fbpx
Wikipedia

Young Ireland

Young Ireland (Irish: Éire Óg, IPA: [ˈeːɾʲə ˈoːɡ]) was a political and cultural movement in the 1840s committed to an all-Ireland struggle for independence and democratic reform. Grouped around the Dublin weekly The Nation, it took issue with the compromises and clericalism of the larger national movement, Daniel O'Connell's Repeal Association, from which it seceded in 1847. Despairing, in the face of the Great Famine, of any other course, in 1848 Young Irelanders attempted an insurrection. Following the arrest and the exile of most of their leading figures, the movement split between those who carried the commitment to "physical force" forward into the Irish Republican Brotherhood, and those who sought to build a "League of North and South" linking an independent Irish parliamentary party to tenant agitation for land reform.

Young Ireland
Irish tricolour raised in the Young Ireland rebellion 1848
Founded1842
Dissolved1849
Preceded byRepeal Association
Succeeded byTenant Right League, Irish Republican Brotherhood
NewspaperThe Nation
IdeologyIrish nationalism
Liberalism
Radicalism[1]
Land reform
National affiliationRepeal Association (1842–1847)
Irish Confederation (1847–1848)
Colours    Green, White and Orange
SloganA Nation Once Again

Origins Edit

The Historical Society Edit

Many of those later identified as Young Ireland first gathered in 1839 at a reconvening of the College Historical Society in Dublin. The club at Trinity College had a history, stretching back through the student participation of the United Irishmen Theobald Wolfe Tone and Robert Emmet to Edmund Burke, of debating patriotic motions. Not for the first time, the club had been expelled from college for breaching the condition that it not discuss questions of "modern politics".[2]

Those present for meeting in the chambers of Francis Kearney were, in Irish terms, a "mixed" group. They included Catholics (first admitted to Trinity in 1793), among them Thomas MacNevin, elected the Society's president, and (later to follow him in that role) John Blake Dillon. Chief among the other future Young Irelanders present were law graduate Thomas Davis, and the Newry attorney John Mitchel.[3]

The Repeal Association Edit

With others present, these four would go to join Daniel O'Connell's Repeal Association. In 1840 this was a relaunch of a campaign to restore an Irish parliament in Dublin by repealing the 1800 Acts of Union. O'Connell had suspended Repeal agitation in the 1830s to solicit favour and reform from Whig ministry of Lord Melbourne.

In April 1841 O’Connell placed both Davis and Dillon on the Association's General Committee with responsibilities for organisation and recruitment. Membership uptake had been slow.[4]

In the south and west, the great numbers of tenant farmers, small-town traders and journeymen O'Connell had rallied to the cause of Emancipation in the 1820s did not similarly respond to his lead on the more abstract proposition of Repeal.[5][6] Patriotic and republican sentiment among the Presbyterians of the north-east had surrendered, since the Rebellion of 1798, to the conviction that the union with Great Britain was both the occasion for their relative prosperity and a guarantee of their liberty.[7] Protestants were now, as a body, opposed to a restoration of the parliament in Dublin whose prerogatives they had once championed. In these circumstances, the Catholic gentry and much of the middle class were content to explore the avenues for advancement opened by Emancipation and earlier "Catholic relief". The suspicion, in any case, was that O'Connell's purpose in returning to the constitutional question was merely to embarrass the incoming Conservatives (under his old enemy Sir Robert Peel) and to hasten the Whigs return.[5]

In working with O'Connell, Thomas and Dillon contended with a patriarch "impatient of opposition or criticism, and apt to prefer followers to colleagues". They found an ally in Charles Gavan Duffy, editor in Belfast of the Repeal journal The Vindicator.[5]

The Nation Edit

 
Charles Gavan Duffy

Duffy proposed a new national weekly to Davis and Dillon, owned by himself but directed by all three. The paper first appeared in October in 1842 bearing the title chosen for it by Davis, The Nation, after the French liberal-opposition daily Le National. The prospectus, written by Davis, dedicated the paper "to direct the popular mind and the sympathies of educated men of all parties to the great end of [a] nationality" that will "not only raise our people from their poverty, by securing to them the blessings of a domestic legislature, but inflame and purify them with a lofty and heroic love of country".[8]

The Nation was an immediate publishing success. Its sales soared above all other Irish papers, weekly or daily. Circulation at its height was reckoned to be close to a quarter of a million.[9] With its focus upon editorials, historical articles and verse, all intended to shape public opinion, copies continued to be read in Repeal Reading Rooms and to be passed from hand to hand long after their current news value had faded.[5] It may have been a "reinforcement for which O’Connell had scarcely dared to hope",[10] but the journal's role in the revived fortunes of the Repeal Association has to be weighed against other contributions. Legislative independence was powerfully endorsed by Archbishop McHale of Tuam.[4][11]

Beyond Davis and Dillon's Historical Society companions, the paper drew on a widening circle of contributors. Among the more politically committed these included: the Repeal MP William Smith O'Brien; Tithe War veteran James Fintan Lalor; prose and verse writer Michael Doheny; author of Traits and Stories of the Irish Peasantry, William Carleton; militant-nationalist priest, John Kenyon; poet and early suffragist Jane Wilde; republican and labour-rights activist Thomas Devin Reilly; former American journalist (and future "Father of the Canadian Confederation") Thomas D'Arcy McGee; and the renowned Repeal orator Thomas Francis Meagher.

It was an English journalist who first applied to this growing circle the label "Young Ireland".[5] Although there was no direct connection, the reference was to Young Italy and to other European national-republican movements (Young Germany, Young Poland... ) that Giuseppe Mazzini had sought loosely to federate under the aegis of "Young Europe" (Giovine Europa). When O'Connell picked up on the moniker and began referring to those he had considered his junior lieutenants as "Young Irelanders" it was a signal for an impending break.[12]

Conflicts with O'Connell Edit

 
Depiction of Young Ireland (Smith O'Brien) and Old Ireland (O'Connell) fighting like two Kilkenny cats (Punch, 1846)

Retreat from Repeal Edit

The Nation was loyal to O'Connell when, in October 1843, he stood down the Repeal movement at Clontarf. The government had deployed troops and artillery to enforce a ban on what O'Connell had announced as the last "monster meeting" in the Year of Repeal. (In August at the Hill of Tara crowds had been estimated in the hostile reporting of The Times at close to a million).[13] O'Connell submitted at once. He cancelled the rally and sent out messengers to turn back the approaching crowds.[14]

Although in Duffy's view, the decision deprived the Repeal movement of "half its dignity and all of its terror", the Young Irelanders acknowledged that the risk of a massacre on many times the scale of "Peterloo" was unacceptable. Pressing what they imagined was their advantage, the government had O'Connell, his son John and Duffy convicted of sedition. When after three months (the charges quashed on appeal to the House of Lords) they were released, it was Davis and O'Brien who staged O'Connell's triumphal reception in Dublin.[15]

The first sign of a breach came when Duffy through an open letter in The Nation Duffy pressed O'Connell to affirm Repeal as his object.[16] While insisting he would "never ask for or work" for anything less than an independent legislature, O'Connell had suggested he might accept a "subordinate parliament" (an Irish legislature with powers devolved from Westminster) as "an instalment".[17]

A further, and more serious, rift opened with Davis. Davis had himself been negotiating the possibility of a devolved parliament with the Northern reformer William Sharman Crawford.[18] The difference with O'Connell was that Davis was seeking a basis for compromise, in the first instance, not at Westminster but in Belfast.

Protestant inclusion Edit

 
Thomas Davis

When he first followed O'Connell, Duffy concedes that he had "burned with the desire to set up again the Celtic race and the catholic church".[5] In The Nation he subscribed to a broader vision. In the journal's prospectus, Davis wrote of a "nationality" as ready to embrace "the stranger who is within our gates" as "the Irishman of a hundred generations".[8]

Davis (conscious of his family's Cromwellian origin) was persuaded by Johann Gottfried von Herder: nationality was not a matter of ancestry or blood but of acclimatising influences. Cultural traditions, and above all language, "the organ of thought", could engender in persons of diverse origin common national feeling.[19]

Davis was a keen promoter of the Irish language in print, at a time when, while still the speech of the vast majority of the Irish people, it had been all but abandoned by the educated classes. Such cultural nationalism did not appear to interest to O'Connell. There is no evidence that he saw the preservation or revival of his mother tongue, or any other aspect of "native culture", as essential to his political demands.[20] His own paper, the Pilot, recognised but one "positive and unmistakable" marker of the national distinction between English and Irish—religion.[21]

O'Connell "treasured his few Protestant Repealers",[22] but he acknowledged the central role of the Catholic clergy in his movement and guarded the bond it represented. In 1812/13 he had refused emancipation conditioned on Rome having to seek royal assent in the appointment of Irish bishops.[23][24] Throughout much of the country the bishops and their priests were the only figures of standing independent of the government around which a national movement could organise. It was a reality on which the Repeal Association, like the Catholic Association before it, was built.[25][26]

In 1845 O'Connell, in advance of the bishops, denounced a "mixed" non-denominational scheme for tertiary education. The Anglicans could retain Trinity in Dublin; the Presbyterians might have the Queens College proposed for Belfast; but the Queens colleges intended for Galway and Cork had to be Catholic. When Davis (moved to tears in the controversy) pleaded that "reasons for separate education are reasons for [a] separate life", O'Connell accused him of suggesting it a "crime to be a Catholic". "I am", he declared, "for Old Ireland, and I have some slight notion that Old Ireland will stand by me".[27][28]

 
Thomas Francis Meagher

O'Connell rarely joined the Young Irelanders in invoking the memory of 1798, the union of "Catholic, Protestant and Dissenter". His one Repeal foray to the Presbyterian north (to Belfast), organised by Duffy in 1841, was cut short by hostile demonstrations. For the key to an Irish parliament, O'Connell looked to liberal England, not Protestant Ulster. Once a parliament restored to Dublin had retired their distinctive privileges, he was content to suggest that Protestants would, "with little delay, melt into the overwhelming majority of the Irish nation".[29]

Whig concessions Edit

Thomas Davis's sudden death in 1845 helped close the matter. But his friends suspected that behind the vehemence with which O'Connell opposed Davis on the colleges question there also the intent, again, to frustrate Peel and to advantage the Whigs. This was not a strategy, Meagher argued, that had paid national dividends. The last concession wrung from the Melbourne administration, the 1840 municipal reform, had elected O'Connell to the Lord Mayoralty of Dublin. But with the Grand Jury system of county government untouched, it left the great majority of people to continue under the local tyranny of the landlords. In return for allowing a "corrupt gang of politicians who fawned on O'Connell" an extensive system of political patronage, the Irish people being "purchased back into factious vassalage".[30][31]

In June 1846 the Whigs, under Lord John Russell, returned to office. Immediately they set about dismantling Peel's limited, but practical, efforts to relieve the gathering Irish Famine.[32] Barricaded behind laissez-faire doctrines of "political economy", the government left O'Connell to plead for his country from the floor of the House of Commons: "She is in your hands—in your power. If you do not save her, she cannot save herself. One-fourth of her population will perish unless Parliament comes to their relief".[33] A broken man, on the advice of his doctors O'Connell took himself to the continent where, on route to Rome, he died in May 1847.

