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IT HAPPENED IN OCTOBER
Theobold Wolfe Tone
by Mike McCormack, NY State Historian
The closest that the Irish ever came to complete independence happened
when Irish Catholics and Protestants united in a brotherhood of purpose
for the benefit of all. It started at the time of the American
Revolution.
The 1777 surrender of General Burgoyne at Saratoga in the American
Revolution was followed by the alliance of France to America's cause.
The British Parliament began to fear an invasion of either England or
Ireland. In April 1778, John Paul Jones crossed the Atlantic, captured
two British ships, then boldly sailed into Belfast Bay in broad
daylight, and sank a British Man-0-War. England was painfully aware that
their power in Ireland to repel such attacks was non-existent, so they
gave in to a suggestion made by Henry Grattan’s Patriot Party in the
Irish Parliament: the creation of a corps of volunteers to defend
England's Irish colony.
The Patriot Party had evolved in the Irish Parliament as a result of the
Crown’s policies against dissenters. Church of Ireland members held all
the privileged positions, and the predominantly Catholic native Irish
were forced to the low end of the economic scale, but all other
Protestants, including Methodists, Presbyterians, Baptists, and Quakers
who made up the growing middle class of professionals and tradesmen,
were called Dissenters,
and were likewise disenfranchised. As Turlough Faolain further revealed
in his book, Blood on the Harp,
Although the Penal Laws had been
specifically targeted at the Papists, much of the legislation had
been drafted in such a way to make the Dissenters subject to the same
restrictions. Throughout the 18th
century, selfish exploitation incited violence in all corners of
England’s colonial empire. In Ireland, angry Irish tenants formed secret
agrarian societies like the Whiteboys
and Defenders
to punish the abuses of the Landlords. Dissenters followed with secret
Protestant societies of their own like the
Steel Boys in reaction to Ascendancy
outrages. In 1759, Henry Flood, a leader of Irish Protestants in
opposition to England’s economic exploitation, was elected to the Irish
Parliament, and he formed a faction called the
Patriot Party. The
Patriot Party attracted Dissenters seeking change, and England bought
off Flood with the position of Vice Treasurer. Henry Grattan stepped in
to assume that vacated leadership, and the Patriot Party became the
opposition party in the Irish Parliament.
Within two years after approval to form a Corps of Volunteers, 100,000
men were armed by the loyal aristocracy. Catholics were initially
excluded from the volunteers, but when Spain entered the American
alliance in 1779, Catholics were not only invited in, but armed. The
volunteers did not turn out to be the loyal army that the Crown had
hoped for. Not only had the Catholics no love of the Crown, but the
Presbyterians had grievance with England over unfair trade laws that
favored British products and crippled the Irish woolen and linen trades.
Thus when the volunteers came to strength, the first invasion they
repelled was the invasion of British-manufactured goods. In 1779 Henry
Gratten moved in Parliament for Free Trade for Ireland. Knowing that his
supporters were in the minority, on the day of the vote the indomitable
Napper Tandy could be seen from the windows of Parliament with his
volunteer artillery corps in their emerald and scarlet uniforms. They
were mustered on College Green with their cannon trained on the
assembly! The Free Trade Bill passed and the embargo was lifted on Irish
exports. England became more nervous as Ireland became bolder.
In 1780, Gratten moved a Declaration of Right to grant the Irish
Parliament independent status under the Crown, but the measure was
opposed. In October 1781, Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown! Afraid
that Ireland would erupt next, King George gave Gratten his Irish
Parliament, although it was a shallow victory. Only 64 of the 300 seats
were filled by elections; the remainder were peers, lords, and
landlords, and was hopelessly corrupt. There was one however, who
entered and challenged that corrupt body; his name was Theobold Wolfe
Tone.
Inspired by the American and French revolutions, Tone worked to unite
the Irish people. In September, 1791, he published a pamphlet
An Argument on Behalf of the Catholics of
Ireland by a Northern Whig explaining
that both Dissenters and Catholics had common cause and a common enemy -
England! The pamphlet was so well received that he was invited by Henry
Joy McCracken to meet with the Northern Whig Club in Belfast. On Oct 12
Tone met with Thomas Russell and William Sinclair and on the 14th he met
with a Secret Committee to discuss his plan for organized political and
economic opposition to England. From it sprang an organization known as
The United Irishmen which held its first meeting on October 26. They
began to lobby for Catholic rights. England, on the verge of war with
France, acquiesced, and the Franchise of 1793 was passed granting
limited rights to Catholics.
Though legally established, England was determined to break this new
union called The United Irishmen
and began to sew seeds of division. Religious propaganda was aimed at
both sides - each denouncing the other, and in 1795, as a final
solution, The Orange Order
was formed among loyal Church of Ireland protestants to exterminate
Catholic `troublemakers'. Homes were raided, murders committed, and
farms burned to the ground. Tone and the other leaders of
The United Irishmen
remodeled their organization from a political to a military one. As Tone
travelled to America and France for aid, Insurrection and Indemnity Acts
were passed by Parliament and England's war against The United Irishmen
accelerated. Atrocities were commonplace and leaders of the organization
were arrested. Tone secured French aid and led a fleet of 43 French
ships to Ireland. A fierce storm prevented their landing and they
returned to France with the broken-hearted Wolfe Tone who immediately
began lobbying for the French to mount yet another expedition.
On March 30, 1798, England declared Martial Law in Ireland to break The
United Irishmen or force them into premature action. By May 27, the
tactic succeeded. The people were finally goaded into action in a
disjointed rather than coordinated insurrection - the rising of 1798 had
begun. The leaderless and unarmed people of Wexford followed, initially
led by a simple parish priest named Father John Murphy. News of the
rising reached Tone in France, and he frantically pressed the French to
aid his people who were already in the field against overwhelming odds.
A small force of 1,000 men was dispatched, to be followed by a larger
force. They landed on August 22, but at the wrong place - Killala Bay in
Mayo. England dispatched General Cornwallis (recently disgraced by his
surrender in America to an army made up of many Irish immigrants) to
redeem his honor in Ireland. He landed at the head of a massive army and
overpowered the French and Irish forces. French prisoners were
expatriated back to France while the Irish were put to the sword.
Tone arrived with the final French force off Lough Swilly and ran
directly into a waiting British fleet. After a desperate 6-hour battle,
during which Tone himself commanded a battery of ships guns, the French
fleet was routed and Tone was captured. As he was placed in chains he
declared, For the cause which I have
embraced, I am prouder to wear these chains than if I were decorated
with the Star and Garter of England..
After his court-martial on November 10, he said,
I have sacrificed all in life; I have
courted poverty; I left a beloved wife unprotected and children whom I
adore fatherless. After such
sacrifice in the cause of justice and freedom - it is no great effort to
add the sacrifice of my life. Wolfe Tone made that sacrifice on November
19, 1798. He was buried in Bodenstown, in the grave which Ireland
cherishes today as her most precious possession. Thus ended a glorious
dream that had all started in October, 1791.

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