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Leonard McNally

Leonard McNally or MacNally (27 September 1752 – 13 February 1820)[1] was an Irish barrister, playwright, lyricist, founding member of the United Irishmen and spy for the British Government within Irish republican circles.

Leonard McNally
Leo. MacNally Esq.
Born27 September 1752
Died13 February 1820 (aged 68)
Dublin, United Kingdom
Burial placeDonnybrook, County Dublin, Ireland
Spouses
Mary O'Brien
(m. 1783; d. 1786)
(m. 1787; d. 1795)
Louisa Edgeworth
(m. 1799)

He was a successful lawyer in late 18th and early 19th century Dublin, and wrote a law book that was crucial in the development of the "beyond reasonable doubt" standard in criminal trials. However, during his time, he was best known for his popular comic operas and plays, together with his most enduring work, the romantic song "The Lass of Richmond Hill". He is now mainly remembered as a very important informer for the British government within the Irish revolutionary society, the United Irishmen and played a major role in the defeat of the Irish Rebellion of 1798. In return for payments from the government, McNally would betray his United Irishmen colleagues to the authorities and then, as defence counsel at their trial, secretly collaborate with the prosecution to secure a conviction. His notable republican clients included Napper Tandy, Wolfe Tone, Robert Emmet and Lord Edward FitzGerald.

Early life edit

McNally was born in Dublin in 1752, the son of a merchant and wine importer. He was raised by his mother with the support of his uncle.[2][3] McNally was born into a Roman Catholic family, but at some point in the 1760s he converted to the Church of Ireland.[2] He was passionate about theatre, entirely self-educated and initially became a merchant in Bordeaux like his father.[2][4]

However, in 1774 he went to London to study law at the Middle Temple but returned to Dublin to be called to the Irish bar in 1776.[2] After returning to London in the late 1770s[2] he qualified as a barrister in England, as well, in 1783.[5] He practised for a short time in London,[6] and, while there, supplemented his income by writing plays and editing The Public Ledger.[5]

Career edit

Radical lawyer edit

 
The leadership of the United Irishmen

Returning to Ireland, McNally developed a successful career as a barrister in Dublin.[6] He developed an expertise in the law of evidence and, in 1802, published what became a much-used textbook, The Rules of Evidence on Pleas of the Crown.[7] The text played a crucial role in defining and publicising the beyond reasonable doubt standard for criminal trials.[7]

Not long after returning to Ireland, he became involved in radical politics, having already, in 1782, published a pamphlet in support of the Irish cause.[6] He became Dublin's leading radical lawyer of the day.[8] In 1792, he represented Napper Tandy, a radical member of the Irish Parliament, in a legal dispute over parliamentary privilege.[6] In the early 1790s, McNally became a founder member of the United Irishmen,[9] a clandestine society which soon developed into a revolutionary Irish republican organisation.[10] He ranked high in its leadership and acted as the organisation's chief lawyer, representing many United Irishmen in court.[11][12] This included defending Wolfe Tone and Robert Emmet, the leaders of the 1798 and 1803 rebellions respectively, at their trials for treason.[13] In 1793, McNally was wounded in a duel with Sir Jonah Barrington, who had insulted the United Irishmen.[6] Barrington subsequently described McNally as "a good-natured, hospitable, talented and dirty fellow".[6] John O'Keeffe described McNally as having "a handsome, expressive countenance and alive sparkling eyes".[14]

Informer and government agent edit

 
A 19th century depiction of Robert Emmet's trial

After his death in 1820, it emerged that McNally had for many years been an informant for the government, and one of the most successful British spies in Irish republican circles that there has ever been.[13] When, in 1794, a United Irishmen plot to seek aid from Revolutionary France was uncovered by the British government, McNally turned informer to save himself,[13] although, subsequently, he also received payment for his services.[15] McNally was paid an annual pension in respect of his work as an informer of £300 a year, from 1794 until his death in 1820.[8]

