Canadian politician, Thomas D'Arcy McGee in 1868, who had been a member of the Irish Confederation in the 1840s.

The danger posed by the Fenian raids was an important element in motivating the British North America colonies to consider a more centralised defence for mutual protection, ultimately realised through Canadian Confederation.

England edit

 
Fenian Flag, captured by British forces at Tallaght, County Dublin, 1867

The Fenians in England and the British Empire were a major threat to political stability. In the late 1860s, the IRB control centre was in Lancashire. In 1868, the Supreme Council of the IRB, the provisional government of the Irish Republic, was restructured. The four Irish provinces (Connacht, Leinster, Ulster and Munster), along with Scotland, the north and south of England and London, had representatives on the council. Later four honorary members were co-opted. The Council elected three members to the executive. The President was chairman, the Treasurer managed recruitment and finance, and the Secretary was director of operations. There were IRB Circles in every major city in England.[13]

On 23 November 1867,[14] three Fenians, William Philip Allen, Michael O'Brian, and Michael Larkin,[15] known as the Manchester Martyrs, were executed in Salford for their attack on a police van to release Fenians held captive earlier that year.[16]

On 13 December 1867, the Fenians exploded a bomb in attempt to free one of their members being held on remand at Clerkenwell Prison in London. The explosion damaged nearby houses, killed 12 people and caused 120 injuries. None of the prisoners escaped. The bombing was later described as the most infamous action carried out by the Fenians in Great Britain in the 19th century. It enraged the public, causing a backlash of hostility in Britain which undermined efforts to establish home rule or independence for Ireland.

The Fenians also exploded three bombs on the London Underground in 1883–1885 and were also believed to be responsible for a bomb on 26th April 1897 at Aldersgate Street station which fatally injured two people.[17]

Australia edit

In 1868 an Irishman, Henry James O'Farrell, attempted to assassinate the Duke of Edinburgh, second son of Queen Victoria, who was visiting Sydney. O'Farrell claimed to be a Fenian but was probably a lone actor. He was hanged on 21 April 1868. The Duke recovered but the attack was used by politician Henry Parkes to wage a sectarian campaign against Catholics and people of Irish origin.[18]

Later in 1868 the Hougoumont, the last convict ship to Australia, arrived in Western Australia carrying 62 Fenian prisoners convicted in England. Over the next decade, most were released and many chose to go to America. By 1876 only six remained in custody, and in that year they were freed in a daring rescue mission organised by the IRB in the United States. The ship Catalpa was sailed from New Bedford, Massachusetts, to Fremantle, Western Australia, a distance of some 12,000 miles, and took the men back to the United States. The rescue caused a worldwide sensation and sparked several ballads.[19]

Contemporary usage edit

Northern Ireland edit

In Northern Ireland, Fenian is used by some as a derogatory word for Irish Catholics;[20][21] in 2012, British National Party leader Nick Griffin was criticised by Unionists and Republicans for tweeting the term while attending an Ulster Covenant event at Stormont, Belfast; Griffin referred to Lambeg drums, saying "the bodran [sic] can't match the lambeg, you Fenian bastards".[22][23]

Scotland edit

 
Memorial dedication to John Keegan 'Leo' Casey (1846–1870), known as the Poet of the Fenians

The term Fenian is used similarly in Scotland. During Scottish football matches, it is often aimed in a sectarian manner at supporters of Celtic F.C.[24] Celtic has its roots in Glasgow's immigrant Catholic Irish population and the club has thus been associated with Irish nationalism, symbolised by the almost universal flying of the Irish Tricolour during matches. Other Scottish clubs that have Irish roots, such as Hibernian and Dundee United, do not tend to have the term applied to them, however.[25] The term is now firmly rooted within the Old Firm rivalry between Celtic and Rangers.[26] Use of the term as a religious slur carried criminal penalties in some contexts under the Offensive Behaviour at Football and Threatening Communications (Scotland) Act 2012, before its repeal in January 2018.

