fbpx
Wikipedia

Robert Emmet

Robert Emmet (4 March 1778 – 20 September 1803) was an Irish Republican, orator and rebel leader. Following the suppression of the United Irish uprising in 1798, he sought to organise a renewed attempt to overthrow the British Crown and Protestant Ascendancy in Ireland, and to establish a nationally representative government. Emmet entertained, but ultimately abandoned, hopes of immediate French assistance and of coordination with radical militants in Great Britain. In Ireland, many of the surviving veterans of '98 hesitated to lend their support, and his rising in Dublin in 1803 proved abortive.

Robert Emmet
A watercolour miniature of Emmet made during his trial.
Born(1778-03-04)4 March 1778
Dublin, Ireland
Died20 September 1803(1803-09-20) (aged 25)
Dublin, Ireland
Allegiance United Irishmen
Years of service1793–1803
RankCommander
Commands heldIrish Rebellion of 1803
Battles/wars1798 Rebellion
Irish Rebellion of 1803
RelationsThomas Addis Emmet (brother)

Emmet’s Proclamation of the Provisional Government to the People of Ireland, his Speech from the Dock, and his "sacrificial" end on the gallows inspired later generations of Irish republicans.[1] Patrick Pearse, who in 1916 was again to proclaim a provisional government in Dublin, declared Emmet's attempt "not a failure, but a triumph for that deathless thing we call Irish Nationality".[2]

Early life

Emmet was born at 109 St. Stephen's Green,[3] in Dublin on 4 March 1778. He was the youngest son of Dr Robert Emmet (1729–1802), physician to the Lord Lieutenant, and his wife, Elizabeth Mason (1739–1803). The Emmets were financially comfortable, members of the Protestant Ascendancy with a house at St Stephen's Green and a country residence near Milltown.

Dr. Emmet supported the cause of American independence and was a well-known figure on the fringes of the Irish patriot movement. Theobald Wolfe Tone, a friend of Emmet's elder brother, Thomas Addis Emmet, and an advocate of more radical reform, including Catholic Emancipation, was a visitor to the house.[4] So too, as a friend of his father, was Dr William Drennan,[5] the original proposer of the "benevolent conspiracy--a plot for the people"[6] that was to call itself, at Tone's suggestion, the Society of United Irishmen.

Emmet entered Trinity College Dublin in October 1793 as a precocious fifteen-year-old and excelled as a student of history and chemistry. In December 1797 he joined the College Historical Society. His brother Thomas and Wolfe Tone, preceding him in the society, had maintained its lively tradition (stretching back to Edmund Burke) of defying the College's injunction against discussing questions of "modern politics".[7]

Fellow Society member Thomas Moore recalled that men "of advanced standing and reputation for oratory, came to attend our debates, expressly for the purpose of answering [Robert] Emmet". He eloquence was unmatched.[8] In the preface to his Irish Melodies (1837), he recounts Emmet "ardently" taking the side of Democracy in the debate "Whether an Aristocracy or a Democracy is most favourable to the advancement of science and literature?" and, in "another of his remarkable speeches", saying, "When a people, advancing rapidly in knowledge and power, perceive at last how far their government is lagging behind them, what then, I ask, is to be done in such a case? What, but to pull the government up to the people?"[9]

Robert Emmet is described by his contemporaries as slight in person; his features were regular, his forehead high, his eyes bright and full of expression, his nose sharp, thin, and straight, the lower part of his face slightly pock-marked, his complexion sallow.[4]

Revolutionary career

Emissary for the new United Irish Executive

In April 1798 Emmet was exposed as the secretary of a secret college committee in support of the Society of United Irishmen (of which his brother and Tone were leading executive members). Rather than submit to questioning under oath that might inculpate others, he withdrew from Trinity.[10]

Emmet did not participate in the disordered United Irish uprising when it broke out in counties to the south and north of a heavily-garrisoned Dublin in May 1798. But after the suppression of the rebellion in the summer, and in communication with state prisoners held at Fort George in Scotland (including his brother), Emmet joined William Putnam McCabe in re-establishing a United Irish organisation. They sought to reconstruct the Society on a strict military basis, with its members chosen personally by its officers' meeting as the executive directorate. Following the example not only of Tone but also of James Coigly, their aim was to again solicit a French invasion on the prospective strength both of a rising in Ireland and of a radical conspiracy in Britain. To this end McCabe set out for France in December 1798, stopping first in London to renew contact with the network of English Jacobins, the United Britons.[11]

On the new United Irish executive in Dublin, Emmet assisted veterans Thomas Wright (from April 1799, an informer)[12] and Malachy Delaney (a former officer in the Austrian army),[13] with a manual on insurgent tactics. In the summer of 1800, as secretary to Delaney, he set out on a secret mission to support McCabe's efforts in Paris. Through his foreign minister Talleyrand, Emmet and Delaney presented Napoleon with a memorial which argued that the parliamentary Union with Great Britain, imposed in the wake of the rebellion, had "in no way eased the discontent of Ireland", and with lessons drawn from the failure of '98, the United Irish were again prepared to act on the first news of a French landing.[14]

Their request for an invasion force almost double that commanded by Hoche in the aborted 1796 Bantry expedition possibly told against them.[14] The First Consul had other priorities: securing a temporary respite from war (the treaties of Lunéville in 1801 and of Amiens, March 1802) and re-enslaving Haiti.[15]

Connection with English radicals and with France

In January 1802 the arrival in Dublin of William Dowdall, following his release from Fort George, injected new life into the United Irishmen, and by March, contact was re-established with the United Britons network in England. In July, McCabe, returning to Paris from a visit to Dublin, brought news to Manchester that the United Irishmen were ready to rise again as soon as the continental war was renewed. In this expectation, preparations in England were intensified, including in London where Edward Despard sought to enlist in the republican conspiracy soldiers of the guards' regiment stationed at Windsor and the Tower of London. In October, Emmet (one of the few in exile against whom charges were not pending in Ireland)[16] was dispatched from Paris to assist Dowdall with the Dublin preparations.[17]

In November 1802 the government moved on the conspirators in London. It did not discover the full extent of the plot, but the arrest of Despard and his execution in February 1803 may have weakened English support. Emmet's emissaries from Dublin found a cooler reception in the mill towns of Lancashire and Yorkshire, and in London than they had expected.[17]

In May 1803 the war with France was renewed. McCabe appeared to enjoy Napoleon's favour,[18] and had had assurances of his intention to help Ireland secure her independence. From his own interviews with Napoleon, and with Talleyrand, in the autumn of 1802 Emmet emerged unconvinced. He was persuaded that the First Consul was considering a Channel crossing for August 1803, but that in the contest with England there would be scant consideration for Ireland's interests.[8] (Sympathetic to the cause, Denis Taaffe proposed that if ever France took possession of Ireland she would trade it for a West Indian sugar island).[19]

Disputing with Arthur O'Connor, who in Paris insisted on a guarantee of a French landing,[20] when war was resumed Emmett sent his own emissary, Patrick Gallagher, to Paris, to ask for "money, arms, ammunition and officers" but not for large numbers of troops. After the rising in Dublin misfired, and with no further prospects at home, in August Emmet did send Myles Byrne to Paris to do all he could to encourage an invasion. But at his trial, while he conceded that a "connection with France was, indeed, intended" it was to be "only as far as mutual interest would sanction require":[21] no man should "calumniate" his memory by believing that he had "hoped for freedom from the government of France".[22]

Michael Fayne, a Kildare conspirator, later testified that Emmet used talk of French assistance only to "encourage the lower orders of people", as he often heard him say that as bad as an English government was, it was better than a French one", and that his object was "an independent state brought about by Irishmen only".[23]

Decision to proceed with a rising in Dublin

 
Emmet in Thomas Street, The Shamrock, Dublin, 1890

After his return to Ireland in October 1802, assisted by Anne Devlin (ostensibly his housekeeper), and with a legacy of £2,000 left to him by his father, Emmet laid preparations for a rising. According to the later recollection of Myles Byrne, on St Patrick's Day, 17 March 1803, Emmet gave a stirring speech to his confederates justifying the renewed resort to arms. If Ireland had cause in 1798, he argued it had only been compounded by the legislative union with Britain. As long as Ireland retained in its own parliament a "vestige of self-government", its people might entertain the hope of representation and reform. But now "in consequence of the accursed union":

[S]even-eights of the population have no right to send a member of their body to represent them, even in a foreign parliament, and the other eight part of the population are the tools and taskmasters, acting for the cruel English government and their Irish Ascendancy--a monster still worse, if possible than foreign tyranny.[24]

In April 1803, James (Jemmy) Hope and Myles Byrne arranged conferences, at which Emmet promised arms, with Michael Dwyer (Devlin’s cousin), who still maintained a guerrilla resistance in the Wicklow Mountains,[25] and with Thomas Cloney, a veteran of the Wexford rebellion in '98.[26] Hope and Russell headed north to rouse the United veterans of Down and Antrim.

In Dublin, Emmet believed his hand was forced on the 16th of July when gunpowder in the rebel arms depot in Patrick Street accidentally detonated, arousing the suspicion of the authorities. He persuaded the majority of the leadership, to bring forward the date for the rising to the evening of Saturday, July 23, a festival day, which would provide cover for the gathering of their forces.[27] The plan, without any further consideration of French aid, was to storm Dublin Castle, make hostage of Privy Council, and signal the country to rise.[28]

Moved by "a sinister hand"?

