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Myles Byrne

Myles (or Miles) Byrne (20 March 1780 – 24 January 1862) was an insurgent leader in Wexford in the Irish Rebellion of 1798 and a fighter in the continued guerrilla struggle against British Crown forces in the Wicklow Hills until 1802. In 1803 collaborated closely with Robert Emmet in plans for a renewed insurrection in Dublin. After these misfired, he took a commission in Napoleon’s Irish Legion, seeing action in the Low Countries, Spain and at the Battle of Leipzig. Under the Bourbon Restoration he was deployed to Greece, and retired as a chef de bataillon. In his later years, he was the Paris correspondent for the Young Irelander paper The Nation, and dictated his memoirs. In these, he advanced the image of the United Irishmen as a cohesive revolutionary organisation dedicated to the achievement of a national democratic government.

Miles Byrne
Born20 March 1780
Ballylusk, County Wexford,
Ireland.
Died24 January 1862 (aged 81)
Rue Montaigne, Paris, France.
Resting placeMontmartre Cemetery, Paris.
OccupationSoldier.
Known forIrish Rebel (1798)
Political party United Irishmen
SpouseFanny Horner

Early life edit

Myles (he usually spelt his name Miles) Byrne was born in the townland of Ballylusk near Monaseed, County Wexford, Ireland, on 20 March 1780, into a Catholic farming family.

1798 Rebellion edit

At the age of 17 Byrne was asked to join the government Yeomanry. He choose instead to join the Society of United Irish. In defiance of the British Crown and the Protestant Ascendancy the oath-bound movement was determined to achieve an independent and representative government for Ireland. He participated in preparations in Wexford for the 1798 Rebellion, and at the age of 18 fought at the Battle of Tubberneeing on 4 June and, in command of a division of pikemen, in the attack on Arklow (9 June) in which the rebel leader Father Michael Murphy was killed. In the face of a general rout, he led a rebel charge in the Battle of Vinegar Hill (21 June).

Keeping command of a small band, Byrne seized Goresbridge (23 June) but had to deplore the murder of several prisoners and other atrocities committed by his men in revenge for the torture and executions that had been visited upon the peasantry by the yeomanry and government militia. After further skirmishes, he joined Joseph Holt and Michael Dwyer in taking to the Wicklow Hills to continue a guerrilla resistance.[1]

After Holt accepted terms (transportation to Australia) in November, Byrne, assisted by his sister, escaped to Dublin. He recalled of his sister: “If I had not remarked a long scar on her neck, she would not have mentioned anything herself. A yeoman ... threatened to cut her throat with his sabre if she did not tell instantly the place in which I was hiding. The cowardly villain, no doubt, would have put his threat in execution had not some of his comrades interfered to prevent him".[2]

Rising of 1803 edit

In the winter of 1802-03 Byrne entered into the plans of Robert Emmet and Anne Devlin for a renewed uprising. In his Memoirs[3] Byrne describes a meeting he arranged between Robert Emmet and the Wexford rebel leader Thomas Cloney at Harold's Cross Green, Dublin, just prior to Emmet's Rebellion: "I can never forget the impression this meeting made on me at the time - to see two heroic patriots, equally devoted to poor Ireland, discussing the best means of obtaining her freedom."

In July 1803, the plans unravelled when Michael Dwyer (Devlin's cousin), still holding out in Wicklow, recognised that there were neither the promised arms nor convincing proof of an intended French landing. In the north Thomas Russell and James Hope found no enthusiasm for a renewal of the struggle in what in '98 had been the strongest United Irish and Catholic Defender districts.[4]

In Dublin, with their preparations revealed by an accidental explosion of a rebel arms depot, Emmet proceeded with a plan to seize the centres of government. The rising, for which Byrne turned out with Emmet and Malachy Delaney in gold-trimmed green uniforms, was broken up after a brief confrontation in Thomas Street.[3] Unaware that John Allen was approaching with a band, according to one witness, of 300,[5] Emmet ordered what R.R. Madden recorded as "a motley assemblage of [80] armed men ... under the evident excitement of drink" to disperse.[6]