Australia edit

In Australia, Fenian is used as a pejorative term for those members of the Australian Labor Party (ALP) who have Australian Republican views similar to those who support Irish unification. In a speech given at the ALP Convention in Adelaide on 15 October 2006, Michael Atkinson, Attorney-General of South Australia, spoke of those members of the ALP who wished to remove the title Queen's Counsel and other references to the crown as "Fenians and Bolsheviks". Atkinson made a further mention of Fenianism when the title of Queen's Counsel was abolished. The title of Queen's Counsel was re-instated by the South Australian government in 2019.[27]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ "Fenians". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 30 August 2019.
  2. ^ Green, E. R. R. (October 1958). "The Fenians". History Today. Vol. 8, no. 10. pp. 698–705.
  3. ^ Ryan, p. 318
  4. ^ "Fianna". www.timelessmyths.com. Retrieved 26 February 2019.
  5. ^ McGee, pp. 13–14
  6. ^ Kennerk, Barry (2010). Shadow of the Brotherhood: The Temple Bar Shootings. Mercier Press. ISBN 978-1-8563-5677-0.
  7. ^ "Fenian Brotherhood". IrishRepublicanHistory. Retrieved 26 February 2019.
  8. ^ Montgomery, David (1967). Beyond Equality: Labor and the Radical Republicans, 1862–1872. New York: Alfred Knopf. pp. 130–133. ISBN 978-0252008696. Retrieved 9 October 2020.
  9. ^ Knight, Matthew (2017). "The Irish Republic: Reconstructing Liberty, Right Principles, and the Fenian Brotherhood". Éire-Ireland (Irish-American Cultural Institute). 52 (3 & 4): 252–271. doi:10.1353/eir.2017.0029. S2CID 159525524. Retrieved 9 October 2020.
  10. ^ Devoy, John (1929). Recollections of an Irish rebel.... A personal narrative by John Devoy. New York: Chas. P. Young Co., printers. p. 276. Retrieved 13 October 2020.
  11. ^ "For the Sake of Ireland: The Fenian Raids of Missisquoi County 1866 & 1870". townshipsheritage.com.
  12. ^ Further reading: W. D'Arcy, The Fenian movement in the United States: 1858–1886 (New York, 1947, 1971). W.S. Neidhardt, Fenianism in North America (Pennsylvania, 1975). H. Senior, The Fenians and Canada (Toronto, 1978). D.A. Wilson, Thomas D'Arcy McGee, vol. I: passion, reason, and politics, 1825–57 (Montreal and Kingston, 2008).
  13. ^ Stanford, Jane (2011). That Irishman. History Press Ireland. p. 33. ISBN 978-1-84588-698-1.
  14. ^ "The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Dock and the Scaffold, by Unknown". www.ibiblio.org.
  15. ^ In Memoriam, William Philip Allen, Michael O'Brien, and Michael Larkin [original missing], 1867. Box 1, Folder 9, Allen Family Papers, 1867, AIS.1977.14, Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh
  16. ^ Allen Family Papers, 1867, AIS.1977.14, Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh
  17. ^ Alan A Jackson (1986). London's Metropolitan Railway. David & Charles, Newton Abbot. p. 123. ISBN 0-7153-8839-8.
  18. ^ Travers, Robert (1986). The Phantom Fenians of New South Wales. Sydney: Kangaroo Press.
  19. ^ Amos, Keith (1988). The Fenians in Australia 1865–1880. Sydney: NSW University Press.
  20. ^ Croft, Hazel. . Socialist Worker. Archived from the original on 11 November 2011.
  21. ^ "Fenian". TheFreeDictionary.com.
  22. ^ Rutherford, Adrian; O'Hara, Victoria (2 October 2012). "BNP leader Nick Griffin faces police probe over 'fenian bastards' sectarian tweet during procession". Belfast Telegraph. Retrieved 6 April 2016.
  23. ^ "BNP leader Nick Griffin defends Fenian comment on Twitter". BBC News. Northern Ireland. 30 September 2012. Retrieved 6 April 2016.
  24. ^ "Ibrox chant ruling goes to appeal". BBC News. 18 April 2006.
  25. ^ Bradley, Joseph (1998). Fanatics!: power, identity, and fandom in football. ISBN 978-0415181037.
  26. ^ Devine, Tom (1996). Scotland in the twentieth century. ISBN 978-0748608393. The divide between Orange and Green has been increasingly transformed into a divide between Blue and Green
  27. ^ Gout, Hendrik (9 May 2008). . InDaily. Archived from the original on 5 August 2008.