From 1794, McNally systematically informed on his United Irishmen colleagues, who often gathered at his house for meetings.[5] It was McNally that betrayed Lord Edward FitzGerald, one of the leaders of the 1798 rebellion, as well as Robert Emmet in 1803.[15] A significant factor in the failure of the 1798 rebellion was the efficacious intelligence provided to the government by its agents.[16] McNally was considered to be one of the most damaging informers.[16]

The United Irishmen represented by McNally at their trials were invariably convicted[15] and McNally was paid by the crown for passing the secrets of their defence to the prosecution.[17] During the trial of Emmet, McNally provided details of the defence's strategy to the crown and conducted his client's case in a way that would assist the prosecution.[8] For example, three days before the trial he assured the authorities that Emmet "does not intend to call a single witness, nor to trouble any witness for the Crown with a cross-examination, unless they misrepresent facts… He will not controvert the charge by calling a single witness".[8] For his assistance to the prosecution in Emmet's case, he was paid a bonus of £200, on top of his pension, half of which was paid five days before the trial.[8]

After McNally's death, his activities as a government agent became generally known when his heir attempted to continue to collect his pension of £300 per year.[17] He is still remembered with opprobrium by Irish nationalists. In 1997, the Sinn Féin newspaper, An Phoblacht in an article on McNally, described him as "undoubtedly one of the most treacherous informers of Irish history".[18]

Playwright and lyricist edit

 
Vauxhall Gardens, where McNally's song, The Lass of Richmond Hill, was first performed in 1789.

McNally was a successful dramatist and wrote a number of well-constructed but derivative comedies, as well as comic operas.[19][20] His first dramatic work was The Ruling Passion, a comic opera written in 1771,[19] and he is known to have authored at least twelve plays between 1779 and 1796 as well as other comic operas.[20] His works include The Apotheosis of Punch (1779), a satire on the Irish playwright Richard Brinsley Sheridan, Tristram Shandy (1783), which was an adaptation of Lawrence Sterne's novel, Robin Hood (1784), Fashionable Levities (1785), Richard Cœur de Lion (1786), and Critic Upon Critic (1788).[19]

He also wrote a number of songs and operettas for Covent Garden.[21] One of his songs, Sweet Lass of Richmond Hill, became very well-known and popular following its first public performance at Vauxhall Gardens in London in 1789.[21][22] It was said to be a favourite of George III[23] and popularised the romantic metaphor "a rose without a thorn", a phrase which McNally had used in the song.[24]

Personal life and family edit

Nothing is known of McNally's first wife Mary O'Brien, other than that she died in 1786.[14] In London in 1787, McNally eloped with Frances I'Anson, as her father William I'Anson a solicitor,[21][25] disapproved of McNally.[26] Frances, and her family's estate, Hill House in Richmond, Yorkshire, was the subject of a song with lyrics by McNally and composed by James Hook, Sweet Lass of Richmond Hill.[21] In 1795, Frances died during child birth at age 29 and was survived by only one daughter.[26] In 1799, McNally married his third wife Louisa Edgeworth, the daughter of a clergyman from County Longford, and with his third wife he had at least three sons.[27][14]

When his son, who had the same professions, died on 13 February 1820, it was widely reported to have been McNally. The son was buried in Donnybrook, Dublin on 17 February 1820, and McNally sent a letter on 6 March 1820 (from 20 Cuffe Street, Dublin) to the Proprietor of 'Saunders's Newsletter' seeking damages for the severe injury caused by the circulation of his death. In June 1820, McNally was on his deathbed, and although he had been a Protestant for most of his adult life, he sought absolution from a Roman Catholic priest,[5] and was also buried in Donnybrook on 8 June 1820.[28][21]

