From Rebels to Revolutionaries: a brief history of the founding of the Fenians and the Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB) in Ireland and the United States, March 17, 1858by Peter VronskyI noticed that under " Today in History" there was mention of the Fenian invasion of Canada and the whole scheme to take Canada hostage to obtain the freedom of Ireland. News to me, actually...Here is the story of the Fenians |
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JAMES STEPHENS: co-founder in Dublin of the Irish
Republican Brotherhood (I.R.B.) - The Fenians
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Founded in 1858 by former
Young Irelander rebels James Stephens in Dublin and John O’Mahony in New
York City, the Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB) in Ireland and the
Fenian Brotherhood (FB) in the United States was a predecessor to the
twentieth-century IRA.
In fact the Fenian insurgents who invaded
Canada in 1866 called themselves the Irish Republican Army (IRA)—the first known
usage of that appellation.[1]
Eventually the IRB became known as the
“Fenians” even back home in Ireland and in England.[2]
Their goal was the creation of an
independent democratically liberal republican Ireland free of the
British Crown, a nationalist ambition shaped by a seven century-long
conflicted yet symbiotic relationship between the Irish and English
peoples which is beyond the scope of all the bandwidth of the entire
internet to describe satisfactorily.[3]
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JOHN O'MAHONY: co-founder in
New York City of the Fenian Brotherhood.
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After the bloody Irish
Rebellion of 1798, for the next fifty years the main thrust of political
dissent in Ireland was channelled into peaceful legislative and
constitutional reform.
The Catholic Daniel O’Connell spearheaded
two great political movements one after the other—the emancipation of
Catholics and the repeal of the Act of Union.
O’Connell’s strategy involved rallying
thousands of Irish Catholics in ‘monster meetings’—the largest estimated
at 750,000 strong at Royal Hill in August 1843.
These huge demonstrations were disciplined
and well behaved, which perhaps was even more terrifying to the authorities of that era than small
unruly uprisings.
In 1828 despite
proscriptions on the election of Catholics to Parliament, O’Connell was
elected and in 1829, Parliament lifted the remaining legislative
vestiges of the
Penal Acts with
the passage of the
Emancipation Act.
Now O’Connell would turn his attention
to promoting the repeal of the Act of Union through the same strategy
and tactics, but this time attempting to bring Protestants into his
movement as well.
Parallel to O’Connell’s
legislative movement in the wake of the failure of the 1798 Rebellion,
there arose a new network of radical secret societies in the tradition
of the Defenders:
the Ribbonmen.
Historians have often
dismissed Ribbonism as a “post-United Irishmen-pre-famine” continuation
of the Whiteboys and Defenders tradition—a type of peasant self-defence
association bordering on a
mafia.
Tom Garvin suggests that Ribbonism was
something more:
These societies developed into
regional networks and tended to become politicized, some of them
eventually becoming affiliated to quite elaborate all-Ireland
organizations. Some were also attracted to politics of a nationalist and
quasi-revolutionary kind to further their activities….they
served as prototypes for the far better-known separatist Fenian movement
of the I860s.[4]
Perhaps more important than what historians think,
is what the Fenians might have thought. Garvin quotes Michael Davitt,
one of the Fenian founders who attributed the movement’s lineage through
a line from Defenderism to Ribbonism.
According to Davitt, late Ribbonism was an
international proto-political movement which migrated with Irish
labourers to Britain and the United States, while Matthew Barlow has
described their presence and activities in Canada.[5]
Interest in O’Connell’s
popular legislative movement was stopped dead by an unprecedented
calamity of holocaust proportions—the Irish Potato Famine of 1845-1849.
It impacted most on Catholic peasants who
depended upon the potato for subsistence and drove at least 1.5 million
predominately Catholic refugees to immigrate and killed another eight
hundred thousand to one million by starvation and disease.
In 1841 the population of Ireland was 8.2
million.