References edit

  • Comerford, R.V. The Fenians in Context: Irish Politics & Society 1848–82, Dublin: Wolfhound Press, 1985.
  • Cronin, Seán. The McGarrity Papers, Anvil Books, Ireland, 1972
  • Green, E. R. R. "The Fenians" History Today (Oct. 1958) 8#10 pp 698–705.
  • Kee, Robert. The Bold Fenian Men, Quartet Books (London 1976), ISBN 0-7043-3096-2
  • Kelly, M. J. The Fenian Ideal and Irish Nationalism, 1882–1916, Boydell and Brewer, 2006, ISBN 1-84383-445-6
  • Kenny, Michael. The Fenians, The National Museum of Ireland in association with Country House, Dublin, 1994, ISBN 0-946172-42-0
  • McGee, Owen. The IRB: The Irish Republican Brotherhood from The Land League to Sinn Féin, Four Courts Press, 2005, ISBN 1-85182-972-5
  • Ó Broin, Leon. Fenian Fever: An Anglo-American Dilemma, Chatto & Windus, London, 1971, ISBN 0-7011-1749-4.
  • O'Hegarty, P. S. A History of Ireland Under the Union, Methuen & Co. (London 1952).
  • Quinlavin, Patrick, and Paul Rose, The Fenians in England (London, 1982).
  • Ramón, Marta. A Provisional Dictator: James Stephens and the Fenian Movement, University College Dublin Press (2007), ISBN 978-1-904558-64-4
  • Ryan, Desmond. The Fenian Chief: A Biography of James Stephens, Hely Thom LTD, Dublin, 1967
  • Ryan, Mark F. Fenian Memories, Edited by T.F. O'Sullivan, M. H. Gill & Son, LTD, Dublin, 1945
  • Snay, Mitchell. Fenians, Freedmen, and Southern Whites: Race and Nationality in the Era of Reconstruction (2010)
  • Stanford, Jane. That Irishman: The Life and Times of John O'Connor Power, The History Press Ireland, Dublin 2011, ISBN 978-1-84588-698-1
  • Steward, Patrick, and Bryan McGowan. The Fenians: Irish Rebellion in the North Atlantic World, 1858–1876. Knoxville, TN: University of Tennessee Press, 2013.
  • Thompson, Francis John (1936). Francis J. Thompson Diary (PDF). A journal of Francis Thompson's research into Fenianism and the Celtic Renaissance.
  • Thompson, Francis John (1940). Fenianism and the Celtic Renaissance (PDF) (Ph.D.). New York: New York University.
  • Ui Fhlannagain, Fionnuala. Finini Mheiricea agus an Ghaeilge, Binn Éadair, Baile Átha Cliath (Howth, Dublin), Ireland: Coiscéim, 2008, OCLC 305144100
  • Whelehan, Niall. The Dynamiters: Irish Nationalism and Political Violence in the Wider World, 1867–1900 (Cambridge, 2012).

Further reading edit

  • Brady, William Maziere (1883). Rome and Fenianism: The Pope's Anti-Parnellite Circular  (1st ed.). London: Robert Washbourne.

External links edit

  • Fenians.org
  • Fenian Brotherhood
  • BBC History article on the Irish Republican Brotherhood
  • 1865 newspaper Article describing the Fenians
  • History Learning Site > Ireland 1848 to 1922 > The Fenian Movement
  • including digitised materials about their activities. From the Immigration to the United States, 1789–1930 collection, Harvard University Library Open Collections Program