The Peace Resolutions Edit

 
James Fintan Lalor

In the months before O'Connell's death, Duffy circulated letters received from James Fintan Lalor.[34] In these Lalor argued independence could be pursued only in a popular struggle for the land. This alone could bring about a union of North and South, without which separation from England was impossible to contemplate. But recognising that "any and all means" that employed in this struggle could be made "illegal by Act of Parliament", the Young Irelanders would have, at the very least, to ready themselves for a "moral insurrection". He proposed that they should begin with a campaign to withhold rent, but more might be implied.[35] Parts of the country were already in a state of semi-insurrection. Tenants conspirators, in tradition of the Whiteboys and Ribbonmen, were attacking process servers, intimidating land agents, and resisting evictions. Lalor advised only against a general uprising: the people, he believed, could not hold their own against the country's English garrison.[36]

The letters made a profound impression, particularly on John Mitchel and Father John Kenyon.[37] When the conservative Standard observed that the new Irish railways could be used to transport troops to quickly curb agrarian unrest, Mitchel responded that the tracks could be turned into pikes and trains ambushed. O’Connell publicly distanced himself from The Nation, appearing to some to set Duffy, as the editor, up for prosecution.[38] When the courts failed to convict, O'Connell pressed the issue, seemingly intent on effecting a break.

In July 1846, the Repeal Association tabled resolutions declaring that under no circumstances was a nation justified in asserting its liberties by force of arms. Meagher argued that while the Young Irelanders were not advocating physical force, if Repeal could not be carried by moral persuasion and peaceful means they believed a resort to arms would be a no less honourable course.[39] In his O'Connell's absence, his son John forced the decision: the resolution was carried on the threat of the O'Connells themselves quitting the Association.

An offer by United Irish veteran, Valentine Lawless (Lord Cloncurry) to chair a committee to adjust the dispute between Old and Young Ireland had been rejected by John O'Connell in reportedly "very saucy and unbecoming language".[40] An offer of mediation from the abolitionist and pacifist James Haughton was also spurned.[41]

The Irish Confederation Edit

 
Depiction in Punch (1846) of the split: "Young Ireland in Business for Himself", Smith O'Brien in Repeal cap sells weapons to a stereotyped Irishman.

Secession Edit

The Young Irelanders withdrew from the Repeal Association, but not without considerable support. In October 1846, the Association chairman in Dublin was presented with a remonstrance protesting Young Irelanders exclusion signed by fifteen hundred of the city's leading citizens. When John O’Connell ordered this to be flung into the gutter, a large protest meeting was held,[42] suggesting the possibility for a rival organisation. In January 1847, the seceders formed themselves as the Irish Confederation. Michael Doheny recalls "no declarations or calls for rebellion, and no pledges [given] of peace". The objectives were "independence of the Irish nation" with "no means to attain that end abjured, save such as were inconsistent with honour, morality and reason".[42]

In the shadow of the Famine Edit

 
John Mitchel

As first directed by Duffy, in towns Confederate clubs were to encourage the use of Irish resources and manufactures, work for the extension of popular franchise, and instruct youth in the history of their country which was being kept from them in the government's National Schools. The village clubs were to promote the rights of tenants and labourers, diffuse knowledge of agriculture and—in token of the continuing commitment to non-violence—discourage secret societies. All were to promote harmony between Irishmen of all creeds, making it a point to invite the participation of Protestants.[43] But in "Black '47", the worst year of the potato-blight famine, the search was for policies that could address the immediate crisis.

The Confederation urged cultivators to hold the harvest until the needs of their own families were supplied. As Duffy was later to acknowledge, the poorest had lost the art and means of preparing for themselves anything other than the potato. Even were it not at the cost of eviction, holding back grain and other foodstuffs grown to pay rent might avail them little.[44] As "temporary relief for destitute persons", in the spring of 1847 the government opened soup kitchens. In August they were shut. The starving were directed to abandon the land and apply to the workhouses.[45]

Mitchel urged the Confederation to pronounce for Lalor's policy and make control of land the issue. However, Duffy had cut Michel's access to the leader columns of The Nation' over a seemingly extraneous issue. In Duffy's view, Mitchel had abused a temporary editorship to take unsanctioned and, in themselves, scandalous positions on matters that had been sacrosanct to O'Connell. O'Connell had repeatedly assailed what he described as "the vile union" in the United States "of republicanism and slavery".[46][47] He had also criticised Pope Gregory XVI over the treatment of Jews in the Papal States.[48] Conscious of the risk to American funding and support, Duffy himself had difficulty with O'Connell's vocal abolitionism: the time was not right, he suggested, "for gratuitous interference in American affairs".[49] In articles written for the New York-based Nation, Mitchel espoused proslavery thought and opposed Jewish emancipation in the United States.[50][51] His views were similar to many other Young Ireland émigrés such as Thomas D'Arcy McGee, who defended American slavery while espousing Irish nationalism.[52]

In February 1848 Mitchel established a paper of his own. Under its title The United Irishman he placed Wolfe Tone's declaration: "Our independence must be had at all hazards. If the men of property will not support us, they must fall; we can support ourselves by the aid of that numerous and respectable class of the community, the men of no property".[53] The paper boldly advocated Lalor's policy. In May, as its publisher, Mitchel was convicted of a new crime of treason felony and sentenced to transportation for 14 years to the Royal Naval Dockyard on Ireland Island in the "Imperial fortress" of Bermuda (imprisoned in the Prison hulk HMS Dromedary),[54] and Van Diemen's Land.[55][56]

Land War or Parliamentary Obstruction Edit

Duffy recalled from his youth a Quaker neighbour who had been a United Irishman and had laughed at the idea that the issue was kings and governments. What mattered was the land from which the people got their bread.[57] Instead of singing the La Marseillaise, he said that what the men of '98 should have borrowed from the French was "their sagacious idea of bundling the landlords out of doors and putting tenants in their shoes".[58] But Duffy's objection to "Lalor's theory" was that "his angry peasants, chafing like chained tigers, were creatures of the imagination--not the living people through whom we had to act".[59] At the same time Duffy was trying to hold together a broader coalition, and had for that reason advanced O'Brien to the leadership, a Protestant and a landowner. On the Confederation's Council he was supported by Patrick James Smyth who argued that with propertied classes, as well as the priesthood opposed, the Confederation could not hope to call out a single parish in Ireland.[60]

By a vote of fifteen to six, the Council adopted Duffy's alternative proposition: a Parliamentary Party that, accepting no favours, would press Ireland's claims by threatening to put a stop to the entire business of the Commons. Such a party would either have its demands conceded, or be forcibly ejected from Westminster, in which case the people united behind its single purpose would know how to enforce their will. Opposition was led by Thomas Devin Reilly and by Mitchel. Class coalitions attempted in past had failed, and they continued to insist on Lalor's plan.[61]

The path to insurrection Edit

 
Depiction from Punch of "Mr. G. O'Rilla of the Young Ireland Party," reading The Nation with pickled cabbage and vitriol in jars on his shelf. A policeman holds an extinguisher to snuff him out.

Duffy's Creed Edit

By the spring of 1848, the scale of the catastrophe facing the country had persuaded all parties on the Council that independence was an existential issue; that the immediate need was for an Irish national government able to take control of national resources. In May 1848 Duffy published "The Creed of the Nation." If Irish independence was to come by force, it would be in the form of a Republic. The avoidance of deadly animosities between Irishmen was of course preferable.

An independent Irish parliament, elected by widest possible suffrage, a responsible minister for Ireland [i.e. an Irish executive accountable to an Irish parliament] a Viceroy of Irish birth, would content the country... Such a parliament would inevitably establish Tenant Right, abolish the Established Church..., and endeavour to settle the claims of labour upon some solid and satisfactory basis. But one step further in the direction of Revolution... it would not go.[62]

Other peoples in Europe had been protected from starvation because their rulers were "of their own blood and race". That this was not the case for Ireland, was the source of its present tragedy.[63]

The Government made clear that its chosen response to the crisis in Ireland was coercion, not concession. Mitchel had been convicted under new martial law measures approved by Parliament (including by a number of "Old Ireland" MPs). On 9 July 1848 Duffy, with the Creed as evidence, was arrested for sedition. He managed to smuggle a few lines out to The Nation but the issue that would have carried his declaration, that there was no remedy now but the sword, was seized and the paper suppressed.[64]

1848 Uprising Edit

 
William Smith O'Brien

Planning for an insurrection had already advanced. Mitchel, although the first to call for action, had scoffed at the necessity for systematic preparation. O'Brien, to Duffy's surprise, attempted the task. In March he had returned from a visit to revolutionary Paris with hopes of French assistance. (Among the leading republicans in France, Ledru-Rollin had been loud in his declaration of French support for the Irish cause).[65] There was also talk of an Irish-American brigade and of a Chartist diversion in England[66] (Allied with the Chartists, the Confederation had a relatively strong organised presence in Liverpool, Manchester and Salford).[67] With Duffy's arrest, it was left to O'Brien to confront the reality of the Confederates' domestic isolation.

Having with Meagher and Dillon gathered a small group of both landowners and tenants, on 23 July O'Brien raised the standard of revolt in Kilkenny.[68] This was a tricolour he had brought back from France, its colours (green for Catholics, orange for Protestants) intended to symbolise the United Irish republican ideal.