As preparations were made early in July, according to one of his many biographers, Helen Landreth, Emmet believed that "he had been tricked into the conspiracy", that he had been "a pawn moved by some sinister hand". Such may have been the suggestion of Hope's later remarks to the historian R. R. Madden. Emmet, according to Hope, realised that "the men of rank and fortune" who had urged him to head a new rising had had ulterior motives, but that, with Russell, he nonetheless placed his confidence in the great mass of the people to rise.[29] This would have been despite Emmet's recognition that: "No leading Catholic is committed. We are all Protestants".[30]

Parts of his plan were known, through spies and informers, to an undersecretary at Dublin Castle, Alexander Marsden and in turn by the Chief Secretary for Ireland, William Wickham. Yet they kept reports from the Lord Lieutenant and stayed the hand of the Town Major, Henry Sirr, who had wished move against the rebels following the St. Patrick Street explosion.[31]

Drawing on research in the 1880s by Dr Thomas Addis Emmet of New York City, a grandson of Emmet's elder brother, Landreth believes that Marsden and Wickham conspired with William Pitt, then out of office but anticipating his return as Prime Minister, to encourage the most dangerously disaffected in Ireland to fatally compromise the prospects for an effective revolt by acting in advance of a French invasion. Landreth believes that Emmet was their unwitting instrument,[32] drawn home from Paris for the purpose of organising a premature rising by the calculated misrepresentations of William Putnam McCabe and Arthur O'Connor.[33] Her evidence, however, is circumstantial, relying not least on Pitt's reputed cynicism in accepting the prospect of a rebellion in 1798 in order to frighten the Irish Parliament into dissolving itself.[32]

Emmet biographer, Patrick Geoghegan, finds it entirely "implausible" that Pitt, in or out of office, would risk the credibility of the union he had accomplished, and perhaps much else, for "some negligible security gains".[34] He argues that Wickham was genuinely complacent and that notes that, while he may have too long delayed moving against the rebels in the hope of discovering the full scope of their conspiracy, on the 23rd Marsden did sound the alarm in advance of the day's action.[35]

Proclamation of the Provisional Government

Emmet issued a proclamation in the name of the "Provisional Government". Calling upon the Irish people "to show the world that you are competent to take your place among the nations . . . as an independent country", Emmet made clear in the proclamation that they would have to do so "without foreign assistance": "That confidence which was once lost by trusting to external support . . . has been again restored. We have been mutually pledged to each other to look only to our own strength".[36]

The Proclamation also contained "allusions to the widening of the political agenda of Emmet and the United Irishmen following the failure of 1798".[36] In addition to democratic parliamentary reform, the Proclamation announced that tithes were to be abolished and the land of the established Church of Ireland nationalised. This, it has been suggested, marked the influence upon Emmet of Thomas Russell, although as a radical campaigner for economic and social reform Russell might have wished to go further.[37] Emmet remained intent on giving the rising a universal appeal across both class and sectarian divisions: "We are not against property – we war against no religious sect – we war not against past opinions or prejudices – we war against English dominion."[36]

The Government sought to suppress all 10,000 printed copies of the Proclamation. Only two are known to survive.[38]

The Rising

At 11 on the morning of 23 July 1803, Emmet showed men from Kildare an arsenal of pikes, grenades, rockets, and gunpowder-packed hollowed beams (these were to be dragged out onto the streets to prevent cavalry charges). They noted only the absence of recognisable firearms and were unimpressed by Emmet, a "youngster" whose inexperience would place "the rope around the neck of decent men".[39] They left to turn back other Kildare insurgents on the road to Dublin. The plan to surprise Dublin Castle, and seize the viceroy, was botched when the assailants prematurely revealed themselves.[28]

By evening Emmet, Malachy Delaney and Myles Byrne (turned out for the occasion in gold-trimmed green uniforms) were outside their Thomas Street arsenal – with just 80 men.[28] R.R. Madden describes "a motley assemblage of armed men, a great number of whom were, if not intoxicated, under the evident excitement of drink".[40] Unaware that John Allen was approaching with a band, according to one witness, of 300,[41] and shaken by the sight of a lone dragoon being pulled from his horse and piked to death, Emmet told the men to disperse.[42] He had already stood down sizeable insurgent groups straddling the main suburban roads by pre-arranged signal, a solitary rocket.[43]

Sporadic clashes continued into the night. In one incident, the Lord Chief Justice of Ireland, Lord Kilwarden, was dragged from his carriage and stabbed by pikes. Found still alive, he was taken to a watch-house where he died shortly thereafter. Kilwarden had used his position to help his cousin, Wolfe Tone, to avoid prosecution in 1794. He was nonetheless reviled for the prosecution and hanging of William Orr in 1797 and, in the wake of 1798, of several Catholic Defenders. Kilwarden's nephew, the Rev. Mr Wolfe, was also killed, although his daughter was not harmed.[44]

Emmet fled the city arriving in Rathfarnham with party of 16 men. When he heard that Wicklowmen were still planning to rise, he issued a countermanding order to prevent needless violence.[45] Instead he ordered Byrne to Paris to again solicit the French.[21]

Capture and trial

 
Site of Mrs. Palmer's house in Harold's Cross where Emmet was arrested, with memorial marker.

While Emmet hid in Rathfarnham, yeomen sought to extract information from Anne Devlin, prodding her with bayonets and half hanging her until she passed out.[28] Had he not insisted on taking his leave of his fiancée Sarah Curran (daughter of the disapproving John Philpot Curran)[4] he may have succeeded in joining Dowdall and Byrne in France. Emmet was captured on 25 August and taken to the Castle, then removed to Kilmainham. Vigorous but ineffectual efforts were made to procure his escape.

 
Depiction of Robert Emmet's trial

Emmet was tried and convicted for high treason on 19 September. The evidence against him had been overwhelming, but the Crown took the extra precaution of suborning his defence attorney, Leonard McNally, for £200 and a pension.[46] McNally's assistant Peter Burrowes could not be bought and represented Emmet as best he could.[42]

Emmet's instruction, however, was not to offer a defence: he would not call any witnesses, "or to take up the time of the court". When on announcing this, McNally proposed that the trial was concluded, the prosecuting counsel William Plunket took to his feet. In what was widely regarded as an unnecessary attack on a doomed man, Plunket, who was to see himself appointed Solicitor-General, mocked Emmet as the deluded leader of a conspiracy encompassing "the bricklayer, the old clothes man, the hodman and the hostler".[47]

Emmet's Speech from the Dock is especially remembered for his closing remarks. Historian Patrick Geoghehan has identified over seventy different versions of the text,[48] but in an early printing (1818) based on notes taken by Burrowes, Emmet concludes:[49]

I am here ready to die. I am not allowed to vindicate my character; no man shall dare to vindicate my character; and when I am prevented from vindicating myself, let no man dare to calumniate me. Let my character and my motives repose in obscurity and peace, till other times and other men can do them justice. Then shall my character be vindicated; then may my epitaph be written.

Chief Justice Lord Norbury sentenced Emmet to be hanged, drawn and quartered, as was customary for conviction of treason. The following day, 20 September, Emmet was executed in Thomas Street in front of St. Catherine's. He was hanged and then beheaded once dead.[50] As family members and friends of Robert had also been arrested, including some who had nothing to do with the rebellion, no one came forward to claim his remains out of fear of arrest.

On the eve of his execution, Emmet wrote from Kilmainham to the Chief Secretary for Ireland, William Wickham, whose "fairness" he acknowledged. He appears to have made a profound impression.[51][52]

In December Wickham resigned his post, confessing to friends that "no consideration upon earth" could induce him "to remain after having maturely reflected" on the contents of the note he had received. He could not enforce laws "unjust, oppressive and unchristian" and intolerable to the memory of a man he had been "compelled by the duty of my office to pursue to the death". Wickham was persuaded that Emmet had been attempting to save Ireland from "a state of depression and humiliation" and that, had he himself been an Irishman, he "should most unquestionably have joined him".[53][54]

Burial and Shelley's later eulogy

Emmet's remains were first delivered to Newgate Prison and then back to Kilmainham Gaol, where the jailer was under instructions that if no one claimed them they were to be buried in a nearby hospital's burial grounds called Bully's Acre. Family tradition has it that in 1804, under cover of the burial of his sister, Mary Anne Holmes, Emmet's remains were removed from Bully's Acre and re-interred in the family vault (since demolished) at St Peter's Church in Aungier Street.[50]

After searching for Emmet's grave in Dublin, early in 1812, Percy Bysshe Shelley revised his elegiac poem “The Monarch's Funeral: An Anticipation”: "For who was he, the uncoffined slain, /That fell in Erin's injured isle /Because his spirit dared disdain/ To light his country's funeral pile?"[55] In "On Robert Emmet's Grave" Shelley proposed that, because unknown, Emmet's grave would "remain unpolluted by fame /Till thy foes, by the world and by fortune caressed, /Shall pass like a mist from the light of thy name."[56]

When Shelley returned to London from Dublin in 1812, it was with an account of Emmet's trial containing his famous speech, and Emmet appears again as the “patriot” in The Devil's Walk, a lengthy broadside against a corrupt and un-reforming government.[55] (At the same time, while in Dublin, Shelley had gone round streets and pubs of the city handing out An Address, to the Irish People, a 22-page pamphlet in which he pleaded with the Irish people not to repeat Emmet's attempt: "I do not wish to see things changed now, because it cannot be done without violence, and we may assure ourselves that none of us are fit for any change, however good, if we condescend to employ force in a cause we think right").[57]

Legacy

 
Robert Emmet was honoured on two Irish postage stamps issued in 1953, commemorating the 150th anniversary of his death

Emmet’s rebellion infuriated Lord Castlereagh because he "could not see the change that his own great measure the Union has effected in Ireland".[51] Despite having so badly misfired, the 1803 rising suggested that the Act of Union was not going to be the palliative Castlereagh and Prime Minister William Pitt had intended. Castlereagh advised that "the best thing would be to go into no detail whatever upon the case, to keep the subject clearly standing on its own narrow base of a contemptible insurrection without means or respectable leaders",[51] an instruction Plunket appears to have followed in Emmet's prosecution. This was to be a stance taken not only by unionists.