References edit

  1. ^ Keogh, Daire (1998). Patriot Priest: A Life of Reverend James Coigly. Cork University Press. p. 81. ISBN 978-1859181423.
  2. ^ a b c d e Bartlett 2001, p. 114
  3. ^ "Leonard McNally". www.ricorso.net. Retrieved 22 August 2022.
  4. ^ Maxwell, Nick (3 March 2015). "Leonard MacNally— the most disreputable barrister to have ever practised at the Irish bar?". History Ireland. Retrieved 14 January 2023.
  5. ^ a b c d Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "MacNally, Leonard" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 17 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 265.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Lecky, William E. H. (2001) [1904]. A History of England in the Eighteenth Century: Volume 7. pp. 138–139. ISBN 978-1402179303.
  7. ^ a b Shapiro, Barbara J. (1993). Beyond Reasonable Doubt and Probable Cause: Historical Perspectives on the Anglo-American Law of Evidence. University of California Press. pp. 29–30, 271, 335. ISBN 978-0520084513.
  8. ^ a b c d e Adrian Hardiman (July–August 2005). "The (Show?) Trial of Robert Emmet". History Ireland. 13 (4). Retrieved 30 December 2012.
  9. ^ Ranelagh, John O'Beirne (1995). A Short History of Ireland. Cambridge University Press. p. 83. ISBN 978-0521469449.
  10. ^ Dickson, David, ed. (1993). The United Irishmen: Republicanism, Radicalism and Rebellion. Lilliput Press. p. 172. ISBN 978-0946640959.
  11. ^ Conner, Clifford D. (2009). Arthur O'Connor: The Most Important Irish Revolutionary You May Never Have Heard Of. iUniverse. p. 101. ISBN 978-1440105166.
  12. ^ "Leonard McNally - Irish Biography". www.libraryireland.com. Retrieved 26 January 2023.
  13. ^ a b c Boylan, Henry (1981). Wolfe Tone. Gill and Macmillan. pp. 42–43. ISBN 0-7171-1091-5.
  14. ^ a b c "MacNally, Leonard | Dictionary of Irish Biography". dib.ie. Retrieved 24 May 2022.
  15. ^ a b c "Leonard McNally". The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Encyclopedia.com. 2008. Retrieved 29 December 2012.
  16. ^ a b Jackson, Alvin (2010). Ireland 1798–1998: War, Peace and Beyond. John Wiley & Sons. p. 19. ISBN 978-1405189613.
  17. ^ a b Alfred John Webb (1878). "Leonard McNally". A Compendium of Irish Biography. Library Ireland. Retrieved 30 December 2012.
  18. ^ "Remembering the Past: Leonard McNally arch-informer". An Phoblacht. 13 February 1997. Retrieved 3 January 2012.
  19. ^ a b c "McNally, Leonard". Leonard McNally. Oxford University Press, Answers.com. 2003. ISBN 978-0-19-280080-0. Retrieved 3 January 2013. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  20. ^ a b Herr, Cheryl (1990). For the Land They Loved. Syracuse University Press. p. 47. ISBN 978-0815624813.
  21. ^ a b c d e Fitz-Gerald, S. J. Adair (2005) [1901]. Stories of Famous Songs. p. 169. ISBN 978-1417960163.
  22. ^ McMahon, Sean (1996). A Short History of Ireland. Dufour Editions. p. 112. ISBN 978-0802313195.
  23. ^ Fitz-Gerald, S. J. Adair (2005) [1901]. Stories of Famous Songs. p. 170. ISBN 978-1417960163.
  24. ^ Humphries, Patrick (1998). Nick Drake: The Biography. Bloomsbury. p. 94. ISBN 978-0747535034.
  25. ^ Joan Wyllie. . Richmond Online. Archived from the original on 2 January 2012. Retrieved 30 December 2012.
  26. ^ a b Peach, Howard; Willis, Phil (2003). Curious Tales of Old North Yorkshire. Sigma Leisure. p. 142. ISBN 978-1850587934.
  27. ^ Willis, George (April 1856). "The Lass of Richmond Hill". Willis's Current Notes. 6 (64): 35. Retrieved 30 December 2012.
  28. ^ Brief Sketches of the Parishes of Booterstown & Donneybrook in County Dublin by Rev. Beaver H. Blacker.(1860) Page 90-91

Bibliography edit

The most extensive modern study on McNally is:

  • Bartlett, Thomas (2001). "The life and opinions of Leonard MacNally". In Morgan, Hiram (ed.). Information, media & power through the ages. University College Dublin Press. pp. 113–136. ISBN 978-1900621625.