With Old Ireland and rural priesthood against them, the Confederates had no organised support in the countryside.[69] Active membership was confined to the garrisoned towns. As O'Brien proceeded into Tipperary he was greeted by curious crowds, but found himself in command of only a few hundred ill-clad largely unarmed men. They scattered after their first skirmish with the constabulary, derisively referred to by The Times of London as "Battle of Widow McCormack's Cabbage Patch".[70]

O'Brien and his colleagues were quickly arrested and convicted of treason. Following a public outpouring, the government commuted their death sentences to penal transportation to Van Diemen's Land, where they joined John Mitchel. Duffy alone escaped conviction. Thanks to a token Catholic juror whose character the government had misjudged, and able defence of Isaac Butt, Duffy was released in February 1849, the only major Young Ireland leader to remain in Ireland.[71]

In a judgement shared by many of their sympathisers, John Devoy, the later Fenian, wrote of the Young Irelander rebellion:

The terrible Famine of 1847 forced the hand of the Young Irelanders and they rushed into a policy of Insurrection without the slightest military preparation... Their writings and speeches had converted a large number of the young men to the gospel of force and their pride impelled them to an effort to make good their preaching. But... an appeal to arms made to a disarmed people was little short of insanity.[72]

James Connolly, however, was to argue that the response to arrest the Young Ireland leaders suggests that in the towns, people would have taken to arms if only the signal been given. He writes that when Duffy was arrested on July 9, Dublin workers surrounded the military escort, pressed up to Duffy and offered to begin an insurrection then and there. “Do you wish to be rescued?” “Certainly not,” said Duffy. In Cashel, Tipperary, people stormed the jail and rescued Michael Doheny, only for him to give himself up again and apply for bail. In Waterford, people brought the cavalcade carrying Meagher to a standstill with a barricade across a narrow bridge over the River Suir. They begged him to give the word, for they had the town already in their hands, but Meagher persisted in going with the soldiers, and ordered the barricade removed.[73]

Aftermath Edit

The League of North and South Edit

Convinced that "the Famine had 'dissolved society' and exposed landlordism both morally and economically",[74] in September 1849 Lalor attempted with John Savage, Joseph Brenan and other Young Irelanders to revive the insurrection in Tipperary and Waterford. After an indecisive engagement at Cappoquin, once again in view of their small number the insurgents disbanded.[37] Lalor died three months later of bronchitis. This was just as a new movement was lending new credence to his belief that the independence of cultivator would bring "national independence in its train".[75]

Tenant farmers and cottiers may not have been prepared to fight for a republic, but with the formation of tenant protection societies they were beginning to see value in an open and legal combination for furtherance of their interests.[76] Seeking to link the new tenant agitation to his vision of an independent parliamentary party, in August 1850 Duffy, with James McKnight, William Sharman Crawford and Frederick Lucas, moved the formation of an all-Ireland Tenant Right League.[77] In addition to tenant representatives, among those gathered for the inaugural meeting were magistrates and landlords, Catholic priests and Presbyterian ministers, and journalists with the Presbyterian James McKnight of the Banner of Ulster in the chair.[78]

In the 1852 election, organised around what Michael Davitt described as "the programme of the Whiteboys and Ribbonmen reduced to moral and constitutional standards",[79] the League helped return Duffy (for New Ross) and 47 other MPs pledged to tenant-rights.[80] What Duffy hailed as the "League of North and South",[81] however, was less than it appeared. Many of the MPs had been sitting Repealers who had broken with the Whig government over the Ecclesiastical Titles Act, and only one pledged MP, William Kirk for Newry, was returned from Ulster.[82]

After a modest land bill was defeated in the Lords,[83] the "Independent Irish Party" began to unravel. Catholic Primate of Ireland, Archbishop Paul Cullen approved the MPs breaking their pledge of independent opposition and accepting positions in a new Whig administration.[84] In the North McKnight and Crawford had their meetings broken up by Orange "bludgeon men".[85]

Broken in health and spirit, Duffy published in 1855 a farewell address to his constituency, declaring that he had resolved to retire from parliament, as it was no longer possible to accomplish the task for which he had solicited their votes. He emigrated to Australia.[86] From 1870 a Land League and Irish Parliamentary Party realised the combination he had sought: coordinated agrarian agitation and obstructionist representation at Westminster.

Irish Republican Brotherhood Edit

Some of the "Men of 1848" carried the commitment to physical force forward into the Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB), formed in 1858 in Dublin, and in the sister Fenian Brotherhood (later Clan na Gael) established by Meagher and fellow exiles in the United States. In 1867, in a loosely co-ordinated action, the Fenians, mobilising Irish veterans of the American Civil War, raided across the northern border of the United States with a view to holding Canada hostage to the grant of Irish Independence.[87] while the IRB attempted an armed rising at home.[88]

With critical and continuing support from the Irish post-Famine diaspora in the United States, the IRB survived to play a critical role in raising the Young Irelander tricolour over Dublin in the Easter Rising of 1916.