At the current rate of growth it should
have reached 9 million easily by 1851.
But the census in 1851 showed a surviving
population of only 6.5 million.[6]
The famine and the British
government’s mismanagement of it to the extent that some characterize it
as an act of blatant genocide, radicalized some of O’Connell’s followers
into reviving the United Irishmen call for self-determination and
Catholic and Protestant unity under an Irish identity through armed
rebellion.
The Young Ireland movement broke away from
O’Connell’s legislative movement and began to hesitatingly argue for
armed insurrection and the establishment of an independent Ireland.
The Young Irelander James
Stephens was twenty-four when he managed to escape from Ireland and
arrive in Paris as a refugee.
Only fragments are known about Stephen’s
pre-Fenian life.
His educational background is unknown but
it was said he was employed on the Waterford and Limerick Railway as a
civil engineer.[7]
His most recent biographer, Marta Ramón was
unable to find any surviving employment records from the railway but has
established that before 1848 he was employed as a clerk at an auction
house and bookseller.[8]
Once safely in Paris, Stephens eked out a
miserable living as a language teacher and freelance journalist,
translating English press into French, while at the same time rising to
prominence in the Irish exile community as a pamphleteer on Irish
independence and a Young Ireland spokesman.
In Paris, Stephens and
O’Mahony were caught up in Louis Napoleon’s overthrow of the Second
Republic in December 1851 and are alleged to have participated in the
street fighting in the failed defence of the republic.
It was in this period of his exile that
James Stephens was transformed from rebel to professional revolutionary.
Paris in this period was
ground-zero of a myriad of revolutionary secret societies, some
domestic, others in exile from other regions.
Their quasi-Masonic pyramidal insulated
cell-like structure would resemble later that of the IRB and Fenian
“circles.”
It was alleged that Stephens and O’Mahony
were initiated into one of these secret societies: Louis Auguste
Blanqui’s revolutionary Society of the Seasons, being the most often
cited candidate.[9]
Stephens himself denied membership in any of the
European societies but did write:
"Once I resolved that armed
revolution was the only course for Ireland, I commenced a particular
study of Continental secret societies, and in particular those which had
ramifications in Italy….I proposed, however, not so much to make a
slavish imitation of any known secret society as a selection of the good
qualities of each, and fuse them into that which I was then about
creating".[10]
The
Carbonari of course would be the
society that had the most “ramification” in Italy and its organizational
structure would be similar to the one Stephens would lead in Ireland.
If Stephens was not an initiate of any
society, he did have links with members of these societies.
In Paris, Stephens
was tutored in Italian by General Guglielmo Pepe, the
Carbonari
deputy of Daniel Manin—the 1848
Venetian revolutionary.
Stephens was also associated with
Jérôme-Adolphe Blanqui—the brother of Louis-August of the Society of
Seasons.[11]
John
Rutherford in his
Secret History of the Fenian Conspiracy
published in 1877, claims that Stephens and
O’Mahony were agents of the Russian secret service recruited to create
chaos in the British Empire during the Crimean War.
According to Rutherford, O’Mahony was
specifically to organize an American branch of an Irish terrorist
organization while Stephens was to organize the Irish branch.[12]
Such a claim
certainly might not be all that outlandish in the Cold War second half
of the 20th
Century.
The timing of O’Mahony’s departure from Paris in December 1853
and his arrival in the USA in January 1854 coincides with the escalation
of the Crimean War.
O’Mahony
established himself in New York City and with several other prominent
Irish exiles formed the Emmet Monument Association (EMA)—a veiled
reference to his epitaph speech about no memorials being raised in his
name until Ireland is free.
The EMA’s objective was to raise a
guerrilla army in the United States and send it into action in Ireland
while England was bogged down in the Crimean conflict.
At meetings in the Russian Consulate in New
York and at its Embassy in Washington, the EMA was promised financial
and material support by the Russians.