fenian, this, article, about, irish, organisation, other, uses, disambiguation, word, served, umbrella, term, irish, republican, brotherhood, their, affiliate, united, states, brotherhood, they, were, secret, political, organisations, late, 19th, early, 20th, . This article is about the Irish organisation For other uses see Fenian disambiguation The word Fenian ˈ f iː n i e n served as an umbrella term for the Irish Republican Brotherhood IRB and their affiliate in the United States the Fenian Brotherhood They were secret political organisations in the late 19th and early 20th centuries dedicated to the establishment of an independent Irish Republic In 1867 they sought to coordinate raids into Canada from the United States with a rising in Ireland 1 2 In the 1916 Easter Rising and the 1919 1921 Irish War of Independence the IRB led the republican struggle Supplement given with the Weekly Freeman of October 1883John O MahonyJames Stephens Contents 1 Fenianism 2 Ireland 3 United States 4 Canada 5 England 6 Australia 7 Contemporary usage 7 1 Northern Ireland 7 2 Scotland 7 3 Australia 8 See also 9 Footnotes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksFenianism editFenianism Irish Finineachas according to O Mahony embodied two principles firstly that Ireland had a natural right to independence and secondly that this right could be won only by an armed revolution 3 The name originated with the Fianna of Irish mythology groups of legendary warrior bands associated with Fionn mac Cumhail Mythological tales of the Fianna became known as the Fenian Cycle 4 In the 1860s opponents of Irish nationalism within the British political establishment sometimes used the term Fenianism to refer to any form of mobilisation among the Irish or to those who expressed any Irish nationalist sentiments or questioned the Protestant Ascendancy such as by advocating for the rights of tenant farmers The political establishment often applied the term in this sense inaccurately to the unrelated Tenant Right League the Irish National Land League and the Irish Parliamentary Party who did not advocate explicitly for an independent Irish Republic or for the use of force The establishment warned people about a perceived threat to turn what they saw as decent civilised society on its head by movements such as trade unionism seeking to change the existing social order in the United Kingdom 5 need quotation to verify Ireland edit nbsp Fenian Plot Glasnevin DublinJames Stephens one of the Men of 1848 a participant in the 1848 revolt had established himself in Paris and was in correspondence with John O Mahony in the United States and other advanced nationalists at home and abroad This would include the Phoenix National and Literary Society with Jeremiah O Donovan afterwards known as O Donovan Rossa among its more prominent members which had been formed recently at Skibbereen Along with Thomas Clarke Luby John O Leary and Charles Kickham he founded the Irish Republican Brotherhood on 17 March 1858 in Lombard Street Dublin The Fenian Rising in 1867 proved to be a doomed rebellion poorly organised and with minimal public support Most of the Irish American officers who landed at Cork in the expectation of commanding an army against the British were imprisoned sporadic disturbances around the country were easily suppressed by the police army and local militias In the aftermath Fenian assassination circles were active in Cork and in Dublin and were responsible for shooting two officers of the Dublin Metropolitan Police on duty in October 1867 6 In 1882 a breakaway IRB faction calling itself the Irish National Invincibles assassinated the British Chief Secretary for Ireland Lord Frederick Cavendish and his Permanent Under secretary chief civil servant in an incident known as the Phoenix Park Murders United States editThe Fenian Brotherhood the Irish Republican Brotherhood s US branch was founded by John O Mahony and Michael Doheny both of whom had been out participating in the Young Irelander s rising in 1848 7 In the face of nativist suspicion it quickly established an independent existence although it still worked to gain Irish American support for armed rebellion in Ireland Initially O Mahony ran operations in the US sending funds to Stephens and the IRB in Ireland In 1865 O Mahony s leadership was challenged and the movement was split by a faction led by William B Roberts a wealthy New York City dry goods merchant more closely allied with the Democratic Party machine It was Roberts faction that sponsored the plan to invade Canada and hold it