Notable Young Irelanders Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Peter Billingham, ed. (2005). Radical Initiatives in Interventionist and Community Drama. Intellect. ISBN 9781841500683. Active in the 1840s, Young Ireland was formed by radical intellectuals, and was influenced by the pan European nationalist movements of the period. The group launched an unsuccessful rising in 1848.
  2. ^ Young Ireland, Sir Charles Gavan Duffy, Cassell, Petter, Galpin & Co 1880 pg.34
  3. ^ Dennis Gwynn, Young Ireland and 1848, Cork University Press, 1949, pg 5
  4. ^ a b Beckett, J. C. (1966). Modern Ireland 1603-1923. London: Faber and Faber. p. 323. ISBN 0571092675.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Moody, T. W. (Autumn 1966). "Thomas Davis and the Irish nation". Hermathena (103): 11–12. JSTOR 23039825. from the original on 22 September 2021. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  6. ^ Beckett (1966), p. 291
  7. ^ Connolly, S.J. (2012). "Chapter 5: Improving Town, 1750–1820". In Connolly, S.J. (ed.). Belfast 400: People, Place and History. Liverpool University Press. ISBN 978-1-84631-635-7.
  8. ^ a b Bardon, Jonathan (2008). A History of Ireland in 250 Episodes. Dublin: Gill & Macmillan. p. 367.
  9. ^ Foster, R. F. (1988). Modern Ireland 1600-1972. Allen Lane, Penguin. p. 311. ISBN 0713990104.
  10. ^ Dennis Gwynn, Young Ireland and 1848, Cork University Press, 1949, pg 9
  11. ^ "British Library Catalogue entry". from the original on 22 September 2021. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  12. ^ Dennis Gwynn, O'Connell, Davis and the Colleges Bill, Cork University Press, 1948, p. 68
  13. ^ Bardon, Jonathan (2008). A History of Ireland in 250 Episodes. Dublin: Gill & Macmillan. pp. 362–363. ISBN 9780717146499.
  14. ^ Beckett, J>C> (1966). The Making of Modern Ireland 1603-1923. London: Faber and Faber. pp. 323–327. ISBN 0571092675.
  15. ^ Duffy, Charles Gavan (1898). My life in two hemispheres, Volume 1. London: Fischer Unwin. pp. 95–97. from the original on 23 September 2021. Retrieved 1 September 2020.
  16. ^ Duffy, Charles Gavan (1898). My life in two hemispheres, Volume 1. London: Fischer Unwin. p. 99. from the original on 23 September 2021. Retrieved 1 September 2020.
  17. ^ Quoted in MacDonagh, Oliver (1977). Ireland: The Union and its Aftermath. London. p. 58. ISBN 978-1-900621-81-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  18. ^ "Davis to R.R. Madden, March 1843 (Gaven Duffy Papers) quoted in Terence LaRocca (1974) "The Irish Career of Charles Gavan Duffy 1840-1855", Doctoral Dissertation, Loyola University Chicago, pp. 17-18. Loyola eCommons" (PDF). from the original on 23 September 2021. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  19. ^ Votruba, Martin. "Herder on Language" (PDF). Slovak Studies Program. University of Pittsburgh. (PDF) from the original on 24 November 2017. Retrieved 30 June 2010.
  20. ^ Ó Tuathaigh, Gearóid (1975). "Gaelic Ireland, Popular Politics and Daniel O'Connell". Journal of the Galway Archaeological and Historical Society. 34: 21–34. JSTOR 25535454.
  21. ^ Beckett, J.C. (1966). The Making of Modern Ireland, 1603-1923. London: Faber & Faber. p. 332. ISBN 0571092675.
  22. ^ Foster, R.F. (1988). Modern Ireland, 1600-1972. London: Allen Lane. p. 317. ISBN 0713990104.
  23. ^ Clifford, Brendan (1985). The Veto Controversy. Belfast: Athol Books. ISBN 9780850340303.
  24. ^ Luby, Thomas Clarke (1870). The life and times of Daniel O'Connell. Glasgow: Cameron, Ferguson & Company. p. 418. from the original on 31 July 2021. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  25. ^ MacDonagh, Oliver (1975). "The Politicization of Irish Catholic Bishops: 1800-1850". The Historical Journal. xviii (1): 37–53. doi:10.1017/S0018246X00008669. JSTOR 2638467. S2CID 159877081. from the original on 23 September 2021. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  26. ^ Clifford, Brendan (1997). Spotlights on Irish History. Millstreet, Co. Cork: Aubane Historical Society. p. 95. ISBN 0952108151.
  27. ^ Macken, Ultan (2008). The Story of Daniel O'Connell. Cork: Mercier Press. p. 120. ISBN 9781856355964.
  28. ^ Mulvey, Helen (2003). Thomas Davis and Ireland: A Biographical Study. Washington DC: The Catholic University of America Press. p. 180. ISBN 0813213037. from the original on 24 June 2021. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  29. ^ O'Connell to Cullen, 9 May 1842. Maurice O'Connell (ed.) The Correspondence of Daniel O'Connell. Shannon: Irish University Press, 8 vols.), vol. vii, p. 158
  30. ^ Griffith, Arthur (1916). Meagher of the Sword:Speeches of Thomas Francis Meagher in Ireland 1846–1848. Dublin: M. H. Gill & Son, Ltd. p. vii
  31. ^ O'Sullivan, T. F. (1945). Young Ireland. The Kerryman Ltd. p. 195
  32. ^ Woodham-Smith, Cecil (1962). The Great Hunger: Ireland 1845–1849. London: Penguin. pp. 410–411. ISBN 978-0-14-014515-1.
  33. ^ Geoghegan, Patrick (2010). Liberator Daniel O'Connell: The Life and Death of Daniel O'Connell, 1830-1847. Dublin: Gill & Macmillan. p. 332. ISBN 9780717151578. from the original on 22 September 2021. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  34. ^ LaRocca p. 58
  35. ^ Finton Lalor to Duffy, January 1847 (Gavan Duffy Papers).
  36. ^ Finton Lalor to Duffy, February 1847 (Gavan Duffy Papers).
  37. ^ a b T. F. O’Sullivan, The Young Irelanders, The Kerryman Ltd. 1945.
  38. ^ McCullagh, John (8 November 2010). "Irish Confederation formed". newryjournal.co.uk/. Newry Journal. from the original on 25 September 2020. Retrieved 27 August 2020.
  39. ^ O'Sullivan, T. F. (1945). Young Ireland. The Kerryman Ltd. pp. 195-6
  40. ^ "Valentine Brown Lawless, Baron Cloncurry - Irish Biography". www.libraryireland.com. from the original on 5 June 2021. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  41. ^ Roger Courtney (2013), Dissenting Voices: Rediscovering the Irish Progressive Presbyterian Tradition, Ulster Historical Foundation, Belfast, p. 156
  42. ^ a b Michael Doheny’s The Felon’s Track, M.H. Gill & Son, LTD, 1951 Edition pg 111–112
  43. ^ Terence LaRocca (1974) "The Irish Career of Charles Gavan Duffy 1840-1855", Doctoral Dissertation, Loyola University Chicago, pp. 52-55. Loyola eCommons
  44. ^ Duffy, Charles Gavan (1898). My life in two hemispheres, Volume 1. London: Fischer Unwin. pp. 198–203. from the original on 23 September 2021. Retrieved 1 September 2020.
  45. ^ Gray, Peter. (2012). "British Relief Measures". Atlas of the Great Irish Famine. Ed. John Crowley, William J. Smyth, and Mike Murphy. New York: New York University Press.
  46. ^ Jenkins, Lee (Autumn 1999). "Beyond the Pale: Frederick Douglass in Cork" (PDF). The Irish Review (24): 92. (PDF) from the original on 17 February 2018. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  47. ^ "Daniel O'Connell and the campaign against slavery". historyireland.com. History Ireland. 5 March 2013. from the original on 8 September 2020. Retrieved 23 August 2020.
  48. ^ Bew, Paul; Maune, Patrick (July 2020). "The Great Advocate". Dublin Review of Books (124). from the original on 4 August 2020. Retrieved 7 August 2020.
  49. ^ Kinealy, Christine (August 2011). "The Irish Abolitionist: Daniel O'Connell". irishamerica.com. Irish America. from the original on 14 August 2020. Retrieved 24 August 2020.
  50. ^ Duffy, Charles Gavan (1883). Four Years of Irish History, 1845-1849. Dublin: Cassell, Petter, Galpin. pp. 500–501. from the original on 9 June 2021. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  51. ^ Gleeson, David (2016) Failing to 'unite with the abolitionists': the Irish Nationalist Press and U.S. emancipation. Slavery & Abolition, 37 (3). pp. 622-637. ISSN 0144-039X
  52. ^ Fanning, Bryan (1 November 2017). "Slaves to a Myth". Irish Review of Books (article). 102. Retrieved 11 November 2018.
  53. ^ William Theobald Wolfe Tone, ed. (1826). Life of Theobald Wolfe Tone, vol. 2. Washington D.C.: Gales and Seaton. p. 45. ISBN 9781108081948. from the original on 23 September 2021. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  54. ^ Mitchel, John (1854). JAIL JOURNAL; OR, FIVE YEARS IN BRITISH PRISONS. New York: PUBLISHED AT THE OFFICE OF THE "CITIZEN,". p. Title page. COMMENCED ON BOARD THE SHEARWATER STEAMER, IN DUBLIN BAY, CONTINUED AT SPIKE ISLAND—ON BOARD THE SCOURGE WAR STEAMER—ON BOARD THE "DROMEDARY" HULK, BERMUDA-ON BQARD THE NEPTUNE CONVICT SHIP—AT PERNAMBUCO—AT THE CAPE OF GOOD HOPE (DURING THE ANTI-CONVICT REBELLION)—AT VAN DIEMAN'S LAND—AT SYDNEY—AT TAHITI—AT SAN FRANCISCO—AT GREYTOWN—AND CONCLUDED AT NO. 8 PIER, NORTH RIVER, NEW YORK
  55. ^ "John Mitchel 1815-1875 Revolutionary". www.irelandseye.com. from the original on 9 November 2020. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
  56. ^ "United Irishman (Dublin, Ireland : 1848) v. 1 no. 16". digital.library.villanova.eduUnited Irishman (Dublin, Ireland : 1848) v. 1 no. 16. from the original on 20 September 2020. Retrieved 20 August 2019.
  57. ^ "Terence LaRocca (1974) "The Irish Career of Charles Gavan Duffy 1840-1855", Doctoral Dissertation, Loyola University Chicago, p. 3. Loyola eCommons" (PDF). from the original on 23 September 2021. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  58. ^ Duffy, Charles Gavan (1898). My life in two hemispheres, Volume 1. London: Fischer Unwin. p. 16. from the original on 23 September 2021. Retrieved 1 September 2020.
  59. ^ Buckley, Mary (1976). "John Mitchel, Ulster and Irish Nationality (1842-1848)". Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review. 65 (257): (30–44) 37. ISSN 0039-3495. JSTOR 30089986.
  60. ^ LaRocca, p. 63
  61. ^ LaRocca pp.61-65
  62. ^ Duffy, Charles Gavan (1848). The Creed of "The Nation": A Profession of Confederate Principles. Dublin: Mason Bookseller. p. 6. from the original on 23 September 2021. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  63. ^ Duffy, Charles Gavan (1848). The Creed of "The Nation": A Profession of Confederate Principles. Dublin: Mason Bookseller. p. 9. from the original on 23 September 2021. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  64. ^ La Rocca, p. 87
  65. ^ John Huntly McCarthy (1887), Ireland since the Union, London, Chatto & Windus. p.121
  66. ^ La Rocca, p. 78-80
  67. ^ Navickas, Katrina (2016). Protest and the politics of space and place, 1789–1848. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-1-78499-627-7. from the original on 23 September 2021. Retrieved 19 April 2021.
  68. ^ Sir Charles Gavan Duffy, Four Years of Irish History 1845–1849, Cassell, Petter, Galpin & Co. 1888, p. 389
  69. ^ Duffy, Charles Gavan (1883). Four Years of Irish History, 1845-1849. Dublin: Cassell, Petter, Galpin. pp. 640–645. from the original on 9 June 2021. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  70. ^ Grogan, Dick (29 July 1998). "Taoiseach to announce purchase of 1848 'Warhouse' in Tipperary". The Irish Times. from the original on 23 September 2021. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  71. ^ Duffy, Charles Gavan (1883). Four Years of Irish History, 1845-1849. Dublin: Cassell, Petter, Galpin. pp. 743–745. from the original on 9 June 2021. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  72. ^ Devoy, John (1929). Recollections of an Irish rebel.... A personal narrative by John Devoy. New York: Chas. P. Young Co., printers. p. 290. Retrieved 13 October 2020.
  73. ^ Connolly, James (1910). Labour in Irish History. p. 168.
  74. ^ Foster, R. F. (1988). Modern Ireland 1600-1972. Allen Lane, Penguin. p. 381. ISBN 0713990104.
  75. ^ Foster, R. F. (1988). Modern Ireland 1600-1972. Allen Lane, Penguin. p. 381. ISBN 0713990104.
  76. ^ Beckett, J.C. (1966). the Making of Modern Ireland, 1603-1923. London: Faber. p. 348. ISBN 0571092675.
  77. ^ Lyons, Dr Jane (1 March 2013). "Sir Charles Gavan Duffy, My Life in Two Hemispheres, Vol. II". From-Ireland.net. from the original on 28 February 2021. Retrieved 27 March 2021.
  78. ^ Lyons, Jane (March 2013). "Irish Alliance and the Tenant Right League". From-Ireland.net. from the original on 28 September 2020. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  79. ^ Davitt, Michael (1904). The fall of feudalism in Ireland; or, The story of the land league revolution. London: Dalcassian Publishing Company. p. 70. from the original on 23 September 2021. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
  80. ^ Duffy, Charles Gavan (1886). The League of North and South. London: Chapman & Hall.
  81. ^ Duffy, Charles Gavan (1886). The League of North and South: An Episode in Irish History, 1850-1854. London: Chapman and Hall.
  82. ^ Bew, Paul (2007). Ireland: The Politics of Enmity 1789-2006. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 238–239. ISBN 9780198205555. from the original on 2 April 2021. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  83. ^ Anton, Brigitte; O'Brien, R. B. (2008). "Duffy, Sir Charles Gavan". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/32921. ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  84. ^ McCaffrey, Lawrence (1976). The Irish Catholic Diaspora in America. Washington DC: The Catholic University of America Press. p. 145. ISBN 9780813208961. from the original on 2 April 2021. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  85. ^ Bew, Paul (2007). Ireland: The Politics of Enmity 1789-2006. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 238–239. ISBN 9780198205555. from the original on 2 April 2021. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  86. ^   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainO'Brien, Richard Barry (1912). "Duffy, Charles Gavan". In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography (2nd supplement). London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  87. ^ Senior, Hereward (1991). The Last Invasion of Canada: The Fenian Raids, 1866-1870. Dundurn. ISBN 9781550020854. from the original on 21 July 2020. Retrieved 26 June 2020.
  88. ^ Bardon, Jonathan (2008). A History of Ireland in 250 Episodes. Dublin: Gill & Macmillan. p. 389. ISBN 9780717146499.

Bibliography Edit

  • Bew, Paul (2007). Ireland: The Politics of Enmity 1789-2006. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198205555.
  • James Quinn. Young Ireland and The Writing of Irish History (2015).
  • Bryan McGovern, "Young Ireland and Southern Nationalism," Irish Studies South (2016) : Iss. 2, Article 5. online 8 November 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  • Richard Davis The Young Ireland Movement (Dublin, 1987).
  • Malcolm Brown, The Politics of Irish Literature: from Thomas Davis to W.B. Yeats, Allen & Unwin, 1973. 7 April 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  • Aidan Hegarty, John Mitchel, A Cause Too Many, Camlane Press.
  • Arthur Griffith, Thomas Davis, The Thinker and Teacher, M.H. Gill & Son, 1922.
  • Young Ireland and 1848, Dennis Gwynn, Cork University Press, 1949.
  • Daniel O'Connell The Irish Liberator, Dennis Gwynn, Hutchinson & Co, Ltd.
  • O'Connell Davis and the Colleges Bill, Dennis Gwynn, Cork University Press, 1948.
  • Smith O’Brien And The "Secession", Dennis Gwynn, Cork University Press
  • Meagher of The Sword, Edited By Arthur Griffith, M. H. Gill & Son, Ltd., 1916.
  • Young Irelander Abroad: The Diary of Charles Hart, Ed. Brendan O'Cathaoir, University Press.
  • John Mitchel: First Felon for Ireland, Ed. Brian O'Higgins, Brian O'Higgins 1947.
  • Rossa's Recollections: 1838 to 1898, The Lyons Press, 2004.
  • James Connolly, The Re-Conquest of Ireland, Fleet Street, 1915.
  • Louis J. Walsh, John Mitchel: Noted Irish Lives, The Talbot Press Ltd, 1934.
  • Life of John Mitchel, P. A. Sillard, James Duffy and Co., Ltd 1908.
  • John Mitchel, P. S. O'Hegarty, Maunsel & Company, Ltd 1917.
  • R. V. Comerford, The Fenians in Context: Irish Politics & Society 1848–82, Wolfhound Press, 1998
  • Seamus MacCall, Irish Mitchel, Thomas Nelson and Sons Ltd, 1938.
  • T. A. Jackson, Ireland Her Own, Lawrence & Wishart, Ltd, 1976.
  • T. C. Luby, Life and Times of Daniel O'Connell, Cameron & Ferguson.
  • T. F. O'Sullivan, Young Ireland, The Kerryman Ltd., 1945.
  • Terry Golway, Irish Rebel John Devoy and America's Fight for Irish Freedom, St. Martin's Griffin, 1998.
  • Thomas Gallagher, Paddy's Lament: Ireland 1846–1847 Prelude to Hatred, Poolbeg, 1994.
  • James Fintan Lalor, Thomas, P. O'Neill, Golden Publications, 2003.
  • Charles Gavan Duffy: Conversations With Carlyle (1892), with Introduction, Stray Thoughts on Young Ireland, by Brendan Clifford, Athol Books, Belfast, ISBN 0-85034-114-0.
  • Brendan Clifford and Julianne Herlihy, Envoi, Taking Leave of Roy Foster, Cork: Aubane Historical Society
  • Robert Sloan, William Smith O'Brien and the Young Ireland Rebellion of 1848, Four Courts Press, 2000
  • , London: 1845, Quinnipiac University