In the service of France edit

Two days after the fight in Thomas Street, Byrne met with the fugitive Emmet and agreed to go to Paris to procure French assistance. But in Paris, he found Napoleon's attentions (as in 1798) focussed elsewhere. The First Consul used a cessation of hostilities with Britain to pursue a very different venture, the re-enslavement of Haiti.[7]

Byrne was commissioned as a captain in Napoleon's Irish Legion. But at a time when Byrne was convinced that "all Catholic Ireland" was "ready to rise the moment a rallying point was offered",[8] the Irish exiles (Thomas Addis Emmet and Arthur O'Connor chief among them) could not deflect the First Consul from other priorities. Rather than in Ireland, with his diminishing Irish contingent, Byrne was to see action in the Low Countries, Germany and Spain.[9]

Byrne rose to the rank of brigadier general and was awarded the Legion of Honour in 1813. Following the Bourbon Restoration, with fellow legionnaire John Allen, Byrne narrowly avoided deportation as a foreign Bonapartist.[10] An introduction to the Prince de Broglie, then vice-president of the Chamber of Deputies and two audiences with the Minister of War, Marshal Henri Clarke, the Duke of Feltre, (a son of Irish parents, who had advised Wolfe Tone) contributed to the latter's decision to quash the deportation order. In August 1817 Byrne was naturalised as a French citizen.[11]

For much of the next decade, Byrne found himself effectively retired on half pay. Returned to active military service in 1828, he distinguished himself in the French expedition to Morea (as did his fellow United Irishman, William Corbet)[12] during the Greek War of Independence. He retired in 1835 with the rank of Chef de Bataillion.[1]

Memoirs edit

In the 1840s, Byrne was Paris correspondent for The Nation in Dublin,[13] the Young Irelander paper that under the early direction of Thomas David did much to rehabilitate the memory of the United Irishmen.

In his last years, Byrne wrote his Memoirs,[14] which are an account of his participation in the Irish rebellion and his time in the Irish Legion of Napoleon. These were first published in three volumes in 1863 (under the direction of his widow, Fanny), but there have been many subsequent reprints.[15]

Stephen Gwynn who edited and published a new edition of Byrne’s Memoirs in 1907, stated in his Introduction to Volume 1: “I owe my acquaintance with these Memoirs to Mr John Dillon, who spoke of them as the best of all books dealing with Ireland; and a reading of the volumes left me inclined to agree with him.”[16]

Against the portrayal of '98 as a series of disjointed, unconnected risings, Byrne's memoirs presented the United Irishmen as a cohesive revolutionary organisation whose aim of a democratic, secular, republic had captured the allegiance of a great mass of the Irish people.[13]

Marriage edit

Byrne was married (1835) in Paris to a Scots Presbyterian, Frances Charles Horner (better known as Fanny), (1789 - 1876) (originally from George Square, Edinburgh, Scotland) but they had no children. Fanny's father was John Horner, a "merchant of Edinburgh", and her mother was Joanna Baillie. They were married on Christmas Eve, 24 December 1835 in the British Embassy Chapel in Paris. She had three brothers and two sisters. One of her brothers was Francis Horner (1778 - 1817), a Whig MP; another, Leonard Horner (1785 - 1864), was a noted geologist.

 
The grave in the cemetery Montmartre, 23rd division
 
The grave in the cemetery Montmartre, 23rd division

1859 Photograph edit

A photograph (above) of Byrne faces page 185 in Nicholas Furlong's "Fr John Murphy of Boolavogue: 1753-1798" (Dublin, 1991). According to the author, it was taken in Paris in 1859 and was thought to be the first photograph taken of an Irishman. That distinction is probably owed to an 1844 calotype by the pioneer photographer Henry Fox Talbot of the Irish poet (and biographer of Wolfe Tone) Thomas Moore.[17] (In 1821 Byrne had refused to attend a St Patrick's day dinner Moore had organised in Paris because of the presence of Wellesley Pole Long, a nephew of the Duke of Wellington).[18]

The photograph of Byrne, possibly the only one of a United Irish veteran, is now in Áras an Uachtaráin, the residence of the President of Ireland, in Dublin.