hostage for the liberation of Ireland 8 In 1867 there was a further challenge to O Mahony from the new IRB exile David Bell and his weekly the Irish Republic In contrast to Roberts Bell committed to black suffrage and to Reconstruction was allied to the Republicans and was calling a cleansing of the spirits of the Irish in America Let our people fling off the scales of bigotry and declare that all men are entitled to life liberty and happiness 9 John Devoy records that in the course of 1866 various conferences to reunite the various factions were held Their efforts were to elect James Stephens as president of a united organisation Stephens had escaped the round up of the IRB leadership in Dublin the previous year but still promised that The Irish flag the flag of the Irish Republic will float in an Irish breeze before New Year s Day 1867 At the close of 1866 a conference of the refugees of the IRB and many of the American officers who had been in Ireland was held in New York and presided over by Stephens at which the decision was taken that the fight should be made early in 1867 Some thousands of rifles were afterwards sent to Ireland but arrived too late to be of any use in the Rising 10 nbsp Three Manchester Martyrs of 1867 at right is Michael O Brien a former Corporal of Battery E 1st New Jersey Artillery regiment nbsp Fenian convicts escape from Fremantle in the 1876 Catalpa rescue Canada edit nbsp The Battle of Ridgeway was the largest engagement of the Fenian Raids In Canada Fenian is used to designate a group of Irish radicals a k a the American branch of the Fenian Brotherhood in the 1860s They made several attempts to invade some parts of the British colonies of New Brunswick i e Campobello Island and Canada present day Southern Ontario and Missisquoi County 11 with the raids continuing after these colonies had been confederated The ultimate goal of the Fenian raids was to hold Canada hostage and therefore be in a position to blackmail the United Kingdom to give Ireland its independence Because of the invasion attempts support or collaboration for the Fenians in Canada became very rare even among the Irish Francis Bernard McNamee the man who started the Fenian movement in Montreal and who was later suspected of being a government spy was a case in point In public he proclaimed his loyalty to the queen and called for an Irish militia company to defend Canada against the Fenians In private he wrote that the real purpose of an Irish militia company would be to assist the Fenian invasion adding for good measure that if the government denied his request he would raise the cry of anti Irish Catholic discrimination and bring more of his aggrieved countrymen into the Fenian Brotherhood 12 A suspected Fenian Patrick J Whelan was hanged in Ottawa for the assassination of Irish Canadian politician Thomas D Arcy McGee in 1868 who had been a member of the Irish Confederation in the 1840s The danger posed by the Fenian raids was an important element in motivating the British North America colonies to consider a more centralised defence for mutual protection ultimately realised through Canadian Confederation England edit nbsp Fenian Flag captured by British forces at Tallaght County Dublin 1867The Fenians in England and the British Empire were a major threat to political stability In the late 1860s the IRB control centre was in Lancashire In 1868 the Supreme Council of the IRB the provisional government of the Irish Republic was restructured The four Irish provinces Connacht Leinster Ulster and Munster along with Scotland the north and south of England and London had representatives on the council Later four honorary members were co opted The Council elected three members to the executive The President was chairman the Treasurer managed recruitment and finance and the Secretary was director of operations There were IRB Circles in every major city in England 13 On 23 November 1867 14 three Fenians William Philip Allen Michael O Brian and Michael Larkin 15 known as the Manchester Martyrs were executed in Salford for their attack on a police van to release Fenians held captive earlier that year 16 On 13 December 1867 the Fenians exploded a bomb in attempt to free one of their members being held on remand at Clerkenwell Prison in London The explosion damaged nearby houses killed 12 people and caused 120 injuries None of the prisoners escaped The bombing was later described as the most infamous action carried out by the Fenians in Great Britain in the 19th century It enraged the public causing a backlash of hostility in