External links Edit

  • Young Ireland 15 February 2005 at the Wayback Machine from the Encyclopedia of 1848 Revolutions
  • An Gorta Mor 8 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine from Quinnipiac University
  • Legal transcripts relating to the trials of Young Irelanders.
  • Young Irelanders in Tasmania 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  • Young Irelanders in Tasmania wiki 1 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine

young, ireland, irish, Éire, ˈeːɾʲə, ˈoːɡ, political, cultural, movement, 1840s, committed, ireland, struggle, independence, democratic, reform, grouped, around, dublin, weekly, nation, took, issue, with, compromises, clericalism, larger, national, movement, d. Young Ireland Irish Eire og IPA ˈeːɾʲe ˈoːɡ was a political and cultural movement in the 1840s committed to an all Ireland struggle for independence and democratic reform Grouped around the Dublin weekly The Nation it took issue with the compromises and clericalism of the larger national movement Daniel O Connell s Repeal Association from which it seceded in 1847 Despairing in the face of the Great Famine of any other course in 1848 Young Irelanders attempted an insurrection Following the arrest and the exile of most of their leading figures the movement split between those who carried the commitment to physical force forward into the Irish Republican Brotherhood and those who sought to build a League of North and South linking an independent Irish parliamentary party to tenant agitation for land reform Young IrelandIrish tricolour raised in the Young Ireland rebellion 1848Founded1842Dissolved1849Preceded byRepeal AssociationSucceeded byTenant Right League Irish Republican BrotherhoodNewspaperThe NationIdeologyIrish nationalismLiberalismRadicalism 1 Land reformNational affiliationRepeal Association 1842 1847 Irish Confederation 1847 1848 Colours Green White and OrangeSloganA Nation Once Again Contents 1 Origins 1 1 The Historical Society 1 2 The Repeal Association 2 The Nation 3 Conflicts with O Connell 3 1 Retreat from Repeal 3 2 Protestant inclusion 3 3 Whig concessions 3 4 The Peace Resolutions 4 The Irish Confederation 4 1 Secession 4 2 In the shadow of the Famine 4 3 Land War or Parliamentary Obstruction 5 The path to insurrection 5 1 Duffy s Creed 5 2 1848 Uprising 6 Aftermath 6 1 The League of North and South 6 2 Irish Republican Brotherhood 7 Notable Young Irelanders 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 10 External linksOrigins EditThe Historical Society Edit Many of those later identified as Young Ireland first gathered in 1839 at a reconvening of the College Historical Society in Dublin The club at Trinity College had a history stretching back through the student participation of the United Irishmen Theobald Wolfe Tone and Robert Emmet to Edmund Burke of debating patriotic motions Not for the first time the club had been expelled from college for breaching the condition that it not discuss questions of modern politics 2 Those present for meeting in the chambers of Francis Kearney were in Irish terms a mixed group They included Catholics first admitted to Trinity in 1793 among them Thomas MacNevin elected the Society s president and later to follow him in that role John Blake Dillon Chief among the other future Young Irelanders present were law graduate Thomas Davis and the Newry attorney John Mitchel 3 The Repeal Association Edit With others present these four would go to join Daniel O Connell s Repeal Association In 1840 this was a relaunch of a campaign to restore an Irish parliament in Dublin by repealing the 1800 Acts of Union O Connell had suspended Repeal agitation in the 1830s to solicit favour and reform from Whig ministry of Lord Melbourne In April 1841 O Connell placed both Davis and Dillon on the Association s General Committee with responsibilities for organisation and recruitment Membership uptake had been slow 4 In the south and west the great numbers of tenant farmers small town traders and journeymen O Connell had rallied to the cause of Emancipation in the 1820s did not similarly respond to his lead on the more abstract proposition of Repeal 5 6 Patriotic and republican sentiment among the Presbyterians of the north east had surrendered since the Rebellion of 1798 to the conviction that the union with Great Britain was both the occasion for their relative prosperity and a guarantee of their liberty 7 Protestants were now as a body opposed to a restoration of the parliament in Dublin whose prerogatives they had once championed In these circumstances the Catholic gentry and much of the middle class were content to explore the avenues for advancement opened by Emancipation and earlier Catholic relief The suspicion in any case was that O Connell s purpose in returning to the constitutional question was merely to embarrass the incoming Conservatives under his old enemy Sir Robert Peel and to hasten the Whigs return 5 In working with O Connell Thomas and Dillon contended with a patriarch impatient of opposition or criticism and apt to prefer followers to colleagues They found an ally in Charles Gavan Duffy editor in Belfast of the Repeal journal The Vindicator 5 The Nation Edit nbsp Charles Gavan DuffyDuffy proposed a new national weekly to Davis and Dillon owned by himself but directed by all three The paper first appeared in October in 1842 bearing the title chosen for it by Davis The Nation after the French liberal opposition daily Le National The prospectus written by Davis dedicated the paper to direct the popular mind and the sympathies of educated men of all parties to the great end of a nationality that will not only raise our people from their poverty by securing to them the blessings of a domestic legislature but inflame and purify them with a lofty and heroic love of country 8 The Nation was an immediate publishing success Its sales soared above all other Irish papers weekly or daily Circulation at its height was reckoned to be close to a quarter of a million 9 With its focus upon editorials historical articles and verse all intended to shape public opinion copies continued to be read in Repeal Reading Rooms and to be passed from hand to hand long after their current news value had faded 5 It may have been a reinforcement for which O Connell had scarcely dared to hope 10 but the journal s role in the revived fortunes of the Repeal Association has to be weighed against other contributions Legislative independence was powerfully endorsed by Archbishop McHale of Tuam 4 11 Beyond Davis and Dillon s Historical Society companions the paper drew on a widening circle of contributors Among the more politically committed these included the Repeal MP William Smith O Brien Tithe War veteran James Fintan Lalor prose and verse writer Michael Doheny author of Traits and Stories of the Irish Peasantry William Carleton militant nationalist priest John Kenyon poet and early suffragist Jane Wilde republican and labour rights activist Thomas Devin Reilly former American journalist and future Father of the Canadian Confederation Thomas D Arcy McGee and the renowned Repeal orator Thomas Francis Meagher It was an English journalist who first applied to this growing circle the label Young Ireland 5 Although there was no direct connection the reference was to Young Italy and to other European national republican movements Young Germany Young Poland that Giuseppe Mazzini had sought loosely to federate under the aegis of Young Europe Giovine Europa When O Connell picked up on the moniker and began referring to those he had considered his junior lieutenants as Young Irelanders it was a signal for an impending break 12 Conflicts with O Connell Edit nbsp Depiction of Young Ireland Smith O Brien and Old Ireland O Connell fighting like two Kilkenny cats Punch 1846 Retreat from Repeal Edit The Nation was loyal to O Connell when in October 1843 he stood down the Repeal movement at Clontarf The government had deployed troops and artillery to enforce a ban on what O Connell had announced as the last monster meeting in the Year of Repeal In August at the Hill of Tara crowds had been estimated in the hostile reporting of The Times at close to a million 13 O Connell submitted at once He cancelled the rally and sent out messengers to turn back the approaching crowds 14 Although in Duffy s view the decision deprived the Repeal movement of half its dignity and all of its terror the Young Irelanders acknowledged that the risk of a massacre on many times the scale of Peterloo was unacceptable Pressing what they imagined was their advantage the government had O Connell his son John and Duffy convicted of sedition When after three months the charges quashed on appeal to the House of Lords they were released it was Davis and O Brien who staged O Connell s triumphal reception in Dublin 15 The first sign of a breach came when Duffy through an open letter in The Nation Duffy pressed O Connell to affirm Repeal as his object 16 While insisting he would never ask for or work for anything less than an independent legislature O Connell had suggested he might accept a subordinate parliament an Irish legislature with powers devolved from Westminster as an instalment 17 A further and more serious rift opened with Davis Davis had himself been negotiating the possibility of a devolved parliament with the Northern reformer William Sharman Crawford 18 The difference with O Connell was that Davis was seeking a basis for compromise in the first instance not at Westminster but in Belfast Protestant inclusion Edit nbsp Thomas DavisWhen he first followed O Connell Duffy concedes that he had burned with the desire to set up again the Celtic race and the catholic church 5 In The Nation he subscribed to a broader vision In the journal s prospectus Davis wrote of a nationality as ready to embrace the stranger who is within our gates as the Irishman of a hundred generations 8 Davis conscious of his family s Cromwellian origin was persuaded by Johann Gottfried von Herder nationality was not a matter of ancestry or blood but of acclimatising influences Cultural traditions and above all language the organ of thought could engender in persons of diverse origin common national feeling 19 Davis was a keen promoter of the Irish language in print at a time when while still the speech of the vast majority of the Irish people it had been all but abandoned by the educated classes Such cultural nationalism did not appear to interest to O Connell There is no evidence that he saw the preservation or revival of his mother tongue or any other aspect of native culture as essential to his political demands 20 His own paper the Pilot recognised but one positive and unmistakable marker of the national distinction between English and Irish religion 21 O Connell treasured his few Protestant Repealers 22 but he acknowledged the central role of the Catholic clergy in his movement and guarded the bond it represented In 1812 13 he had refused emancipation conditioned on Rome having to seek royal assent in the appointment of Irish bishops 23 24 Throughout much of the country the bishops and their priests were the only figures of standing independent of the government around which a national movement could organise It was a reality on which the Repeal Association like the Catholic Association before it was built 25 26 In 1845 O Connell in advance of the bishops denounced a mixed non denominational scheme for tertiary education The Anglicans could retain Trinity in Dublin the Presbyterians might have the Queens College proposed for Belfast but the Queens colleges intended for Galway and Cork had to be Catholic