Daniel O'Connell who was to lead the struggle for Catholic Emancipation and for repeal of the Union in the decades following Emmet's death, roundly condemned the resort to "physical force". O'Connell's own programme of mobilising public opinion, fuelled by sometimes violent rhetoric and demonstrated in "monster meetings", might have suggested that constitutionalism and physical force were complementary rather than antithetical.[58] But O'Connell remained content with his dismissal of Emmett in 1803 as an instigator of bloodshed who had forfeited any claim to "compassion".[59]

Emmet's political rehabilitation begins in the Famine-years of the 1840s with the Young Irelanders. In 1846 they had finally broken with O'Connell declaring that if Repeal could not be carried by moral persuasion and peaceful means, a resort to arms would be "a no less honourable course".[60] The Young Irelander publisher Charles Gavan Duffy repeatedly reprinted Michael James Whitty's popular chapbook Life, Trial and Conversations of Robert Emmet Esq. (1836), and promoted R.R. Madden's Life and Times of Robert Emmet (1847) which, despite its devastating account of the Thomas Street fiasco, was hagiographic.[40]

In carrying forward the tradition of physical-force republicanism from the debacle of the Young Irelander "Famine Rebellion" in 1848, the Irish Republican Brotherhood (the Fenians) also carried forward admiration for Emmet. On the $20 bonds they issued in 1866 in the United States in the name of the Irish Republic, his profile appears opposite that of Tone.[61]

Robert Emmet's older brother, Thomas Addis Emmet emigrated to the United States shortly after Robert's execution. He eventually served as the New York State Attorney General. His descendants (who included the prominent American portrait painters Lydia Field Emmet, Rosina Emmet Sherwood, Ellen Emmet Rand, and Jane Emmet de Glehn) helped advance his standing among the Irish diaspora, which in turn may have been one factor in ensuring that he was one among the "ghosts" invoked in the run-up to 1916 Easter Rising.[62]

In the Emmet Commemoration speech he delivered in New York City in March 1914, Pearse described how the spirit of Irish patriotism called in Emmet "to a dreamer" and "awoke a man of action"; called to "a student and a recluse" and brought forth "a leader of men"; "called to one who loved the ways of peace" and found "a revolutionary". Emmet was a man unwilling to "surrender of one jot or shred of our claim to freedom even in return for all the blessings of the British peace".[63]

Representation in popular culture

 
Brandon Tynan's Robert Emmet, The Days of 1803. Chicago 1903

In a speech on Emmet in New York City in 1904, W. B. Yeats famously observed that "Emmet died and became an image".[64] This was the work first, and foremost, of Thomas Moore.[55] In his popular ballad "O! Breathe Not His Name",[65] Moore made his former Trinity College friend the touchstone of national sentiment: "Oh breathe not his name! let it sleep in the shade, / Where cold and unhonoured his relics are laid! [...] / And the tear we shed, though secret it rolls, Shall keep his memory green in our souls". Dwelling upon the heartache of Sarah Curran, his "She is Far From the Land Where Her Young Hero Sleeps" also made Emmet an icon of romantic love.[66]

In Irish America where, together with Emmet's Speech from the Dock, "O! Breathe Not His Name" became part of the canon of parochial education, Moore had innumerable imitators. Of these, one of the most ambitious was John Boyle O'Reilly, a member of the Irish Republican Brotherhood who had escaped from penal servitude in Western Australia. O'Reilly wrote a publicly performed eighty-four line poem, "The Patriot's Grave" (1878) in which he both echoes the defiance of Emmet's last words while attempting to bring the defence of physical force within a broader tradition that embraced constitutional agitation (to add Emmet to a Pantheon that included "Grattan, Flood and Curran").[67] Emmet was also a frequent character on the patriotic stage. Typical of his green-uniform presentation was Brandon Tynon's melodrama, Robert Emmet, the Days of 1803, which premiered on Broadway in 1902.[68]

In the nineteenth century, the Emmet story also found its way into prose. On both sides of the Atlantic John Doherty's 1836 Life, Trial and Conversation and Times of Robert Emmet, and R. R. Madden's 1844 Life and Time of Robert Emmet became the standard references. With less patience for historical or political background, what tended to be drawn out in subsequent works was the notion of "pure sacrifice". In Robert Emmet, A Survey of his Rebellion and of His Romance (1904), Louise Imogen Guiney classes Emmet with Charlotte Corday and John Brown.[67]

In the early twentieth century, Moore's Emmet appeared in pioneering film. While focussed on the Emmet-Curran love story, the 1911Thanhouser film (USA) Robert Emmet depicts Emmet's expulsion from Trinity College, his meeting with Napoleon, his part in the rising and his capture, trial and execution.[69] Some of the same storyline features in Ireland a Nation (1914) written and produced in London and Ireland by Walter MacNamara,[70] and Sidney Olcott's Bold Emmett Ireland's Martyr (1915, Sid Films, USA).[71][72]

Many decades later there was a step away from hagiography. In her screen drama Anne Devlin (1984), the Irish feminist filmmaker Pat Murphy offers an implicit criticism of patriotic politics that operates "largely at the level of signs and representations". In one scene, Emmet enters a room as Devlin is holding up his splendid green uniform in front of a mirror. Asked what she thinks of it, Devlin (cousin of the guerrilla leader Michael Dwyer) replies that it looks like a green version of an English Redcoat, and will be seen "a mile off". "We should", she argues, "be rebel as ourselves’".[71]

Emmet is "bold Robert" in the song Back Home in Derry, written by Bobby Sands in HM Prison Maze before his fatal hunger strike in 1981.[73] The lyrics, describing the feelings of rebels convicts as leave Ireland for Australia, were recorded by Christy Moore.[74]

Honours

Places named after Emmet in the United States include Emmetsburg, Iowa;[75] Emmet, Nebraska;[76] Emmet County, Iowa; Emmett, Michigan and Emmet County, Michigan,[77] and Emmet Street in the historic French neighborhood of Soulard, St. Louis.[78] The Robert Emmet Elementary School in Chicago, Illinois was named for him. Two time All Ireland Club Camogie Champions Robert Emmet's GAC Slaughtneil is named after him. Emmet Park in Savannah, Georgia, was named after Emmet in 1902 in preparation for the centennial of his death.

Statues were erected in his honour:

  • A life-size bronze statue of Robert Emmet by Jerome Connor stands in St Stephen's Green, Dublin, the parkland beside which Emmet was born. A copy stands in Emmetsburg, Iowa.
  • A bronze statue of Emmet by Jerome Connor stands in Washington, DC on Embassy Row (Massachusetts Avenue NW and S Street NW). A public commemoration of Emmet's execution and legacy is held annually on the fourth Sunday in September by the Irish American Unity Conference.
  • A copy of this statue was installed on the Music Concourse in front of the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park.
  • A statue of Robert Emmet is in the courthouse square in Emmetsburg, Iowa.