John Mitchel visited Byrne when he was 80 years old and described him as "One of those rare beings who never grow old".

Death edit

Miles Byrne died at his house in the rue Montaigne (now rue Jean Mermoz, 8th arrondissement, near Champs-Élysées), Paris on Friday 24 January 1862, and was buried in Montmartre Cemetery. His grave there is marked by a Celtic Cross - but this headstone appears to be a 1950s replacement for an earlier one. The inscription on his original headstone appears in his Memoirs; in part, it read:

SINCEREMENT ATTACHE A L'lRLANDE

SON PAYS NATAL,
IL A FIDELEMENT SERVI LA FRANCE

SA PATRIE ADOPTIVE.

('Sincerely attached to Ireland, his country of birth, he faithfully served France, his country of adoption')

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Myles Byrne - Irish Biography". www.libraryireland.com. Retrieved 22 March 2021.
  2. ^ "Constance Markievicz: The Women of '98 (November/December 1915)". www.marxists.org. Retrieved 31 August 2021.
  3. ^ a b Byrne, Miles (3 June 1907). "Memoirs of Miles Byrne". Dublin : Maunsel – via Internet Archive.
  4. ^ ""The dog that didn't bark": the North and 1803". History Ireland. 22 February 2013. Retrieved 7 March 2021.
  5. ^ Hammond, Joseph W.; Frayne, Michl. (1947). "The Emmet Insurrection". Dublin Historical Record. 9 (2): 59–68. ISSN 0012-6861. JSTOR 30083906.
  6. ^ Beiner, Guy (2004). Elliott, Marianne; Geoghegan, Patrick M.; McMahon, Sean; Brádaigh, Seón Ó.; O'Donnell, Ruán (eds.). "The Legendary Robert Emmet and His Bicentennial Biographers". The Irish Review (32): 98–104, 100, 102. doi:10.2307/29736249. ISSN 0790-7850. JSTOR 29736249.
  7. ^ Girard, Philippe R. (28 August 2019), "Napoléon Bonaparte and the Atlantic World", Atlantic History, Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/obo/9780199730414-0317, ISBN 978-0-19-973041-4, retrieved 11 June 2021
  8. ^ Memoirs, Vol. I, p. 314
  9. ^ Howard, Donald D.; Gallaher, John (1999). "Napoleon's Irish Legion". The Journal of Military History. 63 (1): 180. doi:10.2307/120348. ISSN 0899-3718. JSTOR 120348.
  10. ^ Dunne-Lynch, Nicholas (2009). "Irish Legion officers of Kilkenny origin - Thomas Jackson". In the Shadow of the Steeple. 10: 153, 160.
  11. ^ "Miles Byrne - Irish Paris". www.irishmeninparis.org. Retrieved 7 November 2021.
  12. ^ Quinn, James (2009). "Corbet, William | Dictionary of Irish Biography". www.dib.ie. Retrieved 24 January 2023.
  13. ^ a b Collins, Peter (1999). "The Contest of Memory and the Continuing Impact of 1798 Commemoration". Eire-Ireland (The Irish-American Cultural Institute). 34 (2): (28–50), 35. doi:10.1353/eir.1999.0002. S2CID 149277904.
  14. ^ Memoirs of Myles Byrne. Dublin: Maunsel and Co Ltd. 1907.
  15. ^ "Full Text of the Memoirs of Myles Byrne". 1907.
  16. ^ "'Memoirs of Myles Byrne' - Introduction by Stephen Gwynn with link to full text". Retrieved 22 March 2021.
  17. ^ Moore, Thomas (1831). The Life and Death of Edward Fitzgerald. Volume 1. London: Longman, Reese, Orme, Brown & Green.
  18. ^ "Thomas Moore - Irish Paris". www.irishmeninparis.org. Retrieved 23 March 2021.
  • Miles Byrne (1780-1862) - Memoirs of Miles Byrne (1863).
  • Nicholas Furlong, "Fr. John Murphy of Boolavogue: 1753-1798" (Dublin, 1991).
  • Stephen Gwynn (ed.), Memoirs of Miles Byrne - edited by his Widow, 2 vols. (Dublin & London, 1907).
  • K. Wkelan (ed) & W. Nolan (assoc. ed.), "Wexford: History and Society" (Dublin: Geography Publications, 1987).
  • Leonard Horner (ed.), "Memoirs and Correspondence of Francis Horner, M.P." (Boston, 1853).