When Davis moved to tears in the controversy pleaded that reasons for separate education are reasons for a separate life O Connell accused him of suggesting it a crime to be a Catholic I am he declared for Old Ireland and I have some slight notion that Old Ireland will stand by me 27 28 nbsp Thomas Francis MeagherO Connell rarely joined the Young Irelanders in invoking the memory of 1798 the union of Catholic Protestant and Dissenter His one Repeal foray to the Presbyterian north to Belfast organised by Duffy in 1841 was cut short by hostile demonstrations For the key to an Irish parliament O Connell looked to liberal England not Protestant Ulster Once a parliament restored to Dublin had retired their distinctive privileges he was content to suggest that Protestants would with little delay melt into the overwhelming majority of the Irish nation 29 Whig concessions Edit Thomas Davis s sudden death in 1845 helped close the matter But his friends suspected that behind the vehemence with which O Connell opposed Davis on the colleges question there also the intent again to frustrate Peel and to advantage the Whigs This was not a strategy Meagher argued that had paid national dividends The last concession wrung from the Melbourne administration the 1840 municipal reform had elected O Connell to the Lord Mayoralty of Dublin But with the Grand Jury system of county government untouched it left the great majority of people to continue under the local tyranny of the landlords In return for allowing a corrupt gang of politicians who fawned on O Connell an extensive system of political patronage the Irish people being purchased back into factious vassalage 30 31 In June 1846 the Whigs under Lord John Russell returned to office Immediately they set about dismantling Peel s limited but practical efforts to relieve the gathering Irish Famine 32 Barricaded behind laissez faire doctrines of political economy the government left O Connell to plead for his country from the floor of the House of Commons She is in your hands in your power If you do not save her she cannot save herself One fourth of her population will perish unless Parliament comes to their relief 33 A broken man on the advice of his doctors O Connell took himself to the continent where on route to Rome he died in May 1847 The Peace Resolutions Edit nbsp James Fintan LalorIn the months before O Connell s death Duffy circulated letters received from James Fintan Lalor 34 In these Lalor argued independence could be pursued only in a popular struggle for the land This alone could bring about a union of North and South without which separation from England was impossible to contemplate But recognising that any and all means that employed in this struggle could be made illegal by Act of Parliament the Young Irelanders would have at the very least to ready themselves for a moral insurrection He proposed that they should begin with a campaign to withhold rent but more might be implied 35 Parts of the country were already in a state of semi insurrection Tenants conspirators in tradition of the Whiteboys and Ribbonmen were attacking process servers intimidating land agents and resisting evictions Lalor advised only against a general uprising the people he believed could not hold their own against the country s English garrison 36 The letters made a profound impression particularly on John Mitchel and Father John Kenyon 37 When the conservative Standard observed that the new Irish railways could be used to transport troops to quickly curb agrarian unrest Mitchel responded that the tracks could be turned into pikes and trains ambushed O Connell publicly distanced himself from The Nation appearing to some to set Duffy as the editor up for prosecution 38 When the courts failed to convict O Connell pressed the issue seemingly intent on effecting a break In July 1846 the Repeal Association tabled resolutions declaring that under no circumstances was a nation justified in asserting its liberties by force of arms Meagher argued that while the Young Irelanders were not advocating physical force if Repeal could not be carried by moral persuasion and peaceful means they believed a resort to arms would be a no less honourable course 39 In his O Connell s absence his son John forced the decision the resolution was carried on the threat of the O Connells themselves quitting the Association An offer by United Irish veteran Valentine Lawless Lord Cloncurry to chair a committee to adjust the dispute between Old and Young Ireland had been rejected by John O Connell in reportedly very saucy and unbecoming language 40 An offer of mediation from the abolitionist and pacifist James Haughton was also spurned 41 The Irish Confederation EditMain article Irish Confederation nbsp Depiction in Punch 1846 of the split Young Ireland in Business for Himself Smith O Brien in Repeal cap sells weapons to a stereotyped Irishman Secession Edit The Young Irelanders withdrew from the Repeal Association but not without considerable support In October 1846 the Association chairman in Dublin was presented with a remonstrance protesting Young Irelanders exclusion signed by fifteen hundred of the city s leading citizens When John O Connell ordered this to be flung into the gutter a large protest meeting was held 42 suggesting the possibility for a rival organisation In January 1847 the seceders formed themselves as the Irish Confederation Michael Doheny recalls no declarations or calls for rebellion and no pledges given of peace The objectives were independence of the Irish nation with no means to attain that end abjured save such as were inconsistent with honour morality and reason 42 In the shadow of the Famine Edit nbsp John MitchelAs first directed by Duffy in towns Confederate clubs were to encourage the use of Irish resources and manufactures work for the extension of popular franchise and instruct youth in the history of their country which was being kept from them in the government s National Schools The village clubs were to promote the rights of tenants and labourers diffuse knowledge of agriculture and in token of the continuing commitment to non violence discourage secret societies All were to promote harmony between Irishmen of all creeds making it a point to invite the participation of Protestants 43 But in Black 47 the worst year of the potato blight famine the search was for policies that could address the immediate crisis The Confederation urged cultivators to hold the harvest until the needs of their own families were supplied As Duffy was later to acknowledge the poorest had lost the art and means of preparing for themselves anything other than the potato Even were it not at the cost of eviction holding back grain and other foodstuffs grown to pay rent might avail them little 44 As temporary relief for destitute persons in the spring of 1847 the government opened soup kitchens In August they were shut The starving were directed to abandon the land and apply to the workhouses 45 Mitchel urged the Confederation to pronounce for Lalor s policy and make control of land the issue However Duffy had cut Michel s access to the leader columns of The Nation over a seemingly extraneous issue In Duffy s view Mitchel had abused a temporary editorship to take unsanctioned and in themselves scandalous positions on matters that had been sacrosanct to O Connell O Connell had repeatedly assailed what he described as the vile union in the United States of republicanism and slavery 46 47 He had also criticised Pope Gregory XVI over the treatment of Jews in the Papal States 48 Conscious of the risk to American funding and support Duffy himself had difficulty with O Connell s vocal abolitionism the time was not right he suggested for gratuitous interference in American affairs 49 In articles written for the New York based Nation Mitchel espoused proslavery thought and opposed Jewish emancipation in the United States 50 51 His views were similar to many other Young Ireland emigres such as Thomas D Arcy McGee who defended American slavery while espousing Irish nationalism 52 In February 1848 Mitchel established a paper of his own Under its title The United Irishman he placed Wolfe Tone s declaration Our independence must be had at all hazards If the men of property will not support us they must fall we can support ourselves by the aid of that numerous and respectable class of the community the men of no property 53 The paper boldly advocated Lalor s policy In May as its publisher Mitchel was convicted of a new crime of treason felony and sentenced to transportation for 14 years to the Royal Naval Dockyard on Ireland Island in the Imperial fortress of Bermuda imprisoned in the Prison hulk HMS Dromedary 54 and Van Diemen s Land 55 56 Land War or Parliamentary Obstruction Edit Duffy recalled from his youth a Quaker neighbour who had been a United Irishman and had laughed at the idea that the issue was kings and governments What mattered was the land from which the people got their bread 57 Instead of singing the La Marseillaise he said that what the men of 98 should have borrowed from the French was their sagacious idea of bundling the landlords out of doors and putting tenants in their shoes 58 But Duffy s objection to Lalor s theory was that his angry peasants chafing like chained tigers were creatures of the imagination not the living people through whom we had to act 59 At the same time Duffy was trying to hold together a broader coalition and had for that reason advanced O Brien to the leadership a Protestant and a landowner On the Confederation s Council he was supported by Patrick James Smyth who argued that with propertied classes as well as the priesthood opposed the Confederation could not hope to call out a single parish in Ireland 60 By a vote of fifteen to six the Council adopted Duffy s alternative proposition a Parliamentary Party that accepting no favours would press Ireland s claims by threatening to put a stop to the entire business of the Commons Such a party would either have its demands conceded or be forcibly ejected from Westminster in which case the people united behind its single purpose would know how to enforce their will Opposition was led by Thomas Devin Reilly and by Mitchel Class coalitions attempted in past had failed and they continued to insist on Lalor s plan 61 The path to insurrection Edit nbsp Depiction from Punch of Mr G O Rilla of the Young Ireland Party reading The Nation with pickled cabbage and vitriol in jars on his shelf A policeman holds an extinguisher to snuff him out Duffy s Creed EditBy the spring of 1848 the scale of the catastrophe facing the country had persuaded all parties on the Council that independence was an existential issue that the immediate need was for an Irish national government able to take control of national resources In May 1848 Duffy published The Creed of the Nation If Irish independence was to come by force it would be in the form of a Republic The avoidance of deadly animosities between Irishmen was of course preferable An independent Irish parliament elected by widest possible suffrage a responsible minister for Ireland i e an Irish executive accountable to an Irish parliament a Viceroy of Irish birth would content the country Such a parliament would inevitably establish Tenant Right abolish the Established Church and endeavour to settle the claims of labour upon some solid and satisfactory basis But one step further in the direction of Revolution it would not go 62 Other peoples in Europe had been protected from starvation because their rulers were of their own blood and race That this was not the case for Ireland