See also

leonard, mcnally, macnally, september, 1752, february, 1820, irish, barrister, playwright, lyricist, founding, member, united, irishmen, british, government, within, irish, republican, circles, macnally, born27, september, 1752dublin, kingdom, irelanddied13, f. Leonard McNally or MacNally 27 September 1752 13 February 1820 1 was an Irish barrister playwright lyricist founding member of the United Irishmen and spy for the British Government within Irish republican circles Leonard McNallyLeo MacNally Esq Born27 September 1752Dublin Kingdom of IrelandDied13 February 1820 aged 68 Dublin United KingdomBurial placeDonnybrook County Dublin IrelandSpousesMary O Brien m 1783 d 1786 wbr Frances l Anson m 1787 d 1795 wbr Louisa Edgeworth m 1799 wbr He was a successful lawyer in late 18th and early 19th century Dublin and wrote a law book that was crucial in the development of the beyond reasonable doubt standard in criminal trials However during his time he was best known for his popular comic operas and plays together with his most enduring work the romantic song The Lass of Richmond Hill He is now mainly remembered as a very important informer for the British government within the Irish revolutionary society the United Irishmen and played a major role in the defeat of the Irish Rebellion of 1798 In return for payments from the government McNally would betray his United Irishmen colleagues to the authorities and then as defence counsel at their trial secretly collaborate with the prosecution to secure a conviction His notable republican clients included Napper Tandy Wolfe Tone Robert Emmet and Lord Edward FitzGerald Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Radical lawyer 2 2 Informer and government agent 2 3 Playwright and lyricist 3 Personal life and family 4 References 5 BibliographyEarly life editMcNally was born in Dublin in 1752 the son of a merchant and wine importer He was raised by his mother with the support of his uncle 2 3 McNally was born into a Roman Catholic family but at some point in the 1760s he converted to the Church of Ireland 2 He was passionate about theatre entirely self educated and initially became a merchant in Bordeaux like his father 2 4 However in 1774 he went to London to study law at the Middle Temple but returned to Dublin to be called to the Irish bar in 1776 2 After returning to London in the late 1770s 2 he qualified as a barrister in England as well in 1783 5 He practised for a short time in London 6 and while there supplemented his income by writing plays and editing The Public Ledger 5 Career editRadical lawyer edit See also Society of United Irishmen nbsp The leadership of the United Irishmen Returning to Ireland McNally developed a successful career as a barrister in Dublin 6 He developed an expertise in the law of evidence and in 1802 published what became a much used textbook The Rules of Evidence on Pleas of the Crown 7 The text played a crucial role in defining and publicising the beyond reasonable doubt standard for criminal trials 7 Not long after returning to Ireland he became involved in radical politics having already in 1782 published a pamphlet in support of the Irish cause 6 He became Dublin s leading radical lawyer of the day 8 In 1792 he represented Napper Tandy a radical member of the Irish Parliament in a legal dispute over parliamentary privilege 6 In the early 1790s McNally became a founder member of the United Irishmen 9 a clandestine society which soon developed into a revolutionary Irish republican organisation 10 He ranked high in its leadership and acted as the organisation s chief lawyer representing many United Irishmen in court 11 12 This included defending Wolfe Tone and Robert Emmet the leaders of the 1798 and 1803 rebellions respectively at their trials for treason 13 In 1793 McNally was wounded in a duel with Sir Jonah Barrington who had insulted the United Irishmen 6 Barrington subsequently described McNally as a good natured hospitable talented and dirty fellow 6 John O Keeffe described McNally as having a handsome expressive countenance and alive sparkling eyes 14 Informer and government agent edit See also Irish Rebellion of 1798 and Irish Rebellion of 1803 nbsp A 19th century depiction of Robert Emmet