myles, byrne, fictional, character, fair, city, myles, miles, byrne, march, 1780, january, 1862, insurgent, leader, wexford, irish, rebellion, 1798, fighter, continued, guerrilla, struggle, against, british, crown, forces, wicklow, hills, until, 1802, 1803, co. For the fictional character see Myles Byrne Fair City Myles or Miles Byrne 20 March 1780 24 January 1862 was an insurgent leader in Wexford in the Irish Rebellion of 1798 and a fighter in the continued guerrilla struggle against British Crown forces in the Wicklow Hills until 1802 In 1803 collaborated closely with Robert Emmet in plans for a renewed insurrection in Dublin After these misfired he took a commission in Napoleon s Irish Legion seeing action in the Low Countries Spain and at the Battle of Leipzig Under the Bourbon Restoration he was deployed to Greece and retired as a chef de bataillon In his later years he was the Paris correspondent for the Young Irelander paper The Nation and dictated his memoirs In these he advanced the image of the United Irishmen as a cohesive revolutionary organisation dedicated to the achievement of a national democratic government Miles ByrneBorn20 March 1780Ballylusk County Wexford Ireland Died24 January 1862 aged 81 Rue Montaigne Paris France Resting placeMontmartre Cemetery Paris OccupationSoldier Known forIrish Rebel 1798 Political partyUnited IrishmenSpouseFanny Horner Contents 1 Early life 2 1798 Rebellion 3 Rising of 1803 4 In the service of France 5 Memoirs 6 Marriage 7 1859 Photograph 8 Death 9 ReferencesEarly life editMyles he usually spelt his name Miles Byrne was born in the townland of Ballylusk near Monaseed County Wexford Ireland on 20 March 1780 into a Catholic farming family 1798 Rebellion editAt the age of 17 Byrne was asked to join the government Yeomanry He choose instead to join the Society of United Irish In defiance of the British Crown and the Protestant Ascendancy the oath bound movement was determined to achieve an independent and representative government for Ireland He participated in preparations in Wexford for the 1798 Rebellion and at the age of 18 fought at the Battle of Tubberneeing on 4 June and in command of a division of pikemen in the attack on Arklow 9 June in which the rebel leader Father Michael Murphy was killed In the face of a general rout he led a rebel charge in the Battle of Vinegar Hill 21 June Keeping command of a small band Byrne seized Goresbridge 23 June but had to deplore the murder of several prisoners and other atrocities committed by his men in revenge for the torture and executions that had been visited upon the peasantry by the yeomanry and government militia After further skirmishes he joined Joseph Holt and Michael Dwyer in taking to the Wicklow Hills to continue a guerrilla resistance 1 After Holt accepted terms transportation to Australia in November Byrne assisted by his sister escaped to Dublin He recalled of his sister If I had not remarked a long scar on her neck she would not have mentioned anything herself A yeoman threatened to cut her throat with his sabre if she did not tell instantly the place in which I was hiding The cowardly villain no doubt would have put his threat in execution had not some of his comrades interfered to prevent him 2 Rising of 1803 editIn the winter of 1802 03 Byrne entered into the plans of Robert Emmet and Anne Devlin for a renewed uprising In his Memoirs 3 Byrne describes a meeting he arranged between Robert Emmet and the Wexford rebel leader Thomas Cloney at Harold s Cross Green Dublin just prior to Emmet s Rebellion I can never forget the impression this meeting made on me at the time to see two heroic patriots equally devoted to poor Ireland discussing the best means of obtaining her freedom In July 1803 the plans unravelled when Michael Dwyer Devlin s cousin still holding out in Wicklow recognised that there were neither the promised arms nor convincing proof of an intended French landing In the north Thomas Russell and James Hope found no enthusiasm for a renewal of the struggle