was the source of its present tragedy 63 The Government made clear that its chosen response to the crisis in Ireland was coercion not concession Mitchel had been convicted under new martial law measures approved by Parliament including by a number of Old Ireland MPs On 9 July 1848 Duffy with the Creed as evidence was arrested for sedition He managed to smuggle a few lines out to The Nation but the issue that would have carried his declaration that there was no remedy now but the sword was seized and the paper suppressed 64 1848 Uprising Edit Main article Young Irelander Rebellion of 1848 nbsp William Smith O BrienPlanning for an insurrection had already advanced Mitchel although the first to call for action had scoffed at the necessity for systematic preparation O Brien to Duffy s surprise attempted the task In March he had returned from a visit to revolutionary Paris with hopes of French assistance Among the leading republicans in France Ledru Rollin had been loud in his declaration of French support for the Irish cause 65 There was also talk of an Irish American brigade and of a Chartist diversion in England 66 Allied with the Chartists the Confederation had a relatively strong organised presence in Liverpool Manchester and Salford 67 With Duffy s arrest it was left to O Brien to confront the reality of the Confederates domestic isolation Having with Meagher and Dillon gathered a small group of both landowners and tenants on 23 July O Brien raised the standard of revolt in Kilkenny 68 This was a tricolour he had brought back from France its colours green for Catholics orange for Protestants intended to symbolise the United Irish republican ideal With Old Ireland and rural priesthood against them the Confederates had no organised support in the countryside 69 Active membership was confined to the garrisoned towns As O Brien proceeded into Tipperary he was greeted by curious crowds but found himself in command of only a few hundred ill clad largely unarmed men They scattered after their first skirmish with the constabulary derisively referred to by The Times of London as Battle of Widow McCormack s Cabbage Patch 70 O Brien and his colleagues were quickly arrested and convicted of treason Following a public outpouring the government commuted their death sentences to penal transportation to Van Diemen s Land where they joined John Mitchel Duffy alone escaped conviction Thanks to a token Catholic juror whose character the government had misjudged and able defence of Isaac Butt Duffy was released in February 1849 the only major Young Ireland leader to remain in Ireland 71 In a judgement shared by many of their sympathisers John Devoy the later Fenian wrote of the Young Irelander rebellion The terrible Famine of 1847 forced the hand of the Young Irelanders and they rushed into a policy of Insurrection without the slightest military preparation Their writings and speeches had converted a large number of the young men to the gospel of force and their pride impelled them to an effort to make good their preaching But an appeal to arms made to a disarmed people was little short of insanity 72 James Connolly however was to argue that the response to arrest the Young Ireland leaders suggests that in the towns people would have taken to arms if only the signal been given He writes that when Duffy was arrested on July 9 Dublin workers surrounded the military escort pressed up to Duffy and offered to begin an insurrection then and there Do you wish to be rescued Certainly not said Duffy In Cashel Tipperary people stormed the jail and rescued Michael Doheny only for him to give himself up again and apply for bail In Waterford people brought the cavalcade carrying Meagher to a standstill with a barricade across a narrow bridge over the River Suir They begged him to give the word for they had the town already in their hands but Meagher persisted in going with the soldiers and ordered the barricade removed 73 Aftermath EditThe League of North and South Edit Convinced that the Famine had dissolved society and exposed landlordism both morally and economically 74 in September 1849 Lalor attempted with John Savage Joseph Brenan and other Young Irelanders to revive the insurrection in Tipperary and Waterford After an indecisive engagement at Cappoquin once again in view of their small number the insurgents disbanded 37 Lalor died three months later of bronchitis This was just as a new movement was lending new credence to his belief that the independence of cultivator would bring national independence in its train 75 Tenant farmers and cottiers may not have been prepared to fight for a republic but with the formation of tenant protection societies they were beginning to see value in an open and legal combination for furtherance of their interests 76 Seeking to link the new tenant agitation to his vision of an independent parliamentary party in August 1850 Duffy with James McKnight William Sharman Crawford and Frederick Lucas moved the formation of an all Ireland Tenant Right League 77 In addition to tenant representatives among those gathered for the inaugural meeting were magistrates and landlords Catholic priests and Presbyterian ministers and journalists with the Presbyterian James McKnight of the Banner of Ulster in the chair 78 In the 1852 election organised around what Michael Davitt described as the programme of the Whiteboys and Ribbonmen reduced to moral and constitutional standards 79 the League helped return Duffy for New Ross and 47 other MPs pledged to tenant rights 80 What Duffy hailed as the League of North and South 81 however was less than it appeared Many of the MPs had been sitting Repealers who had broken with the Whig government over the Ecclesiastical Titles Act and only one pledged MP William Kirk for Newry was returned from Ulster 82 After a modest land bill was defeated in the Lords 83 the Independent Irish Party began to unravel Catholic Primate of Ireland Archbishop Paul Cullen approved the MPs breaking their pledge of independent opposition and accepting positions in a new Whig administration 84 In the North McKnight and Crawford had their meetings broken up by Orange bludgeon men 85 Broken in health and spirit Duffy published in 1855 a farewell address to his constituency declaring that he had resolved to retire from parliament as it was no longer possible to accomplish the task for which he had solicited their votes He emigrated to Australia 86 From 1870 a Land League and Irish Parliamentary Party realised the combination he had sought coordinated agrarian agitation and obstructionist representation at Westminster Irish Republican Brotherhood Edit Some of the Men of 1848 carried the commitment to physical force forward into the Irish Republican Brotherhood IRB formed in 1858 in Dublin and in the sister Fenian Brotherhood later Clan na Gael established by Meagher and fellow exiles in the United States In 1867 in a loosely co ordinated action the Fenians mobilising Irish veterans of the American Civil War raided across the northern border of the United States with a view to holding Canada hostage to the grant of Irish Independence 87 while the IRB attempted an armed rising at home 88 With critical and continuing support from the Irish post Famine diaspora in the United States the IRB survived to play a critical role in raising the Young Irelander tricolour over Dublin in the Easter Rising of 1916 Notable Young Irelanders EditThomas Antisell Joseph Brenan Margaret Callan Thomas D Arcy McGee Thomas Davis John Blake Dillon Michael Doheny Charles Gavan Duffy Father John Kenyon James Fintan Lalor Terence MacManus Thomas MacNevin John Martin Thomas Francis Meagher John Mitchel William Smith O Brien Kevin Izod O Doherty Patrick O Donoghue John Edward Pigot Thomas Devin Reilly John Savage Jane Wilde Richard D Alton WilliamsSee also EditFamine Rebellion of 1848 Great Famine Ireland History of Ireland 1801 1923 References Edit Peter Billingham ed 2005 Radical Initiatives in Interventionist and Community Drama Intellect ISBN 9781841500683 Active in the 1840s Young Ireland was formed by radical intellectuals and was influenced by the pan European nationalist movements of the period The group launched an unsuccessful rising in 1848 Young Ireland Sir Charles Gavan Duffy Cassell Petter Galpin amp Co 1880 pg 34 Dennis Gwynn Young Ireland and 1848 Cork University Press 1949 pg 5 a b Beckett J C 1966 Modern Ireland 1603 1923 London Faber and Faber p 323 ISBN 0571092675 a b c d e f Moody T W Autumn 1966 Thomas Davis and the Irish nation Hermathena 103 11 12 JSTOR 23039825 Archived from the original on 22 September 2021 Retrieved 3 September 2020 Beckett 1966 p 291 Connolly S J 2012 Chapter 5 Improving Town 1750 1820 In Connolly S J ed Belfast 400 People Place and History Liverpool University Press ISBN 978 1 84631 635 7 a b Bardon Jonathan 2008 A History of Ireland in 250 Episodes Dublin Gill amp Macmillan p 367 Foster R F 1988 Modern Ireland 1600 1972 Allen Lane Penguin p 311 ISBN 0713990104 Dennis Gwynn Young Ireland and 1848 Cork University Press 1949 pg 9 British Library Catalogue entry Archived from the original on 22 September 2021 Retrieved 3 September 2020 Dennis Gwynn O Connell Davis and the Colleges Bill Cork University Press 1948 p 68 Bardon Jonathan 2008 A History of Ireland in 250 Episodes Dublin Gill amp Macmillan pp 362 363 ISBN 9780717146499 Beckett J gt C gt 1966 The Making of Modern Ireland 1603 1923 London Faber and Faber pp 323 327 ISBN 0571092675 Duffy Charles Gavan 1898 My life in two hemispheres Volume 1 London Fischer Unwin pp 95 97 Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 1 September 2020 Duffy Charles Gavan 1898 My life in two hemispheres Volume 1 London Fischer Unwin p 99 Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 1 September 2020 Quoted in MacDonagh Oliver 1977 Ireland The Union and its Aftermath London p 58 ISBN 978 1 900621 81 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Davis to R R Madden March 1843 Gaven Duffy Papers quoted in Terence LaRocca 1974 The Irish Career of Charles Gavan Duffy 1840 1855 Doctoral Dissertation Loyola University Chicago pp 17 18 Loyola eCommons PDF Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 3 September 2020 Votruba Martin Herder on Language PDF Slovak Studies Program University of Pittsburgh Archived PDF from the original on 24 November 2017 Retrieved 30 June 2010 o Tuathaigh Gearoid 1975 Gaelic Ireland Popular Politics and Daniel O Connell Journal of the Galway Archaeological and Historical Society 34 21 34 JSTOR 25535454 Beckett J C 1966 The Making of Modern Ireland 1603 1923 London Faber amp Faber p 332 ISBN 0571092675 Foster R F 1988 Modern Ireland 1600 1972 London Allen Lane p 317 ISBN 0713990104 Clifford Brendan 1985 The Veto Controversy Belfast Athol Books ISBN 9780850340303 Luby Thomas Clarke 1870 The life and times of Daniel O Connell Glasgow Cameron Ferguson amp Company p 418 Archived from the original on 31 July 2021 Retrieved 6 September 2020 MacDonagh Oliver 1975 The Politicization of Irish Catholic Bishops 1800 1850 The Historical Journal xviii 1 37 53 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00008669 JSTOR 2638467 S2CID 159877081 Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 4 September 2020 Clifford Brendan 1997 Spotlights on Irish History Millstreet Co Cork Aubane Historical Society p 95 ISBN 0952108151 Macken Ultan 2008 The Story of Daniel O Connell Cork Mercier Press p 120 ISBN 9781856355964 Mulvey Helen 2003 Thomas Davis and Ireland A Biographical Study Washington DC The Catholic University of America Press p 180 ISBN 0813213037 Archived from the original