See also

References

  1. ^ Mitchell, Angus (22 February 2013). "Robert Emmet and 1916". History Ireland. from the original on 18 April 2021. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
  2. ^ Pearse, Patrick (2 March 1914). "Robert Emmet and the Ireland of to-day. An Address delivered at the Emmet Commemoration in the Academy of Music, Brooklyn, New York". celt.ucc.ie. from the original on 8 June 2021. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
  3. ^ Kilfeather, Siobhán Marie (2005). Dublin: a cultural history. Oxford University Press. p. 108. ISBN 978-0-19-518201-9. from the original on 20 May 2016. Retrieved 17 October 2015.
  4. ^ a b c "Webb, Alfred. A Compendium of Irish Biography, M.H. Gill & Son, Dublin, 1878". from the original on 26 May 2017. Retrieved 24 July 2014.
  5. ^ Whelan, Fergus (2020). May Tyrants Tremble: The Life of William Drennan, 1754–1820. Dublin: Irish Academic Press. p. 59. ISBN 9781788551212.
  6. ^ "Category Archives: William Drennan". assets.publishing.service.gov.uk. February 2020. pp. 15–16. from the original on 1 November 2020. Retrieved 10 May 2020.
  7. ^ Young Ireland, Sir Charles Gavan Duffy, Cassell, Petter, Galpin & Co 1880 pg.34
  8. ^ a b Webb, Alfred (1878). "Robert Emmet - Irish Biography". www.libraryireland.com. from the original on 4 June 2021. Retrieved 11 June 2021.
  9. ^ Moore, Thomas (1837). "Preface to Irish Melodies". www.musicanet.org. Retrieved 15 December 2022.
  10. ^ Helen, Landreth (1948). The Pursuit of Robert Emmet. New York, London: McGraw Hill. p. 73.
  11. ^ Elliott, Marianne (May 1977). "The 'Despard Plot' Reconsidered". Past & Present. 75 (1): 46–61. doi:10.1093/past/75.1.46.
  12. ^ "Wright, Thomas | Dictionary of Irish Biography". www.dib.ie. from the original on 12 June 2021. Retrieved 12 June 2021.
  13. ^ "Delaney, Malachy | Dictionary of Irish Biography". www.dib.ie. from the original on 12 June 2021. Retrieved 12 June 2021.
  14. ^ a b Kleinman, Sylvie (22 February 2013). "French Connection II: Robert Emmet and Malachy Delaney's memorial to Napoleon Buonaparte, September 1800". History Ireland. from the original on 11 June 2021. Retrieved 11 June 2021.
  15. ^ 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
  16. ^ Parkhill, Trevor (2003). "The Wild Geese of 1798: Emigrés of the Rebellion". Seanchas Ardmhacha: Journal of the Armagh Diocesan Historical Society. 19 (2): (118–135), 129. ISSN 0488-0196. JSTOR 25746923.
  17. ^ a b Elliott, Marianne (May 1977). "The 'Despard Plot' Reconsidered". Past & Present. 75 (1): (46–61) 56–60. doi:10.1093/past/75.1.46.
  18. ^ Kelly, James (2012). "Official List of Radical Activists and Suspected Activists Involved in Emmet's Rebellion, 1803". Analecta Hibernica (43): 129–200, 149. ISSN 0791-6167. JSTOR 23317181. from the original on 12 May 2021. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
  19. ^ Ceretta, Manuela (2009). "Taaffe, Denis | Dictionary of Irish Biography". www.dib.ie. Retrieved 11 January 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  20. ^ Geohegan, Patrick (2002). Robert Emmet. Dublin: Gill & Macmillan. pp. 111–112. ISBN 0717133877.
  21. ^ a b Quinn, James (2002). Soul on Fire: a Life of Thomas Russell. Dublin: Irish Academic Press. p. 267. ISBN 9780716527329.
  22. ^ Elliott, Marianne (1982). Partners in Revolution: the United Irishmen and France. New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 314.
  23. ^ Geoghegan, Patrick (2002). Robert Emmet, a Life. Dublin: Gill & Macmillan. p. 112. ISBN 9780717133871.
  24. ^ quoted in Geoghegan (2002), pp. 120-121
  25. ^ "Michael Dwyer of Imaal". History Ireland. 22 February 2013. from the original on 8 June 2021. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
  26. ^ Byrne, Miles (3 June 1907). "Memoirs of Miles Byrne". Dublin : Maunsel – via Internet Archive.
  27. ^ hÉireann, Stair na (16 July 2021). "#OTD in 1803 – Irish Rebellion of 1803 | Following an explosion at his arms depot on this date, Robert Emmet brings forward his planned rebellion in Dublin to 23 July". Stair na hÉireann | History of Ireland. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  28. ^ a b c d Bardon, Jonathan (2008). A History of Ireland in 250 Episodes. Dublin: Gill & Macmillan. pp. 334–336. ISBN 9780717146499.
  29. ^ Landreth (1948), pp. 153-154
  30. ^ MADDEN, Richard Robert (1858). The United Irishmen, Their Lives and Times. Volume 3. p. 357.
  31. ^ Landreth (1948), p. 179
  32. ^ a b Landreth (1948), pp x-xi
  33. ^ Landreth (1948), pp. 121, 121n, 246n, 247n
  34. ^ Geoghegan (2002) pp. 40-41.
  35. ^ Geoghegan (2002), pp. 152, 166-167
  36. ^ a b c "Robert Emmet, the 1803 Proclamation of Independence and the ghost of 1798 – The Irish Story". from the original on 11 June 2021. Retrieved 11 June 2021.
  37. ^ Quinn, James (2007), "Revelation and Romanticism", in Dolan et al (eds.), Reinterpreting Emmet: Essays on the Life and Legacy of Robert Emmet, University College Dublin Press, ISBN 978-1904558637, p. 27
  38. ^ Whelan, Kevin (6 September 2003). "A poltergeist in politics". The Irish Times. Retrieved 13 June 2021.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  39. ^ Geoghegan (2002), p. 166
  40. ^ a b 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. from the original on 13 June 2021. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  41. ^ Hammond, Joseph W.; Frayne, Michl. (1947). "The Emmet Insurrection". Dublin Historical Record. 9 (2): 59–68. ISSN 0012-6861. JSTOR 30083906. from the original on 30 July 2021. Retrieved 30 July 2021.
  42. ^ a b "Robert Emmet". Ricorso. 2010. from the original on 25 July 2018. Retrieved 6 October 2010.
  43. ^ O'Donnell, Ruan (2021). "The Rising of 1803 in Dublin". History Ireland. Retrieved 30 November 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  44. ^ "Rewind: The murder of Lord Kilwarden". www.echo.ie. 26 March 2020. from the original on 8 June 2021. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
  45. ^ Geohegan, Patrick (2002). Robert Emmet. Dublin: Gill & Macmillan. p. 185. ISBN 0717133877.
  46. ^ "The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition, 2008". Encyclopedia.com. from the original on 17 September 2016. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  47. ^ Whelan, Fergus (2020). May Tyrants Tremble: The Life of William Drennan, 1754–1820. Dublin: Irish Academic Press. pp. 255–256. ISBN 9781788551212.
  48. ^ "History Ireland, autumn 2003". from the original on 22 December 2017. Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  49. ^ Phillips, C. Recollections of Curran (1818 Milliken, Dublin) pp.256–259.
  50. ^ a b "Murphy, Sean. "The Grave of Robert Emmet", Irish Historical Mysteries, Dublin, Ireland; 2010". from the original on 3 June 2019. Retrieved 6 October 2010.
  51. ^ a b c Whelan, Kevin (22 February 2013). "Robert Emmet: between history and memory". History Ireland. from the original on 13 June 2021. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  52. ^ Geohegan, Patrick (2009). "Wickham, William | Dictionary of Irish Biography". www.dib.ie. from the original on 12 June 2021. Retrieved 16 June 2021.
  53. ^ Public Records Office of Northern Ireland (PRONI). T.2627/5/Z/18.
  54. ^ Public Records Office of Northern Ireland (PRONI). T.2627/5/Z/25.
  55. ^ a b c Morgan, Alison (3 July 2014). ""Let no man write my epitaph": the contributions of Percy Shelley, Thomas Moore and Robert Southey to the memorialisation of Robert Emmet". Irish Studies Review. 22 (3): 285–303. doi:10.1080/09670882.2014.926124. ISSN 0967-0882. S2CID 170900710.
  56. ^ Esdaile manuscript book by Dowden, "Life of Shelley", 1887; dated 1812
  57. ^ Holmes, Richard (1974). Shelley, the pursuit. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. p. 120. ISBN 0297767224.
  58. ^ Swift, John (2008). "Review of Reinterpreting Emmet: Essays on the Life and Legacy of Robert Emmet". Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review. 97 (386): 232–235. ISSN 0039-3495. JSTOR 25660568. from the original on 13 June 2021. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  59. ^ O'Connell Correspondence, Vol I, Letter No. 97
  60. ^ O'Sullivan, T. F. (1945). Young Ireland. The Kerryman Ltd. pp. 195-6
  61. ^ Fanning, Charles (2004). "Robert Emmet and Nineteenth-Century Irish America". New Hibernia Review / Iris Éireannach Nua. 8 (4): 53–83. ISSN 1092-3977. JSTOR 20646472. from the original on 13 June 2021. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  62. ^ Mitchel, Angus (22 February 2013). "Robert Emmet and 1916". History Ireland. from the original on 18 April 2021. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  63. ^ Pearse, Patrick. Emmet Commemoration Speech New York 1914. Archived from the original on 13 June 2021. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  64. ^ Foster, R. F. (1998). W. B. Yeats, A Life, I: The Apprentice Mage 1865-1914. Oxford University Press. pp. 312–314. ISBN 9780192880857.
  65. ^ "Oh, Breathe Not His Name". www.contemplator.com. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
  66. ^ "O! Breathe Not His Name. Thomas Moore (1779-1852). September 20. James and Mary Ford, eds. 1902. Every Day in the Year: A Poetical Epitome of the World's History". www.bartleby.com. from the original on 13 June 2021. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  67. ^ a b Fanning, Charles (2004). "Robert Emmet and Nineteenth-Century Irish America". New Hibernia Review / Iris Éireannach Nua. 8 (4): 53–83. ISSN 1092-3977. JSTOR 20646472.
  68. ^ "Robert Emmet – Broadway Play – Original | IBDB". www.ibdb.com. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
  69. ^ "ROBERT EMMET". www.thanhouser.org. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
  70. ^ Rockett, Kevin; Hill, John (5 December 2004). National Cinema and Beyond. Four Courts. ISBN 9781851828739 – via Google Books.
  71. ^ a b Rockett, Kevin (2013). "Emmet on film". History Ireland. Retrieved 8 December 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  72. ^ Arthur Flynn (2005), The Story of Irish Film, Currach Press, Dublin. ISBN 1-85607-914-7.
  73. ^ Deboick, Sophia (14 June 2020). . The New European. London. Archived from the original on 1 August 2021. Retrieved 1 August 2021.
  74. ^ "Back Home In Derry". Christy Moore. 17 February 2012. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
  75. ^ "A Small Town Struggles to Preserve Its Irish Heritage". Irish America Magazine Sept/Oct. 1993. from the original on 7 April 2007. Retrieved 9 March 2007.
  76. ^ Campbell, Dorine. "Emmet". 17 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine Nebraska...Our Towns 18 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2010-06-16.
  77. ^ Gannett, Henry (1905). The Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States. Govt. Print. Off. p. 119.
  78. ^ Google (26 April 2021). "Map of Emmet Street with pin" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved 26 April 2021.
  79. ^ ""Robert Emmet" by Jerome Connor". Smithsonian American Art Museum. Smithsonian Institution. from the original on 16 June 2015. Retrieved 13 June 2015.