But in the end, the support apparently
never materialized.[13]
That probably was the extent of the
Russians’ hand in the founding of the IRB.
The founders of the EMA could barely get
along with each other let alone serve as agents of the Russian secret
service.
In
June 1855, Joseph Danieffe, a young tailor’s cutter in New York and a
member of the EMA was given the mission of organizing a branch in
Ireland and told that an armed expedition would follow him to Ireland in
September.[14]
Upon his arrival in Ireland, Danieffe
proceeded to link-up with the various revolutionaries of the ’48 and ’49
rebellions and recruited them into the EMA with stories of the wealth of
available support from the Irish in the US.
But by September the promised expedition
had not arrived and Danieffe hearing no further information from the EMA
concluded that his mission was over and prepared to return to New York.
In New York, the EMA was collapsing under
the weight of internal conflicts among its leaders and intrigues with
other rival nationalist movements—all competing in their attempts to
raise financing among the Irish diaspora for their respective causes.
Danieffe was persuaded to remain in Ireland
for awhile longer until things get sorted out.
James Stephens in the
meantime by the middle of 1855 abandoned Paris and began his journey
back to Ireland via England.
He arrived in Ireland sometime in January
1856.
Again, it is unclear what his precise objective
was—revolutionary or literary.
Stephens and his followers claim he came to
Ireland to organize the very revolutionary movement he would come to
lead.
But there is more evidence that what in fact drove
Stephens at the time was the relentless poverty he was mired in as a
refugee in Paris.
He might have returned home in search of
better literary and journalistic opportunities.[15]
Whatever his purpose, Stephens began a
famous ‘3000 mile’ trek through Ireland calling on old contacts in the
revolutionary movement and making new ones.
Back in New York, in
the wake of the EMA’s collapse, the scholarly O’Mahony settled down into
a literary project of his own—the translation of Geoffrey Keating’s
History of Ireland from Gaelic into
English.[16]
The consolidation of the
Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB) and its American counterpart the
Fenian Brotherhood is frequently linked to the massive public national
campaign among the Irish in the USA in 1861 to raise money to repatriate
to Ireland the body of a minor 1848 uprising exile who died in San
Francisco—Terence McManus.
The funding drive for the internment of
McManus in his native soil was said to have re-wakened the nationalist
fervour of millions of Irish Americans who generously contributed to the
fund.
[17]
When McManus’ body arrived in Ireland it is
said to have done the same there—the funeral procession it was claimed
was seven miles long.[18]
The McManus funeral is sometime cited as
the cementing of what were said to be two independent movements—the IRB
in Ireland and the Fenians in the USA.
This above described twinning
of the IRB and the Fenians, however, was actually triggered four years
earlier in 1857 by another funeral, that of an even more obscure veteran
of the just as an obscure ‘49 uprising:
Philip Gray.
What troubled many of the Irish
militants—including Stephens—was that the Irish press had entirely
ignored Gray’s passing and mention of the rebellions.
An attempt was made to raise money for a
monument for Gray to memorialize the cause, but without press coverage
of his death, this was unlikely to be a successful endeavour.
This might have been the elusive ‘big-bang’
in the history of the Fenian movement.
In March 1857 Stephens wrote to his fellow Paris
exile O’Mahony in the United States broaching the idea of a launching a
Gray monument fund there.[19]
Stephens asked O’Mahony to raise funding on
“your side of the water.”[20]
The Gray Fund went nowhere but Stephens and
O’Mahony established now an operative link.
The remnants of the EMA in New York
recognized in Stephens a viable contact in Ireland of much more mature
revolutionary pedigree than the young tailor’s cutter Joseph Danieffe.
In December 1857 an emissary
from New York brought Stephens letters from O’Mahony and other prominent
US Irish militants offering financial support and an army if he would
organize its reception and deployment in Ireland.