s trial After his death in 1820 it emerged that McNally had for many years been an informant for the government and one of the most successful British spies in Irish republican circles that there has ever been 13 When in 1794 a United Irishmen plot to seek aid from Revolutionary France was uncovered by the British government McNally turned informer to save himself 13 although subsequently he also received payment for his services 15 McNally was paid an annual pension in respect of his work as an informer of 300 a year from 1794 until his death in 1820 8 From 1794 McNally systematically informed on his United Irishmen colleagues who often gathered at his house for meetings 5 It was McNally that betrayed Lord Edward FitzGerald one of the leaders of the 1798 rebellion as well as Robert Emmet in 1803 15 A significant factor in the failure of the 1798 rebellion was the efficacious intelligence provided to the government by its agents 16 McNally was considered to be one of the most damaging informers 16 The United Irishmen represented by McNally at their trials were invariably convicted 15 and McNally was paid by the crown for passing the secrets of their defence to the prosecution 17 During the trial of Emmet McNally provided details of the defence s strategy to the crown and conducted his client s case in a way that would assist the prosecution 8 For example three days before the trial he assured the authorities that Emmet does not intend to call a single witness nor to trouble any witness for the Crown with a cross examination unless they misrepresent facts He will not controvert the charge by calling a single witness 8 For his assistance to the prosecution in Emmet s case he was paid a bonus of 200 on top of his pension half of which was paid five days before the trial 8 After McNally s death his activities as a government agent became generally known when his heir attempted to continue to collect his pension of 300 per year 17 He is still remembered with opprobrium by Irish nationalists In 1997 the Sinn Fein newspaper An Phoblacht in an article on McNally described him as undoubtedly one of the most treacherous informers of Irish history 18 Playwright and lyricist edit nbsp Vauxhall Gardens where McNally s song The Lass of Richmond Hill was first performed in 1789 McNally was a successful dramatist and wrote a number of well constructed but derivative comedies as well as comic operas 19 20 His first dramatic work was The Ruling Passion a comic opera written in 1771 19 and he is known to have authored at least twelve plays between 1779 and 1796 as well as other comic operas 20 His works include The Apotheosis of Punch 1779 a satire on the Irish playwright Richard Brinsley Sheridan Tristram Shandy 1783 which was an adaptation of Lawrence Sterne s novel Robin Hood 1784 Fashionable Levities 1785 Richard Cœur de Lion 1786 and Critic Upon Critic 1788 19 He also wrote a number of songs and operettas for Covent Garden 21 One of his songs Sweet Lass of Richmond Hill became very well known and popular following its first public performance at Vauxhall Gardens in London in 1789 21 22 It was said to be a favourite of George III 23 and popularised the romantic metaphor a rose without a thorn a phrase which McNally had used in the song 24 Personal life and family editNothing is known of McNally s first wife Mary O Brien other than that she died in 1786 14 In London in 1787 McNally eloped with Frances I Anson as her father William I Anson a solicitor 21 25 disapproved of McNally 26 Frances and her family s estate Hill House in Richmond Yorkshire was the subject of a song with lyrics by McNally and composed by James Hook Sweet Lass of Richmond Hill 21 In 1795 Frances died during child birth at age 29 and was survived by only one daughter 26 In 1799 McNally married his third wife Louisa Edgeworth the daughter of a clergyman from County Longford and with his third wife he had at least three sons 27 14 When his son who had the same professions died on 13 February 1820 it was widely reported to have been McNally The son was buried in Donnybrook Dublin on 17 February 1820 and McNally sent a letter on 6 March 1820 from 20 Cuffe Street Dublin to the Proprietor of Saunders s Newsletter seeking damages for the