Bibliography

  • Elliott, Marianne, (2004) Robert Emmet: The Making of a Legend
  • Geoghegan, Patrick. (2004). Robert Emmet: A Life
  • Gough, Hugh & David Dickson, editors, (1991). Ireland and the French Revolution
  • Landreth, Helen, (1948), The Pursuit of Robert Emmet
  • McMahon, Sean, (2001) Robert Emmet
  • O Bradaigh, Sean, (2003). Bold Robert Emmet 1778–1803
  • O'Donnell, Ruan, (2003). Robert Emmet and the Rebellion of 1798
  • _____.(2003) Robert Emmet and the Rising of 1803
  • _____.(2003). Remember Emmet: Images of the Life and Legacy of Robert Emmet
  • Smyth, Jim, (1998). The Men of No Property: Irish Radicals and Popular Politics in the Late Eighteenth Century
  • Stewart, A.T.Q. (1993). A Deeper Silence: The Hidden Origins of the United Irish Movement

External links

  • Robert Emmet
  • Robert Emmet index of articles in History Ireland
  • Emmet's 'Proclamation of Independence'
  • Robert Emmet's Speech (Unabridged) From the Dock
  • Bronze sculpture of Robert Emmet (1916), by Jerome Stanley Connor, in Emmet Park, Washington, DC (photos)
  • Éamon De Valera unveils statue of Robert Emmet in Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, 20 July 1919
  • Smithsonian American Art Museum's Art Inventories Catalog record of the Robert Emmet Statue in Washington, D.C.
  • Robert Emmet Museum
  • Works by Robert Emmet at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  