Britain which undermined efforts to establish home rule or independence for Ireland The Fenians also exploded three bombs on the London Underground in 1883 1885 and were also believed to be responsible for a bomb on 26th April 1897 at Aldersgate Street station which fatally injured two people 17 Australia editIn 1868 an Irishman Henry James O Farrell attempted to assassinate the Duke of Edinburgh second son of Queen Victoria who was visiting Sydney O Farrell claimed to be a Fenian but was probably a lone actor He was hanged on 21 April 1868 The Duke recovered but the attack was used by politician Henry Parkes to wage a sectarian campaign against Catholics and people of Irish origin 18 Later in 1868 the Hougoumont the last convict ship to Australia arrived in Western Australia carrying 62 Fenian prisoners convicted in England Over the next decade most were released and many chose to go to America By 1876 only six remained in custody and in that year they were freed in a daring rescue mission organised by the IRB in the United States The ship Catalpa was sailed from New Bedford Massachusetts to Fremantle Western Australia a distance of some 12 000 miles and took the men back to the United States The rescue caused a worldwide sensation and sparked several ballads 19 Contemporary usage editNorthern Ireland edit In Northern Ireland Fenian is used by some as a derogatory word for Irish Catholics 20 21 in 2012 British National Party leader Nick Griffin was criticised by Unionists and Republicans for tweeting the term while attending an Ulster Covenant event at Stormont Belfast Griffin referred to Lambeg drums saying the bodran sic can t match the lambeg you Fenian bastards 22 23 Scotland edit See also Sectarianism in Glasgow nbsp Memorial dedication to John Keegan Leo Casey 1846 1870 known as the Poet of the FeniansThe term Fenian is used similarly in Scotland During Scottish football matches it is often aimed in a sectarian manner at supporters of Celtic F C 24 Celtic has its roots in Glasgow s immigrant Catholic Irish population and the club has thus been associated with Irish nationalism symbolised by the almost universal flying of the Irish Tricolour during matches Other Scottish clubs that have Irish roots such as Hibernian and Dundee United do not tend to have the term applied to them however 25 The term is now firmly rooted within the Old Firm rivalry between Celtic and Rangers 26 Use of the term as a religious slur carried criminal penalties in some contexts under the Offensive Behaviour at Football and Threatening Communications Scotland Act 2012 before its repeal in January 2018 Australia edit In Australia Fenian is used as a pejorative term for those members of the Australian Labor Party ALP who have Australian Republican views similar to those who support Irish unification In a speech given at the ALP Convention in Adelaide on 15 October 2006 Michael Atkinson Attorney General of South Australia spoke of those members of the ALP who wished to remove the title Queen s Counsel and other references to the crown as Fenians and Bolsheviks Atkinson made a further mention of Fenianism when the title of Queen s Counsel was abolished The title of Queen s Counsel was re instated by the South Australian government in 2019 27 See also editTaigFootnotes edit Fenians The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved 30 August 2019 Green E R R October 1958 The Fenians History Today Vol 8 no 10 pp 698 705 Ryan p 318 Fianna www timelessmyths com Retrieved 26 February 2019 McGee pp 13 14 Kennerk Barry 2010 Shadow of the Brotherhood The Temple Bar Shootings Mercier Press ISBN 978 1 8563 5677 0 Fenian Brotherhood IrishRepublicanHistory Retrieved 26 February 2019 Montgomery David 1967 Beyond Equality Labor and the Radical Republicans 1862 1872 New York Alfred Knopf pp 130 133 ISBN 978 0252008696 Retrieved 9 October 2020 Knight Matthew 2017 The Irish Republic Reconstructing Liberty Right Principles and the Fenian Brotherhood Eire Ireland Irish American Cultural Institute 52 3 amp 4 252 271 doi 10 1353 eir 2017 0029 S2CID 159525524 Retrieved 9 October 2020 Devoy John 1929 Recollections of an Irish rebel A personal narrative by John Devoy New York Chas P Young Co printers p 276 Retrieved 13 October 2020 For the Sake of Ireland The Fenian Raids of Missisquoi County 1866 amp 1870 townshipsheritage com Further reading W D Arcy The Fenian movement in the United States 1858 1886 New York 1947 1971 W S Neidhardt Fenianism in North America Pennsylvania 1975 H Senior The Fenians and Canada Toronto 1978 D A Wilson Thomas D Arcy McGee