in what in 98 had been the strongest United Irish and Catholic Defender districts 4 In Dublin with their preparations revealed by an accidental explosion of a rebel arms depot Emmet proceeded with a plan to seize the centres of government The rising for which Byrne turned out with Emmet and Malachy Delaney in gold trimmed green uniforms was broken up after a brief confrontation in Thomas Street 3 Unaware that John Allen was approaching with a band according to one witness of 300 5 Emmet ordered what R R Madden recorded as a motley assemblage of 80 armed men under the evident excitement of drink to disperse 6 In the service of France editTwo days after the fight in Thomas Street Byrne met with the fugitive Emmet and agreed to go to Paris to procure French assistance But in Paris he found Napoleon s attentions as in 1798 focussed elsewhere The First Consul used a cessation of hostilities with Britain to pursue a very different venture the re enslavement of Haiti 7 Byrne was commissioned as a captain in Napoleon s Irish Legion But at a time when Byrne was convinced that all Catholic Ireland was ready to rise the moment a rallying point was offered 8 the Irish exiles Thomas Addis Emmet and Arthur O Connor chief among them could not deflect the First Consul from other priorities Rather than in Ireland with his diminishing Irish contingent Byrne was to see action in the Low Countries Germany and Spain 9 Byrne rose to the rank of brigadier general and was awarded the Legion of Honour in 1813 Following the Bourbon Restoration with fellow legionnaire John Allen Byrne narrowly avoided deportation as a foreign Bonapartist 10 An introduction to the Prince de Broglie then vice president of the Chamber of Deputies and two audiences with the Minister of War Marshal Henri Clarke the Duke of Feltre a son of Irish parents who had advised Wolfe Tone contributed to the latter s decision to quash the deportation order In August 1817 Byrne was naturalised as a French citizen 11 For much of the next decade Byrne found himself effectively retired on half pay Returned to active military service in 1828 he distinguished himself in the French expedition to Morea as did his fellow United Irishman William Corbet 12 during the Greek War of Independence He retired in 1835 with the rank of Chef de Bataillion 1 Memoirs editIn the 1840s Byrne was Paris correspondent for The Nation in Dublin 13 the Young Irelander paper that under the early direction of Thomas David did much to rehabilitate the memory of the United Irishmen In his last years Byrne wrote his Memoirs 14 which are an account of his participation in the Irish rebellion and his time in the Irish Legion of Napoleon These were first published in three volumes in 1863 under the direction of his widow Fanny but there have been many subsequent reprints 15 Stephen Gwynn who edited and published a new edition of Byrne s Memoirs in 1907 stated in his Introduction to Volume 1 I owe my acquaintance with these Memoirs to Mr John Dillon who spoke of them as the best of all books dealing with Ireland and a reading of the volumes left me inclined to agree with him 16 Against the portrayal of 98 as a series of disjointed unconnected risings Byrne s memoirs presented the United Irishmen as a cohesive revolutionary organisation whose aim of a democratic secular republic had captured the allegiance of a great mass of the Irish people 13 Marriage editByrne was married 1835 in Paris to a Scots Presbyterian Frances Charles Horner better known as Fanny 1789 1876 originally from George Square Edinburgh Scotland but they had no children Fanny s father was John Horner a merchant of Edinburgh and her mother was Joanna Baillie They were married on Christmas Eve 24 December 1835 in the British Embassy Chapel in Paris She had three brothers and two sisters One of her brothers was Francis Horner 1778 1817 a Whig MP another Leonard Horner 1785 1864 was a noted geologist nbsp The grave in the cemetery Montmartre 23rd division nbsp The grave in the cemetery Montmartre 23rd