robert, emmet, other, people, named, disambiguation, march, 1778, september, 1803, irish, republican, orator, rebel, leader, following, suppression, united, irish, uprising, 1798, sought, organise, renewed, attempt, overthrow, british, crown, protestant, ascen. For other people named Robert Emmet see Robert Emmet disambiguation Robert Emmet 4 March 1778 20 September 1803 was an Irish Republican orator and rebel leader Following the suppression of the United Irish uprising in 1798 he sought to organise a renewed attempt to overthrow the British Crown and Protestant Ascendancy in Ireland and to establish a nationally representative government Emmet entertained but ultimately abandoned hopes of immediate French assistance and of coordination with radical militants in Great Britain In Ireland many of the surviving veterans of 98 hesitated to lend their support and his rising in Dublin in 1803 proved abortive Robert EmmetA watercolour miniature of Emmet made during his trial Born 1778 03 04 4 March 1778Dublin IrelandDied20 September 1803 1803 09 20 aged 25 Dublin IrelandAllegianceUnited IrishmenYears of service1793 1803RankCommanderCommands heldIrish Rebellion of 1803Battles wars1798 Rebellion Irish Rebellion of 1803RelationsThomas Addis Emmet brother Emmet s Proclamation of the Provisional Government to the People of Ireland his Speech from the Dock and his sacrificial end on the gallows inspired later generations of Irish republicans 1 Patrick Pearse who in 1916 was again to proclaim a provisional government in Dublin declared Emmet s attempt not a failure but a triumph for that deathless thing we call Irish Nationality 2 Contents 1 Early life 2 Revolutionary career 2 1 Emissary for the new United Irish Executive 2 2 Connection with English radicals and with France 2 3 Decision to proceed with a rising in Dublin 2 4 Moved by a sinister hand 2 5 Proclamation of the Provisional Government 2 6 The Rising 3 Capture and trial 4 Burial and Shelley s later eulogy 5 Legacy 6 Representation in popular culture 7 Honours 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 10 External linksEarly life EditEmmet was born at 109 St Stephen s Green 3 in Dublin on 4 March 1778 He was the youngest son of Dr Robert Emmet 1729 1802 physician to the Lord Lieutenant and his wife Elizabeth Mason 1739 1803 The Emmets were financially comfortable members of the Protestant Ascendancy with a house at St Stephen s Green and a country residence near Milltown Dr Emmet supported the cause of American independence and was a well known figure on the fringes of the Irish patriot movement Theobald Wolfe Tone a friend of Emmet s elder brother Thomas Addis Emmet and an advocate of more radical reform including Catholic Emancipation was a visitor to the house 4 So too as a friend of his father was Dr William Drennan 5 the original proposer of the benevolent conspiracy a plot for the people 6 that was to call itself at Tone s suggestion the Society of United Irishmen Emmet entered Trinity College Dublin in October 1793 as a precocious fifteen year old and excelled as a student of history and chemistry In December 1797 he joined the College Historical Society His brother Thomas and Wolfe Tone preceding him in the society had maintained its lively tradition stretching back to Edmund Burke of defying the College s injunction against discussing questions of modern politics 7 Fellow Society member Thomas Moore recalled that men of advanced standing and reputation for oratory came to attend our debates expressly for the purpose of answering Robert Emmet He eloquence was unmatched 8 In the preface to his Irish Melodies 1837 he recounts Emmet ardently taking the side of Democracy in the debate Whether an Aristocracy or a Democracy is most favourable to the advancement of science and literature and in another of his remarkable speeches saying When a people advancing rapidly in knowledge and power perceive at last how far their government is lagging behind them what then I ask is to be done in such a case What but to pull the government up to the people 9 Robert Emmet is described by his contemporaries as slight in person his features were regular his forehead high his eyes bright and full of expression his nose sharp thin and straight the lower part of his face slightly pock marked his complexion sallow 4 Revolutionary career EditEmissary for the new United Irish Executive Edit In April 1798 Emmet was exposed as the secretary of a secret college committee in support of the Society of United Irishmen of which his brother and Tone were leading executive members Rather than submit to questioning under oath that might inculpate others he withdrew from Trinity 10 Emmet did not participate in the disordered United Irish uprising when it broke out in counties to the south and north of a heavily garrisoned Dublin in May 1798 But after the suppression of the rebellion in the summer and in communication with state prisoners held at Fort George in Scotland including his brother Emmet joined William Putnam McCabe in re establishing a United Irish organisation They sought to reconstruct the Society on a strict military basis with its members chosen personally by its officers meeting as the executive directorate Following the example not only of Tone but also of James Coigly their aim was to again solicit a French invasion on the prospective strength both of a rising in Ireland and of a radical conspiracy in Britain To this end McCabe set out for France in December 1798 stopping first in London to renew contact with the network of English Jacobins the United Britons 11 On the new United Irish executive in Dublin Emmet assisted veterans Thomas Wright from April 1799 an informer 12 and Malachy Delaney a former officer in the Austrian army 13 with a manual on insurgent tactics In the summer of 1800 as secretary to Delaney he set out on a secret mission to support McCabe s efforts in Paris Through his foreign minister Talleyrand Emmet and Delaney presented Napoleon with a memorial which argued that the parliamentary Union with Great Britain imposed in the wake of the rebellion had in no way eased the discontent of Ireland and with lessons drawn from the failure of 98 the United Irish were again prepared to act on the first news of a French landing 14 Their request for an invasion force almost double that commanded by Hoche in the aborted 1796 Bantry expedition possibly told against them 14 The First Consul had other priorities securing a temporary respite from war the treaties of Luneville in 1801 and of Amiens March 1802 and re enslaving Haiti 15 Connection with English radicals and with France Edit In January 1802 the arrival in Dublin of William Dowdall following his release from Fort George injected new life into the United Irishmen and by March contact was re established with the United Britons network in England In July McCabe returning to Paris from a visit to Dublin brought news to Manchester that the United Irishmen were ready to rise again as soon as the continental war was renewed In this expectation preparations in England were intensified including in London where Edward Despard sought to enlist in the republican conspiracy soldiers of the guards regiment stationed at Windsor and the Tower of London In October Emmet one of the few in exile against whom charges were not pending in Ireland 16 was dispatched from Paris to assist Dowdall with the Dublin preparations 17 In November 1802 the government moved on the conspirators in London It did not discover the full extent of the plot but the arrest of Despard and his execution in February 1803 may have weakened English support Emmet s emissaries from Dublin found a cooler reception in the mill towns of Lancashire and Yorkshire and in London than they had expected 17 In May 1803 the war with France was renewed McCabe appeared to enjoy Napoleon s favour 18 and had had assurances of his intention to help Ireland secure her independence From his own interviews with Napoleon and with Talleyrand in the autumn of 1802 Emmet emerged unconvinced He was persuaded that the First Consul was considering a Channel crossing for August 1803 but that in the contest with England there would be scant consideration for Ireland s interests 8 Sympathetic to the cause Denis Taaffe proposed that if ever France took possession of Ireland she would trade it for a West Indian sugar island 19 Disputing with Arthur O Connor who in Paris insisted on a guarantee of a French landing 20 when war was resumed Emmett sent his own emissary Patrick Gallagher to Paris to ask for money arms ammunition and officers but not for large numbers of troops After the rising in Dublin misfired and with no further prospects at home in August Emmet did send Myles Byrne to Paris to do all he could to encourage an invasion But at his trial while he conceded that a connection with France was indeed intended it was to be only as far as mutual interest would sanction require 21 no man should calumniate his memory by believing that he had hoped for freedom from the government of France 22 Michael Fayne a Kildare conspirator later testified that Emmet used talk of French assistance only to encourage the lower orders of people as he often heard him say that as bad as an English government was it was better than a French one and that his object was an independent state brought about by Irishmen only 23 Decision to proceed with a rising in Dublin Edit Emmet in Thomas Street The Shamrock Dublin 1890 Main article Irish rebellion of 1803After his return to Ireland in October 1802 assisted by Anne Devlin ostensibly his housekeeper and with a legacy of 2 000 left to him by his father Emmet laid preparations for a rising According to the later recollection of Myles Byrne on St Patrick s Day 17 March 1803 Emmet gave a stirring speech to his confederates justifying the renewed resort to arms If Ireland had cause in 1798 he argued it had only been compounded by the legislative union with Britain As long as Ireland retained in its own parliament a vestige of self government its people might entertain the hope of representation and reform But now in consequence of the accursed union S even eights of the population have no right to send a member of their body to represent them even in a foreign parliament and the other eight part of the population are the tools and taskmasters acting for the cruel English government and their Irish Ascendancy a monster still worse if possible than foreign tyranny 24 In April 1803 James Jemmy Hope and Myles Byrne arranged conferences at which Emmet promised arms with Michael Dwyer Devlin s cousin who still maintained a guerrilla resistance in the Wicklow Mountains 25 and with Thomas Cloney a veteran of the Wexford rebellion in 98 26 Hope and Russell headed north to rouse the United veterans of Down and Antrim In Dublin Emmet believed his hand was forced on the 16th of July when gunpowder in the rebel arms depot in Patrick Street accidentally detonated arousing the suspicion of the authorities He persuaded the majority of the leadership to bring forward the date for the rising to the evening of Saturday July 23 a festival day which would provide cover for the gathering of their forces 27 The plan without any further consideration of French aid was to storm Dublin Castle make hostage of Privy Council and signal the country to rise 28 Moved by a sinister hand Edit As preparations were made early in July according to one of his many biographers Helen Landreth Emmet believed that he had been tricked into the conspiracy that he had been a pawn moved by some sinister hand Such may have been the suggestion of Hope s later remarks to the historian R R Madden Emmet according to Hope realised that the men of rank and fortune who had urged him to head a new rising had had ulterior motives but that with Russell he nonetheless placed his confidence in the great mass of the people to rise 29 This would have been despite Emmet s recognition that No leading Catholic is committed We are all Protestants 30 Parts of his plan were known through spies and informers to an undersecretary at Dublin Castle Alexander Marsden and in turn by the Chief Secretary for Ireland William Wickham Yet they kept reports from the Lord Lieutenant and stayed the hand of the Town Major Henry Sirr who had wished move against the rebels following the St Patrick Street explosion 31 Drawing on research in the 1880s by Dr Thomas Addis Emmet of New York City a grandson of Emmet s elder brother Landreth believes that Marsden and Wickham conspired with William Pitt then out of office but anticipating his return as Prime Minister to encourage the most dangerously disaffected in Ireland to fatally compromise the prospects for an effective revolt by acting in advance of a French invasion Landreth believes that Emmet was their unwitting instrument 32 drawn home from Paris for the purpose of organising a premature rising by the calculated misrepresentations of William Putnam McCabe and Arthur O Connor 33 Her evidence however is circumstantial relying not least on Pitt s reputed cynicism in accepting the prospect of a rebellion in 1798 in order to frighten the Irish Parliament into dissolving itself 32 Emmet biographer Patrick Geoghegan finds it entirely implausible that Pitt in or out of office would risk the credibility of the union he had accomplished and perhaps much else for some negligible security gains 34 He argues that Wickham was genuinely complacent and that notes that while he may have too long delayed moving against the rebels in the hope of discovering the full scope of their conspiracy on the 23rd Marsden did sound the alarm in advance of the day s action 35 Proclamation of the Provisional Government Edit Emmet issued a proclamation in the name of the Provisional Government Calling upon the Irish people to show the world that you are competent to take your place