In January 1858 Stephens sent for Danieffe
and after reading to him the letters from New York (their text has not
survived) he took command of Danieffe, ordering him to immediately
return to New York bearing his reply.[21]
Stephens’ conditions were
financially modest—three monthly instalments of £80 to £100 and absolute
unquestioned authority over the operation—he demanded to be “perfectly
unshackled; in other words, a provisional dictator.
On this point I can conscientiously concede
nothing.
That I should not be hampered by wavering
or imbecile it will be well to make out this in proper form, with the
signature of every influential Irishmen of our union.”
In return Stephens promised
to organize “at least 10,000 of whom 1,500 shall have firearms and the
remainder pikes.”
He concluded with the suggestion that the
Americans send “500 men unarmed to England, there to meet an agent who
should furnish each of them with an Enfield rifle.”
Danieffe was to return with their reply and
the money.
The letter was dated “Paris, January 1866”
perhaps some veiled message to O’Mahony referring to their shared time
there in exile.[22]
Three months later Danieffe
returned from New York.
On St. Patrick’s Day, March 17, 1858 he delivered to
Stephens in Dublin the minimum £80 he had demanded and a document dated
February 28 and signed by O’Mahony and fifteen other prominent Irish
militants in the USA stating
We the undersigned members of
the Irish Revolutionary committee, hereby appoint and constitute James
Stephens, of the city of Dublin, Chief Executive of the Irish
Revolutionary movement and give him on our own and our comrades’ behalf
supreme control and absolute authority over that movement in Ireland.[23]
That evening, in Stephens’
Lombard Street lodgings a small group of Irish militants came over, read
the letter and swore an oath founding the Irish Revolutionary
Brotherhood which was later renamed as the Irish Republican Brotherhood
(IRB).[24]
The next morning they departed in separate
directions each to organize an IRB cell—or “circle” as they would be
called.
In New
York City in the meantime, O’Mahony who had came across the term in
Keating’s
History of Ireland
when translating it into English, named his
American branch of the IRB, the “Fenian Brotherhood (FB)” somewhere
between January and April 1859.[26]
The
American Fenian Brotherhood took its name from pre-Christian Third
Century A.D. Gaelic warrior clans, the
Fiana, or
Fianna Eirionn.
The Fians, Fiana, or Fenians according to
one source “employed their time alternately in war, the chase, and the
cultivation of poetry.”
Their tradition also encompasses Scotland
where their mythical chief—Finn or Fionn MacCumhal [Fion Mac Coohal],
(the Fingal of Macpherson) is alleged to have died in A.D. 283.[27]
The
legendary origins of the
Fianna were
already being hotly debated in the 1860s as evidenced by a letter-writer
to the Irish Canadian in
1866 who protested, “there were Fenians in Ireland before Trean Mor, the
grandfather of Fion was born.”[28]
In a more recent and less mythological
dimension, the roots of Fenianism go back to groups like the Whiteboys
and Defenders:
peasant self-defence
associations similar to the early Sicilian rural
mafia and to
their further transformation in the ‘post-United Irishmen-pre-famine’
Ribbonmen period into a transnational Irish nationalist underground.[29]
Whether the Fenians were
nationalists, rebels, patriots, assassins, insurgents, bandits,
irregulars, freedom fighters, pirates, murderers, martyrs, tribal
militia, national revolutionaries, guerrillas or terrorists, depends
much upon their historical chronology and an observer’s point-of-view.
The Fenians were the first modern
transcontinental national insurgent group in the western world with
operational cells in Ireland, England, Canada, United States, South
America, New Zealand and Australia and a banking centre in Paris.
They organized themselves into cells called
‘circles.’ A Fenian circle was like a regiment:
a colonel, the ‘centre’ or ‘A’ recruited
nine ‘B’s or captains, who recruited ‘C’s or sergeants who each chose
nine ‘D’s—the rank and file privates.