on 24 June 2021 Retrieved 3 September 2020 O Connell to Cullen 9 May 1842 Maurice O Connell ed The Correspondence of Daniel O Connell Shannon Irish University Press 8 vols vol vii p 158 Griffith Arthur 1916 Meagher of the Sword Speeches of Thomas Francis Meagher in Ireland 1846 1848 Dublin M H Gill amp Son Ltd p vii O Sullivan T F 1945 Young Ireland The Kerryman Ltd p 195 Woodham Smith Cecil 1962 The Great Hunger Ireland 1845 1849 London Penguin pp 410 411 ISBN 978 0 14 014515 1 Geoghegan Patrick 2010 Liberator Daniel O Connell The Life and Death of Daniel O Connell 1830 1847 Dublin Gill amp Macmillan p 332 ISBN 9780717151578 Archived from the original on 22 September 2021 Retrieved 3 September 2020 LaRocca p 58 Finton Lalor to Duffy January 1847 Gavan Duffy Papers Finton Lalor to Duffy February 1847 Gavan Duffy Papers a b T F O Sullivan The Young Irelanders The Kerryman Ltd 1945 McCullagh John 8 November 2010 Irish Confederation formed newryjournal co uk Newry Journal Archived from the original on 25 September 2020 Retrieved 27 August 2020 O Sullivan T F 1945 Young Ireland The Kerryman Ltd pp 195 6 Valentine Brown Lawless Baron Cloncurry Irish Biography www libraryireland com Archived from the original on 5 June 2021 Retrieved 5 March 2021 Roger Courtney 2013 Dissenting Voices Rediscovering the Irish Progressive Presbyterian Tradition Ulster Historical Foundation Belfast p 156 a b Michael Doheny s The Felon s Track M H Gill amp Son LTD 1951 Edition pg 111 112 Terence LaRocca 1974 The Irish Career of Charles Gavan Duffy 1840 1855 Doctoral Dissertation Loyola University Chicago pp 52 55 Loyola eCommons Duffy Charles Gavan 1898 My life in two hemispheres Volume 1 London Fischer Unwin pp 198 203 Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 1 September 2020 Gray Peter 2012 British Relief Measures Atlas of the Great Irish Famine Ed John Crowley William J Smyth and Mike Murphy New York New York University Press Jenkins Lee Autumn 1999 Beyond the Pale Frederick Douglass in Cork PDF The Irish Review 24 92 Archived PDF from the original on 17 February 2018 Retrieved 3 September 2020 Daniel O Connell and the campaign against slavery historyireland com History Ireland 5 March 2013 Archived from the original on 8 September 2020 Retrieved 23 August 2020 Bew Paul Maune Patrick July 2020 The Great Advocate Dublin Review of Books 124 Archived from the original on 4 August 2020 Retrieved 7 August 2020 Kinealy Christine August 2011 The Irish Abolitionist Daniel O Connell irishamerica com Irish America Archived from the original on 14 August 2020 Retrieved 24 August 2020 Duffy Charles Gavan 1883 Four Years of Irish History 1845 1849 Dublin Cassell Petter Galpin pp 500 501 Archived from the original on 9 June 2021 Retrieved 4 September 2020 Gleeson David 2016 Failing to unite with the abolitionists the Irish Nationalist Press and U S emancipation Slavery amp Abolition 37 3 pp 622 637 ISSN 0144 039X Fanning Bryan 1 November 2017 Slaves to a Myth Irish Review of Books article 102 Retrieved 11 November 2018 William Theobald Wolfe Tone ed 1826 Life of Theobald Wolfe Tone vol 2 Washington D C Gales and Seaton p 45 ISBN 9781108081948 Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 3 September 2020 Mitchel John 1854 JAIL JOURNAL OR FIVE YEARS IN BRITISH PRISONS New York PUBLISHED AT THE OFFICE OF THE CITIZEN p Title page COMMENCED ON BOARD THE SHEARWATER STEAMER IN DUBLIN BAY CONTINUED AT SPIKE ISLAND ON BOARD THE SCOURGE WAR STEAMER ON BOARD THE DROMEDARY HULK BERMUDA ON BQARD THE NEPTUNE CONVICT SHIP AT PERNAMBUCO AT THE CAPE OF GOOD HOPE DURING THE ANTI CONVICT REBELLION AT VAN DIEMAN S LAND AT SYDNEY AT TAHITI AT SAN FRANCISCO AT GREYTOWN AND CONCLUDED AT NO 8 PIER NORTH RIVER NEW YORK John Mitchel 1815 1875 Revolutionary www irelandseye com Archived from the original on 9 November 2020 Retrieved 19 August 2019 United Irishman Dublin Ireland 1848 v 1 no 16 digital library villanova eduUnited Irishman Dublin Ireland 1848 v 1 no 16 Archived from the original on 20 September 2020 Retrieved 20 August 2019 Terence LaRocca 1974 The Irish Career of Charles Gavan Duffy 1840 1855 Doctoral Dissertation Loyola University Chicago p 3 Loyola eCommons PDF Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 3 September 2020 Duffy Charles Gavan 1898 My life in two hemispheres Volume 1 London Fischer Unwin p 16 Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 1 September 2020 Buckley Mary 1976 John Mitchel Ulster and Irish Nationality 1842 1848 Studies An Irish Quarterly Review 65 257 30 44 37 ISSN 0039 3495 JSTOR 30089986 LaRocca p 63 LaRocca pp 61 65 Duffy Charles Gavan 1848 The Creed of The Nation A Profession of Confederate Principles Dublin Mason Bookseller p 6 Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 3 September 2020 Duffy Charles Gavan 1848 The Creed of The Nation A Profession of Confederate Principles Dublin Mason Bookseller p 9 Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 3 September 2020 La Rocca p 87 John Huntly McCarthy 1887 Ireland since the Union London Chatto amp Windus p 121 La Rocca p 78 80 Navickas Katrina 2016 Protest and the politics of space and place 1789 1848 Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 978 1 78499 627 7 Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 19 April 2021 Sir Charles Gavan Duffy Four Years of Irish History 1845 1849 Cassell Petter Galpin amp Co 1888 p 389 Duffy Charles Gavan 1883 Four Years of Irish History 1845 1849 Dublin Cassell Petter Galpin pp 640 645 Archived from the original on 9 June 2021 Retrieved 4 September 2020 Grogan Dick 29 July 1998 Taoiseach to announce purchase of 1848 Warhouse in Tipperary The Irish Times Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 6 September 2020 Duffy Charles Gavan 1883 Four Years of Irish History 1845 1849 Dublin Cassell Petter Galpin pp 743 745 Archived from the original on 9 June 2021 Retrieved 4 September 2020 Devoy John 1929 Recollections of an Irish rebel A personal narrative by John Devoy New York Chas P Young Co printers p 290 Retrieved 13 October 2020 Connolly James 1910 Labour in Irish History p 168 Foster R F 1988 Modern Ireland 1600 1972 Allen Lane Penguin p 381 ISBN 0713990104 Foster R F 1988 Modern Ireland 1600 1972 Allen Lane Penguin p 381 ISBN 0713990104 Beckett J C 1966 the Making of Modern Ireland 1603 1923 London Faber p 348 ISBN 0571092675 Lyons Dr Jane 1 March 2013 Sir Charles Gavan Duffy My Life in Two Hemispheres Vol II From Ireland net Archived from the original on 28 February 2021 Retrieved 27 March 2021 Lyons Jane March 2013 Irish Alliance and the Tenant Right League From Ireland net Archived from the original on 28 September 2020 Retrieved 6 September 2020 Davitt Michael 1904 The fall of feudalism in Ireland or The story of the land league revolution London Dalcassian Publishing Company p 70 Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 21 September 2020 Duffy Charles Gavan 1886 The League of North and South London Chapman amp Hall Duffy Charles Gavan 1886 The League of North and South An Episode in Irish History 1850 1854 London Chapman and Hall Bew Paul 2007 Ireland The Politics of Enmity 1789 2006 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 238 239 ISBN 9780198205555 Archived from the original on 2 April 2021 Retrieved 3 September 2020 Anton Brigitte O Brien R B 2008 Duffy Sir Charles Gavan Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 32921 ISBN 978 0 19 861412 8 Subscription or UK public library membership required McCaffrey Lawrence 1976 The Irish Catholic Diaspora in America Washington DC The Catholic University of America Press p 145 ISBN 9780813208961 Archived from the original on 2 April 2021 Retrieved 3 September 2020 Bew Paul 2007 Ireland The Politics of Enmity 1789 2006 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 238 239 ISBN 9780198205555 Archived from the original on 2 April 2021 Retrieved 3 September 2020 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain O Brien Richard Barry 1912 Duffy Charles Gavan In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography 2nd supplement London Smith Elder amp Co Senior Hereward 1991 The Last Invasion of Canada The Fenian Raids 1866 1870 Dundurn ISBN 9781550020854 Archived from the original on 21 July 2020 Retrieved 26 June 2020 Bardon Jonathan 2008 A History of Ireland in 250 Episodes Dublin Gill amp Macmillan p 389 ISBN 9780717146499 Bibliography Edit Bew Paul 2007 Ireland The Politics of Enmity 1789 2006 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198205555 James Quinn Young Ireland and The Writing of Irish History 2015 Bryan McGovern Young Ireland and Southern Nationalism Irish Studies South 2016 Iss 2 Article 5 online Archived 8 November 2017 at the Wayback Machine Richard Davis The Young Ireland Movement Dublin 1987 Malcolm Brown The Politics of Irish Literature from Thomas Davis to W B Yeats Allen amp Unwin 1973 Archived 7 April 2007 at the Wayback Machine Aidan Hegarty John Mitchel A Cause Too Many Camlane Press Arthur Griffith Thomas Davis The Thinker and Teacher M H Gill amp Son 1922 Young Ireland and 1848 Dennis Gwynn Cork University Press 1949 Daniel O Connell The Irish Liberator Dennis Gwynn Hutchinson amp Co Ltd O Connell Davis and the Colleges Bill Dennis Gwynn Cork University Press 1948 Smith O Brien And The Secession Dennis Gwynn Cork University Press Meagher of The Sword Edited By Arthur Griffith M H Gill amp Son Ltd 1916 Young Irelander Abroad The Diary of Charles Hart Ed Brendan O Cathaoir University Press John Mitchel First Felon for Ireland Ed Brian O Higgins Brian O Higgins 1947 Rossa s Recollections 1838 to 1898 The Lyons Press 2004 James Connolly The Re Conquest of Ireland Fleet Street 1915 Louis J Walsh John Mitchel Noted Irish Lives The Talbot Press Ltd 1934 Life of John Mitchel P A Sillard James Duffy and Co Ltd 1908 John Mitchel P S O Hegarty Maunsel amp Company Ltd 1917 R V Comerford The Fenians in Context Irish Politics amp Society 1848 82 Wolfhound Press 1998 Seamus MacCall Irish Mitchel Thomas Nelson and Sons Ltd 1938 T A Jackson Ireland Her Own Lawrence amp Wishart Ltd 1976 T C Luby Life and Times of Daniel O Connell Cameron amp Ferguson T F O Sullivan Young Ireland The Kerryman Ltd 1945 Terry Golway Irish Rebel John Devoy and America s Fight for Irish Freedom St Martin s Griffin 1998 Thomas Gallagher Paddy s Lament Ireland 1846 1847 Prelude to Hatred Poolbeg 1994 James Fintan Lalor Thomas P O Neill Golden Publications 2003 Charles Gavan Duffy Conversations With Carlyle 1892 with Introduction Stray Thoughts on Young Ireland by Brendan Clifford Athol Books Belfast ISBN 0 85034 114 0 Brendan Clifford and Julianne Herlihy Envoi Taking Leave of Roy Foster Cork Aubane Historical Society Robert Sloan William Smith O Brien and the Young Ireland Rebellion of 1848 Four Courts Press 2000 An Gorta Mor M W Savage The Falcon Family or Young Ireland London 1845 Quinnipiac UniversityExternal links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Young Ireland nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1905 New International Encyclopedia article Young Ireland Young Ireland Archived 15 February 2005 at the Wayback Machine from the Encyclopedia of 1848 Revolutions An Gorta Mor Archived 8 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine from Quinnipiac University Legal transcripts relating to the trials of Young Irelanders Young Irelanders in Tasmania Archived 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Young Irelanders in Tasmania wiki Archived 1 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Young Ireland amp oldid 1174316404, 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.