severe injury caused by the circulation of his death In June 1820 McNally was on his deathbed and although he had been a Protestant for most of his adult life he sought absolution from a Roman Catholic priest 5 and was also buried in Donnybrook on 8 June 1820 28 21 References edit Keogh Daire 1998 Patriot Priest A Life of Reverend James Coigly Cork University Press p 81 ISBN 978 1859181423 a b c d e Bartlett 2001 p 114 Leonard McNally www ricorso net Retrieved 22 August 2022 Maxwell Nick 3 March 2015 Leonard MacNally the most disreputable barrister to have ever practised at the Irish bar History Ireland Retrieved 14 January 2023 a b c d Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 MacNally Leonard Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 265 a b c d e f Lecky William E H 2001 1904 A History of England in the Eighteenth Century Volume 7 pp 138 139 ISBN 978 1402179303 a b Shapiro Barbara J 1993 Beyond Reasonable Doubt and Probable Cause Historical Perspectives on the Anglo American Law of Evidence University of California Press pp 29 30 271 335 ISBN 978 0520084513 a b c d e Adrian Hardiman July August 2005 The Show Trial of Robert Emmet History Ireland 13 4 Retrieved 30 December 2012 Ranelagh John O Beirne 1995 A Short History of Ireland Cambridge University Press p 83 ISBN 978 0521469449 Dickson David ed 1993 The United Irishmen Republicanism Radicalism and Rebellion Lilliput Press p 172 ISBN 978 0946640959 Conner Clifford D 2009 Arthur O Connor The Most Important Irish Revolutionary You May Never Have Heard Of iUniverse p 101 ISBN 978 1440105166 Leonard McNally Irish Biography www libraryireland com Retrieved 26 January 2023 a b c Boylan Henry 1981 Wolfe Tone Gill and Macmillan pp 42 43 ISBN 0 7171 1091 5 a b c MacNally Leonard Dictionary of Irish Biography dib ie Retrieved 24 May 2022 a b c Leonard McNally The Columbia Encyclopedia Sixth Edition Encyclopedia com 2008 Retrieved 29 December 2012 a b Jackson Alvin 2010 Ireland 1798 1998 War Peace and Beyond John Wiley amp Sons p 19 ISBN 978 1405189613 a b Alfred John Webb 1878 Leonard McNally A Compendium of Irish Biography Library Ireland Retrieved 30 December 2012 Remembering the Past Leonard McNally arch informer An Phoblacht 13 February 1997 Retrieved 3 January 2012 a b c McNally Leonard Leonard McNally Oxford University Press Answers com 2003 ISBN 978 0 19 280080 0 Retrieved 3 January 2013 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help a b Herr Cheryl 1990 For the Land They Loved Syracuse University Press p 47 ISBN 978 0815624813 a b c d e Fitz Gerald S J Adair 2005 1901 Stories of Famous Songs p 169 ISBN 978 1417960163 McMahon Sean 1996 A Short History of Ireland Dufour Editions p 112 ISBN 978 0802313195 Fitz Gerald S J Adair 2005 1901 Stories of Famous Songs p 170 ISBN 978 1417960163 Humphries Patrick 1998 Nick Drake The Biography Bloomsbury p 94 ISBN 978 0747535034 Joan Wyllie Guide to Richmond A Brief History Georgian Richmond Richmond Online Archived from the original on 2 January 2012 Retrieved 30 December 2012 a b Peach Howard Willis Phil 2003 Curious Tales of Old North Yorkshire Sigma Leisure p 142 ISBN 978 1850587934 Willis George April 1856 The Lass of Richmond Hill Willis s Current Notes 6 64 35 Retrieved 30 December 2012 Brief Sketches of the Parishes of Booterstown amp Donneybrook in County Dublin by Rev Beaver H Blacker 1860 Page 90 91Bibliography editThe most extensive modern study on McNally is Bartlett Thomas 2001 The life and opinions of Leonard MacNally In Morgan Hiram ed Information media amp power through the ages University College Dublin Press pp 113 136 ISBN 978 1900621625 See also Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 MacNally Leonard Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 265 Rigg James McMullen 1893 MacNally Leonard In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 35 London Smith Elder amp Co Evans Mihail Dafydd Macnally Leonard 1752 1820 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 17707 Subscription or UK public library membership required Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Leonard McNally amp oldid 1209962011, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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