Outside of the United States in the British
Empire, Fenian circles operated clandestinely. A chain of secrecy worked
its way upwards:
the ‘A’ was known only to his ‘B’s, the
‘B’s only to their ‘C’s and so forth.
Senior leaders in a city, territory or
state were called ‘head centres.’[30]
In Toronto and Montreal they infiltrated
the leadership of a local militant Irish Catholic anti-Orange Order
self-defence movement, the Hibernian Benevolent Society (HBS).[31]
Steam power gave the Fenians
an unprecedented trans-Atlantic mobility; the telegraph linked them
together at near internet speed (albeit without its bandwidth); cheap
newsprint and steam driven printing presses gave them a mass-media
voice; industrialism, an ocean of patriotic small wage earners to fund
their cause; and the ascent of global capitalism offered a modern
banking system to raise and distribute operational funds across oceans
and continents, while the American Civil War would mobilize, arm and
militarize tens of thousands of Irish-American patriots.[32]
While the early Fenians were
not as bloodthirsty as today’s international terrorists, and as some of
their many defenders point out, they were liberal-democratic-nationalist
revolutionaries who strongly opposed clerical interference, and in the
early stages of their history before resorting to kidnapping and
dynamite bombings, believed in the concept of ‘open and manly warfare’[33]
it can be nonetheless said that
in the
perception of authorities, the majority
of the press and the public, the Fenians were regarded in their time in
the way al-Qaida is
perceived today.
The Fenians were broadly seen
in the mid-Victorian era as a fanatical religious terrorist movement
representing a radical fundamentalist Catholicism linked to a Papacy
with political ambitions at its conspiratorial centre in Rome.
Very similar to the way Muslim immigrant
communities are suspected of sympathizing with and supporting and
harbouring fanatical Islamic terrorists today, the Irish-Catholic
immigrant community dramatically enlarged in Canada by famine migration
in the preceding years, was suspected in the 1860s of Fenian
allegiances.
The clandestine relationship between the
Catholic HBS in Canada and Fenians did not help although in the end, no
Canadian Fenian circles are known to have participated in the June 1866
attack into Canada.
Their presence in Canada contributed to the
paranoia of a ‘fifth column’ but it never manifested itself in reality
once the invasion occurred.
The broader truth, however, was that
Fenianism went beyond the question of religious sectarianism:
of the 58 Fenians captured on the Niagara
Frontier in 1866 and confined to the Toronto gaol, a full third were
Protestants (19 Protestants with one prisoner claiming no religious
affiliation.)[35]
Fenianism was a nationalist republican movement and not a Catholic one.
Nonetheless, even when
fighting in conventional uniformed formations the Fenians were
classified as illegal combatants, piratical insurgents fighting a ‘dirty
war.’
Familiar to international terrorism today but
entirely new in the emerging telegraph networked world of the
mid-nineteenth century was the Fenians’ global reach, their
quasi-independent franchise cell-like structure,
their operational reliance on long distance
encrypted communications, use of public and press wire announcements,
rallies and ‘fairs’, the launching of deceptive feints and
disinformation, auxiliary cultural, educational and recreational
programs, organizations and publications,
use of long-term
sustained intelligence gathering, deployment of “sleepers”, public and
clandestine fund raising, the use of sophisticated financial instruments
in the international banking system, and the complexity of the
repercussions their acts had on international relations and the
dimension of the alarm and fear they raised in the British Empire.
The
Fenians were
the great perceived modern
transnational internal threat in the British Empire in the second half
of the nineteenth century until supplanted by first the fear of
international anarchism followed by that of Imperial German spies.
Despite these structural similarities to
current terrorist movements, however, there is nothing in this thesis
describing the conduct of the Fenian invaders in 1866 towards the
civilian population in Canada or towards its officials, combatants and
prisoners-of-war and wounded that could be characterized other than
gallant and civilized; at least as gallant as an expropriating, foraging
insurgent army can afford to be in battle.[36]
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