division1859 Photograph editA photograph above of Byrne faces page 185 in Nicholas Furlong s Fr John Murphy of Boolavogue 1753 1798 Dublin 1991 According to the author it was taken in Paris in 1859 and was thought to be the first photograph taken of an Irishman That distinction is probably owed to an 1844 calotype by the pioneer photographer Henry Fox Talbot of the Irish poet and biographer of Wolfe Tone Thomas Moore 17 In 1821 Byrne had refused to attend a St Patrick s day dinner Moore had organised in Paris because of the presence of Wellesley Pole Long a nephew of the Duke of Wellington 18 The photograph of Byrne possibly the only one of a United Irish veteran is now in Aras an Uachtarain the residence of the President of Ireland in Dublin John Mitchel visited Byrne when he was 80 years old and described him as One of those rare beings who never grow old Death editMiles Byrne died at his house in the rue Montaigne now rue Jean Mermoz 8th arrondissement near Champs Elysees Paris on Friday 24 January 1862 and was buried in Montmartre Cemetery His grave there is marked by a Celtic Cross but this headstone appears to be a 1950s replacement for an earlier one The inscription on his original headstone appears in his Memoirs in part it read SINCEREMENT ATTACHE A L lRLANDESON PAYS NATAL IL A FIDELEMENT SERVI LA FRANCESA PATRIE ADOPTIVE Sincerely attached to Ireland his country of birth he faithfully served France his country of adoption References edit a b Myles Byrne Irish Biography www libraryireland com Retrieved 22 March 2021 Constance Markievicz The Women of 98 November December 1915 www marxists org Retrieved 31 August 2021 a b Byrne Miles 3 June 1907 Memoirs of Miles Byrne Dublin Maunsel via Internet Archive The dog that didn t bark the North and 1803 History Ireland 22 February 2013 Retrieved 7 March 2021 Hammond Joseph W Frayne Michl 1947 The Emmet Insurrection Dublin Historical Record 9 2 59 68 ISSN 0012 6861 JSTOR 30083906 Beiner Guy 2004 Elliott Marianne Geoghegan Patrick M McMahon Sean Bradaigh Seon o O Donnell Ruan eds The Legendary Robert Emmet and His Bicentennial Biographers The Irish Review 32 98 104 100 102 doi 10 2307 29736249 ISSN 0790 7850 JSTOR 29736249 Girard Philippe R 28 August 2019 Napoleon Bonaparte and the Atlantic World Atlantic History Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 obo 9780199730414 0317 ISBN 978 0 19 973041 4 retrieved 11 June 2021 Memoirs Vol I p 314 Howard Donald D Gallaher John 1999 Napoleon s Irish Legion The Journal of Military History 63 1 180 doi 10 2307 120348 ISSN 0899 3718 JSTOR 120348 Dunne Lynch Nicholas 2009 Irish Legion officers of Kilkenny origin Thomas Jackson In the Shadow of the Steeple 10 153 160 Miles Byrne Irish Paris www irishmeninparis org Retrieved 7 November 2021 Quinn James 2009 Corbet William Dictionary of Irish Biography www dib ie Retrieved 24 January 2023 a b Collins Peter 1999 The Contest of Memory and the Continuing Impact of 1798 Commemoration Eire Ireland The Irish American Cultural Institute 34 2 28 50 35 doi 10 1353 eir 1999 0002 S2CID 149277904 Memoirs of Myles Byrne Dublin Maunsel and Co Ltd 1907 Full Text of the Memoirs of Myles Byrne 1907 Memoirs of Myles Byrne Introduction by Stephen Gwynn with link to full text Retrieved 22 March 2021 Moore Thomas 1831 The Life and Death of Edward Fitzgerald Volume 1 London Longman Reese Orme Brown amp Green Thomas Moore Irish Paris www irishmeninparis org Retrieved 23 March 2021 Miles Byrne 1780 1862 Memoirs of Miles Byrne 1863 Nicholas Furlong Fr John Murphy of Boolavogue 1753 1798 Dublin 1991 Stephen Gwynn ed Memoirs of Miles Byrne edited by his Widow 2 vols Dublin amp London 1907 K Wkelan ed amp W Nolan assoc ed Wexford History and Society Dublin Geography Publications 1987 Leonard Horner ed Memoirs and Correspondence of Francis Horner M P Boston 1853 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Myles Byrne amp oldid 1177276601, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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