vol I passion reason and politics 1825 57 Montreal and Kingston 2008 Stanford Jane 2011 That Irishman History Press Ireland p 33 ISBN 978 1 84588 698 1 The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Dock and the Scaffold by Unknown www ibiblio org In Memoriam William Philip Allen Michael O Brien and Michael Larkin original missing 1867 Box 1 Folder 9 Allen Family Papers 1867 AIS 1977 14 Archives Service Center University of Pittsburgh Allen Family Papers 1867 AIS 1977 14 Archives Service Center University of Pittsburgh Alan A Jackson 1986 London s Metropolitan Railway David amp Charles Newton Abbot p 123 ISBN 0 7153 8839 8 Travers Robert 1986 The Phantom Fenians of New South Wales Sydney Kangaroo Press Amos Keith 1988 The Fenians in Australia 1865 1880 Sydney NSW University Press Croft Hazel Orangemen and Loyalists target Catholics Socialist Worker Archived from the original on 11 November 2011 Fenian TheFreeDictionary com Rutherford Adrian O Hara Victoria 2 October 2012 BNP leader Nick Griffin faces police probe over fenian bastards sectarian tweet during procession Belfast Telegraph Retrieved 6 April 2016 BNP leader Nick Griffin defends Fenian comment on Twitter BBC News Northern Ireland 30 September 2012 Retrieved 6 April 2016 Ibrox chant ruling goes to appeal BBC News 18 April 2006 Bradley Joseph 1998 Fanatics power identity and fandom in football ISBN 978 0415181037 Devine Tom 1996 Scotland in the twentieth century ISBN 978 0748608393 The divide between Orange and Green has been increasingly transformed into a divide between Blue and Green Gout Hendrik 9 May 2008 Rann usurps Atkinson over Queen s Counsels InDaily Archived from the original on 5 August 2008 References editComerford R V The Fenians in Context Irish Politics amp Society 1848 82 Dublin Wolfhound Press 1985 Cronin Sean The McGarrity Papers Anvil Books Ireland 1972 Green E R R The Fenians History Today Oct 1958 8 10 pp 698 705 Kee Robert The Bold Fenian Men Quartet Books London 1976 ISBN 0 7043 3096 2 Kelly M J The Fenian Ideal and Irish Nationalism 1882 1916 Boydell and Brewer 2006 ISBN 1 84383 445 6 Kenny Michael The Fenians The National Museum of Ireland in association with Country House Dublin 1994 ISBN 0 946172 42 0 McGee Owen The IRB The Irish Republican Brotherhood from The Land League to Sinn Fein Four Courts Press 2005 ISBN 1 85182 972 5 o Broin Leon Fenian Fever An Anglo American Dilemma Chatto amp Windus London 1971 ISBN 0 7011 1749 4 O Hegarty P S A History of Ireland Under the Union Methuen amp Co London 1952 Quinlavin Patrick and Paul Rose The Fenians in England London 1982 Ramon Marta A Provisional Dictator James Stephens and the Fenian Movement University College Dublin Press 2007 ISBN 978 1 904558 64 4 Ryan Desmond The Fenian Chief A Biography of James Stephens Hely Thom LTD Dublin 1967 Ryan Mark F Fenian Memories Edited by T F O Sullivan M H Gill amp Son LTD Dublin 1945 Snay Mitchell Fenians Freedmen and Southern Whites Race and Nationality in the Era of Reconstruction 2010 Stanford Jane That Irishman The Life and Times of John O Connor Power The History Press Ireland Dublin 2011 ISBN 978 1 84588 698 1 Steward Patrick and Bryan McGowan The Fenians Irish Rebellion in the North Atlantic World 1858 1876 Knoxville TN University of Tennessee Press 2013 Thompson Francis John 1936 Francis J Thompson Diary PDF A journal of Francis Thompson s research into Fenianism and the Celtic Renaissance Thompson Francis John 1940 Fenianism and the Celtic Renaissance PDF Ph D New York New York University Ui Fhlannagain Fionnuala Finini Mheiricea agus an Ghaeilge Binn Eadair Baile Atha Cliath Howth Dublin Ireland Coisceim 2008 OCLC 305144100 Whelehan Niall The Dynamiters Irish Nationalism and Political Violence in the Wider World 1867 1900 Cambridge 2012 Further reading editBrady William Maziere 1883 Rome and Fenianism The Pope s Anti Parnellite Circular 1st ed London Robert Washbourne External links edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Fenians Fenians org Fenian Brotherhood BBC History article on the Irish Republican Brotherhood 1865 newspaper Article describing the Fenians History Learning Site gt Ireland 1848 to 1922 gt The Fenian Movement The Fenian Movement in the US including digitised materials about their activities From the Immigration to the United States 1789 1930 collection Harvard University Library Open Collections Program Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fenian amp oldid 1184956495, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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