among the nations as an independent country Emmet made clear in the proclamation that they would have to do so without foreign assistance That confidence which was once lost by trusting to external support has been again restored We have been mutually pledged to each other to look only to our own strength 36 The Proclamation also contained allusions to the widening of the political agenda of Emmet and the United Irishmen following the failure of 1798 36 In addition to democratic parliamentary reform the Proclamation announced that tithes were to be abolished and the land of the established Church of Ireland nationalised This it has been suggested marked the influence upon Emmet of Thomas Russell although as a radical campaigner for economic and social reform Russell might have wished to go further 37 Emmet remained intent on giving the rising a universal appeal across both class and sectarian divisions We are not against property we war against no religious sect we war not against past opinions or prejudices we war against English dominion 36 The Government sought to suppress all 10 000 printed copies of the Proclamation Only two are known to survive 38 The Rising Edit At 11 on the morning of 23 July 1803 Emmet showed men from Kildare an arsenal of pikes grenades rockets and gunpowder packed hollowed beams these were to be dragged out onto the streets to prevent cavalry charges They noted only the absence of recognisable firearms and were unimpressed by Emmet a youngster whose inexperience would place the rope around the neck of decent men 39 They left to turn back other Kildare insurgents on the road to Dublin The plan to surprise Dublin Castle and seize the viceroy was botched when the assailants prematurely revealed themselves 28 By evening Emmet Malachy Delaney and Myles Byrne turned out for the occasion in gold trimmed green uniforms were outside their Thomas Street arsenal with just 80 men 28 R R Madden describes a motley assemblage of armed men a great number of whom were if not intoxicated under the evident excitement of drink 40 Unaware that John Allen was approaching with a band according to one witness of 300 41 and shaken by the sight of a lone dragoon being pulled from his horse and piked to death Emmet told the men to disperse 42 He had already stood down sizeable insurgent groups straddling the main suburban roads by pre arranged signal a solitary rocket 43 Sporadic clashes continued into the night In one incident the Lord Chief Justice of Ireland Lord Kilwarden was dragged from his carriage and stabbed by pikes Found still alive he was taken to a watch house where he died shortly thereafter Kilwarden had used his position to help his cousin Wolfe Tone to avoid prosecution in 1794 He was nonetheless reviled for the prosecution and hanging of William Orr in 1797 and in the wake of 1798 of several Catholic Defenders Kilwarden s nephew the Rev Mr Wolfe was also killed although his daughter was not harmed 44 Emmet fled the city arriving in Rathfarnham with party of 16 men When he heard that Wicklowmen were still planning to rise he issued a countermanding order to prevent needless violence 45 Instead he ordered Byrne to Paris to again solicit the French 21 Capture and trial Edit Site of Mrs Palmer s house in Harold s Cross where Emmet was arrested with memorial marker While Emmet hid in Rathfarnham yeomen sought to extract information from Anne Devlin prodding her with bayonets and half hanging her until she passed out 28 Had he not insisted on taking his leave of his fiancee Sarah Curran daughter of the disapproving John Philpot Curran 4 he may have succeeded in joining Dowdall and Byrne in France Emmet was captured on 25 August and taken to the Castle then removed to Kilmainham Vigorous but ineffectual efforts were made to procure his escape Depiction of Robert Emmet s trial Emmet was tried and convicted for high treason on 19 September The evidence against him had been overwhelming but the Crown took the extra precaution of suborning his defence attorney Leonard McNally for 200 and a pension 46 McNally s assistant Peter Burrowes could not be bought and represented Emmet as best he could 42 Emmet s instruction however was not to offer a defence he would not call any witnesses or to take up the time of the court When on announcing this McNally proposed that the trial was concluded the prosecuting counsel William Plunket took to his feet In what was widely regarded as an unnecessary attack on a doomed man Plunket who was to see himself appointed Solicitor General mocked Emmet as the deluded leader of a conspiracy encompassing the bricklayer the old clothes man the hodman and the hostler 47 Emmet s Speech from the Dock is especially remembered for his closing remarks Historian Patrick Geoghehan has identified over seventy different versions of the text 48 but in an early printing 1818 based on notes taken by Burrowes Emmet concludes 49 I am here ready to die I am not allowed to vindicate my character no man shall dare to vindicate my character and when I am prevented from vindicating myself let no man dare to calumniate me Let my character and my motives repose in obscurity and peace till other times and other men can do them justice Then shall my character be vindicated then may my epitaph be written Chief Justice Lord Norbury sentenced Emmet to be hanged drawn and quartered as was customary for conviction of treason The following day 20 September Emmet was executed in Thomas Street in front of St Catherine s He was hanged and then beheaded once dead 50 As family members and friends of Robert had also been arrested including some who had nothing to do with the rebellion no one came forward to claim his remains out of fear of arrest On the eve of his execution Emmet wrote from Kilmainham to the Chief Secretary for Ireland William Wickham whose fairness he acknowledged He appears to have made a profound impression 51 52 In December Wickham resigned his post confessing to friends that no consideration upon earth could induce him to remain after having maturely reflected on the contents of the note he had received He could not enforce laws unjust oppressive and unchristian and intolerable to the memory of a man he had been compelled by the duty of my office to pursue to the death Wickham was persuaded that Emmet had been attempting to save Ireland from a state of depression and humiliation and that had he himself been an Irishman he should most unquestionably have joined him 53 54 Burial and Shelley s later eulogy EditEmmet s remains were first delivered to Newgate Prison and then back to Kilmainham Gaol where the jailer was under instructions that if no one claimed them they were to be buried in a nearby hospital s burial grounds called Bully s Acre Family tradition has it that in 1804 under cover of the burial of his sister Mary Anne Holmes Emmet s remains were removed from Bully s Acre and re interred in the family vault since demolished at St Peter s Church in Aungier Street 50 After searching for Emmet s grave in Dublin early in 1812 Percy Bysshe Shelley revised his elegiac poem The Monarch s Funeral An Anticipation For who was he the uncoffined slain That fell in Erin s injured isle Because his spirit dared disdain To light his country s funeral pile 55 In On Robert Emmet s Grave Shelley proposed that because unknown Emmet s grave would remain unpolluted by fame Till thy foes by the world and by fortune caressed Shall pass like a mist from the light of thy name 56 When Shelley returned to London from Dublin in 1812 it was with an account of Emmet s trial containing his famous speech and Emmet appears again as the patriot in The Devil s Walk a lengthy broadside against a corrupt and un reforming government 55 At the same time while in Dublin Shelley had gone round streets and pubs of the city handing out An Address to the Irish People a 22 page pamphlet in which he pleaded with the Irish people not to repeat Emmet s attempt I do not wish to see things changed now because it cannot be done without violence and we may assure ourselves that none of us are fit for any change however good if we condescend to employ force in a cause we think right 57 Legacy Edit Robert Emmet was honoured on two Irish postage stamps issued in 1953 commemorating the 150th anniversary of his death Emmet s rebellion infuriated Lord Castlereagh because he could not see the change that his own great measure the Union has effected in Ireland 51 Despite having so badly misfired the 1803 rising suggested that the Act of Union was not going to be the palliative Castlereagh and Prime Minister William Pitt had intended Castlereagh advised that the best thing would be to go into no detail whatever upon the case to keep the subject clearly standing on its own narrow base of a contemptible insurrection without means or respectable leaders 51 an instruction Plunket appears to have followed in Emmet s prosecution This was to be a stance taken not only by unionists Daniel O Connell who was to lead the struggle for Catholic Emancipation and for repeal of the Union in the decades following Emmet s death roundly condemned the resort to physical force O Connell s own programme of mobilising public opinion fuelled by sometimes violent rhetoric and demonstrated in monster meetings might have suggested that constitutionalism and physical force were complementary rather than antithetical 58 But O Connell remained content with his dismissal of Emmett in 1803 as an instigator of bloodshed who had forfeited any claim to compassion 59 Emmet s political rehabilitation begins in the Famine years of the 1840s with the Young Irelanders In 1846 they had finally broken with O Connell declaring that if Repeal could not be carried by moral persuasion and peaceful means a resort to arms would be a no less honourable course 60 The Young Irelander publisher Charles Gavan Duffy repeatedly reprinted Michael James Whitty s popular chapbook Life Trial and Conversations of Robert Emmet Esq 1836 and promoted R R Madden s Life and Times of Robert Emmet 1847 which despite its devastating account of the Thomas Street fiasco was hagiographic 40 In carrying forward the tradition of physical force republicanism from the debacle of the Young Irelander Famine Rebellion in 1848 the Irish Republican Brotherhood the Fenians also carried forward admiration for Emmet On the 20 bonds they issued in 1866 in the United States in the name of the Irish Republic his profile appears opposite that of Tone 61 Robert Emmet s older brother Thomas Addis Emmet emigrated to the United States shortly after Robert s execution He eventually served as the New York State Attorney General His descendants who included the prominent American portrait painters Lydia Field Emmet Rosina Emmet Sherwood Ellen Emmet Rand and Jane Emmet de Glehn helped advance his standing among the Irish diaspora which in turn may have been one factor in ensuring that he was one among the ghosts invoked in the run up to 1916 Easter Rising 62 In the Emmet Commemoration speech he delivered in New York City in March 1914 Pearse described how the spirit of Irish patriotism called in Emmet to a dreamer and awoke a man of action called to a student and a recluse and brought forth a leader of men called to one who loved the ways of peace and found a revolutionary Emmet was a man unwilling to surrender of one jot or shred of our claim to freedom even in return for all the blessings of the British peace 63 Representation in popular culture Edit Brandon Tynan s Robert Emmet The Days of 1803 Chicago 1903 In a speech on Emmet in New York City in 1904 W B Yeats famously observed that Emmet died and became an image 64 This was the work first and foremost of Thomas Moore 55 In his popular ballad O Breathe Not His Name 65 Moore made his former Trinity College friend the touchstone of national sentiment Oh breathe not his name let it sleep in the shade Where cold and unhonoured his relics are laid And the tear we shed though secret it rolls Shall keep his memory green in our souls Dwelling upon the heartache of Sarah Curran his She is Far From the Land Where Her Young Hero Sleeps also made Emmet an icon of romantic love 66 In Irish America where together with Emmet s Speech from the Dock O Breathe Not His Name became part of the canon of parochial education Moore had innumerable imitators Of these one of the most ambitious was John Boyle O Reilly a member of the Irish Republican Brotherhood who had escaped from penal servitude in Western Australia O Reilly wrote a publicly performed eighty four line poem The Patriot s Grave 1878 in which he both echoes the defiance of Emmet s last words while attempting to bring the defence of physical force within a broader tradition that embraced constitutional agitation to add Emmet to a Pantheon that included Grattan Flood and Curran 67 Emmet was also a frequent character on the patriotic stage Typical of his green uniform presentation was Brandon Tynon s melodrama Robert Emmet the Days of 1803 which premiered on Broadway in 1902 68 In the nineteenth century the Emmet story also found its way into prose On both sides of the Atlantic John Doherty s 1836 Life Trial and Conversation and Times of Robert Emmet and R R Madden s 1844 Life and Time of Robert Emmet became the standard references With less patience for historical or political background what tended to be drawn out in subsequent works was the notion of pure sacrifice In Robert Emmet A Survey of his Rebellion and of His Romance 1904 Louise Imogen Guiney classes Emmet with Charlotte Corday and John Brown 67 In the early twentieth century Moore s Emmet appeared in pioneering film While focussed on the Emmet Curran love story the 1911Thanhouser film USA Robert Emmet depicts Emmet s expulsion from Trinity College his meeting with Napoleon his part in the rising and his capture trial and execution 69 Some of the same storyline features in Ireland a Nation 1914 written and produced in London and Ireland by Walter MacNamara 70 and Sidney Olcott s Bold Emmett Ireland s Martyr 1915 Sid Films USA 71 72 Many decades later there was a step away from hagiography In her screen drama Anne Devlin 1984 the Irish feminist filmmaker Pat Murphy offers an implicit criticism of patriotic politics that operates largely at the level of signs and representations In one scene Emmet enters a room as Devlin is holding up his splendid green uniform in front of a mirror Asked what she thinks of it Devlin cousin of the guerrilla leader Michael Dwyer replies that it looks like a green version of an English Redcoat and will be seen a mile off We should she argues be rebel as ourselves 71 Emmet is bold Robert in the song Back Home in Derry written by Bobby Sands in HM Prison Maze before his fatal hunger strike in 1981 73 The lyrics describing the feelings of rebels convicts as leave Ireland for Australia were recorded by Christy Moore 74 Honours EditPlaces named after Emmet in the United States include Emmetsburg Iowa 75 Emmet Nebraska 76 Emmet County Iowa Emmett Michigan and Emmet County Michigan 77 and Emmet Street in the historic French neighborhood of Soulard St Louis 78 The Robert Emmet Elementary School in Chicago Illinois was named for him Two time All Ireland Club Camogie Champions Robert Emmet s GAC Slaughtneil is named after him Emmet Park in Savannah Georgia was named after Emmet in 1902 in preparation for the centennial of his death Statues were erected in his honour A life size bronze statue of Robert Emmet by Jerome Connor stands in St Stephen s Green Dublin the parkland beside which Emmet was born A copy stands in Emmetsburg Iowa A bronze statue of Emmet by Jerome Connor stands in Washington DC on Embassy Row Massachusetts Avenue NW and S Street NW A public commemoration of Emmet s execution and legacy is held annually on the fourth Sunday in September by the Irish American Unity Conference A copy of this statue was installed on the Music Concourse in front of the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco s Golden Gate Park Bronze statue of Robert Emmet 1916 by Jerome Connor from the collection of the Smithsonian American Art Museum It is installed in Washington DC s Embassy Row 79 Statue of Robert Emmet in St Stephens Green Dublin Reproduction of Robert Emmet statue in San Francisco s Golden Gate ParkA statue of Robert Emmet is in the courthouse square in Emmetsburg Iowa See also Edit Wikisource has original works by or about Robert Emmet Wikimedia Commons has media related to Robert Emmet Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Emmet Robert Despard Plot Irish Rebellion of 1803 John Allen Thomas Russell List of monuments and memorials to the Irish Rebellion of 1803References Edit Mitchell Angus 22 February 2013 Robert Emmet and 1916 History Ireland Archived from the original on 18 April 2021 Retrieved 8 June 2021 Pearse Patrick 2 March 1914 Robert Emmet and the Ireland of to day An Address delivered at the Emmet Commemoration in the Academy of Music Brooklyn New York celt ucc ie Archived from the original on 8 June 2021 Retrieved 8 June 2021 Kilfeather Siobhan Marie 2005 Dublin a cultural history Oxford University Press p 108 ISBN 978 0 19 518201 9 Archived from the original on 20 May 2016 Retrieved 17 October 2015 a b c Webb Alfred A Compendium of Irish Biography M H Gill amp Son Dublin 1878 Archived from the original on 26 May 2017 Retrieved 24 July 2014 Whelan Fergus 2020 May Tyrants Tremble The Life of William Drennan 1754 1820 Dublin Irish Academic Press p 59 ISBN 9781788551212 Category Archives William Drennan assets publishing service gov uk February 2020 pp 15 16 Archived from the original on 1 November 2020 Retrieved 10 May 2020 Young Ireland Sir Charles Gavan Duffy Cassell Petter Galpin amp Co 1880 pg 34 a b Webb Alfred 1878 Robert Emmet Irish Biography www libraryireland com Archived from the original on 4 June 2021 Retrieved 11 June 2021 Moore Thomas 1837 Preface to Irish Melodies www musicanet org Retrieved 15 December 2022 Helen Landreth 1948 The Pursuit of Robert Emmet New York London McGraw Hill p 73 Elliott Marianne May 1977 The Despard Plot Reconsidered Past amp Present 75 1 46 61 doi 10 1093 past 75 1 46 Wright Thomas Dictionary of Irish Biography www dib ie Archived from the original on 12 June 2021 Retrieved 12 June 2021 Delaney Malachy Dictionary of Irish Biography www dib ie Archived from the original on 12 June 2021 Retrieved 12 June 2021 a b Kleinman Sylvie 22 February 2013 French Connection II Robert Emmet and Malachy Delaney s memorial to Napoleon Buonaparte September 1800 History Ireland Archived from the original on 11 June 2021 Retrieved 11 June 2021 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 Parkhill Trevor 2003 The Wild Geese of 1798 Emigres of the Rebellion Seanchas Ardmhacha Journal of the Armagh Diocesan Historical Society 19 2 118 135 129 ISSN 0488 0196 JSTOR 25746923 a b Elliott Marianne May 1977 The Despard Plot Reconsidered Past amp Present 75 1 46 61 56 60 doi 10 1093 past 75 1 46 Kelly James 2012 Official List of Radical Activists and Suspected Activists Involved in Emmet s Rebellion 1803 Analecta Hibernica 43 129 200 149 ISSN 0791 6167 JSTOR 23317181 Archived from the original on 12 May 2021 Retrieved 8 June 2021 Ceretta Manuela 2009 Taaffe Denis Dictionary of Irish Biography www dib ie Retrieved 11 January 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Geohegan Patrick 2002 Robert Emmet Dublin Gill amp Macmillan pp 111 112 ISBN 0717133877 a b Quinn James 2002 Soul on Fire a Life of Thomas Russell Dublin Irish Academic Press p 267 ISBN 9780716527329 Elliott Marianne 1982 Partners in Revolution the United Irishmen and France New Haven Yale University Press p 314 Geoghegan Patrick 2002 Robert Emmet a Life Dublin Gill amp Macmillan p 112 ISBN 9780717133871 quoted in Geoghegan 2002 pp 120 121 Michael Dwyer of Imaal History Ireland 22 February 2013 Archived from the original on 8 June 2021 Retrieved 8 June 2021 Byrne Miles 3 June 1907 Memoirs of Miles Byrne Dublin Maunsel via Internet Archive hEireann Stair na 16 July 2021 OTD in 1803 Irish Rebellion of 1803 Following an explosion at his arms depot on this date Robert Emmet brings forward his planned rebellion in Dublin to 23 July Stair na hEireann History of Ireland Retrieved 1 December 2021 a b c d Bardon Jonathan 2008 A History of Ireland in 250 Episodes Dublin Gill amp Macmillan pp 334 336 ISBN 9780717146499 Landreth 1948 pp 153 154 MADDEN Richard Robert 1858 The United Irishmen Their Lives and Times Volume 3 p 357 Landreth 1948 p 179 a b Landreth 1948 pp x xi Landreth 1948 pp 121 121n 246n 247n Geoghegan 2002 pp 40 41 Geoghegan 2002 pp 152 166 167 a b c Robert Emmet the 1803 Proclamation of Independence and the ghost of 1798 The Irish Story Archived from the original on 11 June 2021 Retrieved 11 June 2021 Quinn James 2007 Revelation and Romanticism in Dolan et al eds Reinterpreting Emmet Essays on the Life and Legacy of Robert Emmet University College Dublin Press ISBN 978 1904558637 p 27 Whelan Kevin 6 September 2003 A poltergeist in politics The Irish Times Retrieved 13 June 2021 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Geoghegan 2002 p 166 a b 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 Archived from the original on 13 June 2021 Retrieved 13 June 2021 Hammond Joseph W Frayne Michl 1947 The Emmet Insurrection Dublin Historical Record 9 2 59 68 ISSN 0012 6861 JSTOR 30083906 Archived from the original on 30 July 2021 Retrieved 30 July 2021 a b Robert Emmet Ricorso 2010 Archived from the original on 25 July 2018 Retrieved 6 October 2010 O Donnell Ruan 2021 The Rising of 1803 in Dublin History Ireland Retrieved 30 November 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Rewind The murder of Lord Kilwarden www echo ie 26 March 2020 Archived from the original on 8 June 2021 Retrieved 8 June 2021 Geohegan Patrick 2002 Robert Emmet Dublin Gill amp Macmillan p 185 ISBN 0717133877 The Columbia Encyclopedia Sixth Edition 2008 Encyclopedia com Archived from the original on 17 September 2016 Retrieved 10 February 2014 Whelan Fergus 2020 May Tyrants Tremble The Life of William Drennan 1754 1820 Dublin Irish Academic Press pp 255 256 ISBN 9781788551212 History Ireland autumn 2003 Archived from the original on 22 December 2017 Retrieved 8 April 2015 Phillips C Recollections of Curran 1818 Milliken Dublin pp 256 259 a b Murphy Sean The Grave of Robert Emmet Irish Historical Mysteries Dublin Ireland 2010 Archived from the original on 3 June 2019 Retrieved 6 October 2010 a b c Whelan Kevin 22 February 2013 Robert Emmet between history and memory History Ireland Archived from the original on 13 June 2021 Retrieved 13 June 2021 Geohegan Patrick 2009 Wickham William Dictionary of Irish Biography www dib ie Archived from the original on 12 June 2021 Retrieved 16 June 2021 Public Records Office of Northern Ireland PRONI T 2627 5 Z 18 Public Records Office of Northern Ireland PRONI T 2627 5 Z 25 a b c Morgan Alison 3 July 2014 Let no man write my epitaph the contributions of Percy Shelley Thomas Moore and Robert Southey to the memorialisation of Robert Emmet Irish Studies Review 22 3 285 303 doi 10 1080 09670882 2014 926124 ISSN 0967 0882 S2CID 170900710 Esdaile manuscript book by Dowden Life of Shelley 1887 dated 1812 Holmes Richard 1974 Shelley the pursuit London Weidenfeld and Nicolson p 120 ISBN 0297767224 Swift John 2008 Review of Reinterpreting Emmet Essays on the Life and Legacy of Robert Emmet Studies An Irish Quarterly Review 97 386 232 235 ISSN 0039 3495 JSTOR 25660568 Archived from the original on 13 June 2021 Retrieved 13 June 2021 O Connell Correspondence Vol I Letter No 97 O Sullivan T F 1945 Young Ireland The Kerryman Ltd pp 195 6 Fanning Charles 2004 Robert Emmet and Nineteenth Century Irish America New Hibernia Review Iris Eireannach Nua 8 4 53 83 ISSN 1092 3977 JSTOR 20646472 Archived from the original on 13 June 2021 Retrieved 13 June 2021 Mitchel Angus 22 February 2013 Robert Emmet and 1916 History Ireland Archived from the original on 18 April 2021 Retrieved 13 June 2021 Pearse Patrick Emmet Commemoration Speech New York 1914 Archived from the original on 13 June 2021 Retrieved 13 June 2021 Foster R F 1998 W B Yeats A Life I The Apprentice Mage 1865 1914 Oxford University Press pp 312 314 ISBN 9780192880857 Oh Breathe Not His Name www contemplator com Retrieved 8 December 2021 O Breathe Not His Name Thomas Moore 1779 1852 September 20 James and Mary Ford eds 1902 Every Day in the Year A Poetical Epitome of the World s History www bartleby com Archived from the original on 13 June 2021 Retrieved 13 June 2021 a b Fanning Charles 2004 Robert Emmet and Nineteenth Century Irish America New Hibernia Review Iris Eireannach Nua 8 4 53 83 ISSN 1092 3977 JSTOR 20646472 Robert Emmet Broadway Play Original IBDB www ibdb com Retrieved 8 December 2021 ROBERT EMMET www thanhouser org Retrieved 8 December 2021 Rockett Kevin Hill John 5 December 2004 National Cinema and Beyond Four Courts ISBN 9781851828739 via Google Books a b Rockett Kevin 2013 Emmet on film History Ireland Retrieved 8 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Arthur Flynn 2005 The Story of Irish Film Currach Press Dublin ISBN 1 85607 914 7 Deboick Sophia 14 June 2020 Londonderry A city where music has been shaped by trauma The New European London Archived from the original on 1 August 2021 Retrieved 1 August 2021 Back Home In Derry Christy Moore 17 February 2012 Retrieved 8 December 2021 A Small Town Struggles to Preserve Its Irish Heritage Irish America Magazine Sept Oct 1993 Archived from the original on 7 April 2007 Retrieved 9 March 2007 Campbell Dorine Emmet Archived 17 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine Nebraska Our Towns Archived 18 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2010 06 16 Gannett Henry 1905 The Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States Govt Print Off p 119 Google 26 April 2021 Map of Emmet Street with pin Map Google Maps Google Retrieved 26 April 2021 Robert Emmet by Jerome Connor Smithsonian American Art Museum Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on 16 June 2015 Retrieved 13 June 2015 Bibliography Edit Elliott Marianne 2004 Robert Emmet The Making of a Legend Geoghegan Patrick 2004 Robert Emmet A Life Gough Hugh amp David Dickson editors 1991 Ireland and the French Revolution Landreth Helen 1948 The Pursuit of Robert Emmet McMahon Sean 2001 Robert Emmet O Bradaigh Sean 2003 Bold Robert Emmet 1778 1803 O Donnell Ruan 2003 Robert Emmet and the Rebellion of 1798 2003 Robert Emmet and the Rising of 1803 2003 Remember Emmet Images of the Life and Legacy of Robert Emmet Smyth Jim 1998 The Men of No Property Irish Radicals and Popular Politics in the Late Eighteenth Century Stewart A T Q 1993 A Deeper Silence The Hidden Origins of the United Irish MovementExternal links EditThis section may contain lists of external links quotations or related pages discouraged by Wikipedia s Manual of Style Please help integrate this content into the body of the article using in text citations October 2015 Robert Emmet Robert Emmet index of articles in History Ireland History of Dublin Castle Chapter 13 Emmet s execution DNA tests to tell if skull is Emmet s Emmet s Proclamation of Independence Robert Emmet s Speech Unabridged From the Dock Bronze sculpture of Robert Emmet 1916 by Jerome Stanley Connor in Emmet Park Washington DC photos Eamon De Valera unveils statue of Robert Emmet in Golden Gate Park San Francisco 20 July 1919 Smithsonian American Art Museum s Art Inventories Catalog record of the Robert Emmet Statue in Washington D C Robert Emmet Museum Works by Robert Emmet at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Emmet amp oldid 1149416853, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.