Young Ireland ( ) was a political, cultural and
social movement of the mid-19th century. It led changes in
Irish nationalism, including an abortive
rebellion known as the
Young Irelander Rebellion of
1848.
Many of the latter's leaders were tried for
sedition and sentenced to penal transportation to Van Diemen's
Land
. From its beginnings in the late 1830s,
Young Ireland grew in influence and inspired following generations
of Irish Nationalists.
History
The name Young Ireland was originally used in a disparaging way to
describe the group of young
Repeal
Association members who were associated with
The Nation newspaper.
At the
time, the Repeal Association was
campaigning for the repeal of the Act
of Union 1800 between the kingdoms of Great Britain
and Ireland. The term was first coined by
the "English" press, and later used by leader
Daniel O'Connell in a vindictive attack at
Conciliation Hall, home of the
Repeal
Association.
Young Ireland traced its origins to the new College Historical
Society, founded on 29 March 1839, at a meeting at Francis
Kearney’s chambers, 27 College. Among the members of this new
society were
John Blake Dillon,
Thomas MacNeven, William Eliot Hudson and
Thomas Davis, who
was elected its president in 1840. While still at
Trinity College, Davis had addressed the
Dublin Historical Society, which met at the Dorset Institute in
Upper Sackville Street from 1836 to 1838. Davis became president
and gave two lectures. (Available from the National Library of
Ireland, the lectures clearly show that Davis had become a
convinced Irish nationalist by this period.
Repeal Association
On 15
April 1840, Daniel
O’Connell held the first meeting of his new Repeal Association, in the Corn Exchange, Dublin
. The
group was received with sneers, and O’Connell’s sincerity was
questioned. In the General Election in 1832, O’Connell had made the
same appeal for repeal. Although half the representatives chosen
for Ireland were pledged Repealers, O’Connell dropped the demand.
Several new members accepted appointments under the system they had
pledged to overthrow. Since that time, O’Connell had become a close
ally of the
Whigs. As they were
expected to fall from power in 1840, activists' renewing the
agitation for Repeal was suspected as a devise to embarrass the new
administration. Not one man of status, outside the members of the
defunct Association, joined the ranks of the new one. With the new
Association's mounting debts, the contributions from its members
not sufficient to pay half its ordinary expenses, both
Thomas Davis and
John Blake Dillon, joined its
ranks in April 1841, having in the process, to overcome their
dislike of the abusive tone of O’Connell’s agitation. O’Connell
welcomed them and made them members of the General Committee, which
controlled the organisation of the Association. The two men began
their work in earnest; Davis first became Chairman of a
sub-committee in charge of the registers of the Association, which
contained the names of all the Members.
Davis thus could communicate with all the leading politicians of
the Party, and whenever he came across any with depth or ability;
he at once developed into friendly associations. In the autumn of
1841, Dillon and Davis took over the roles of Editor and sub-Editor
of the
Morning Register, a Dublin daily paper belonging to
Alderman Staunton, which had been the organ of the
Catholic Association, and “was
generally regarded among the mercenaries” of the Dublin Castle,
according to
Michael Doheny, who was
to become one of Young Ireland's leading figures. As editors they
featured articles on such topics as
Protestant nationality, historical parallels from
classic and mediaeval history, and agencies and conditions of
guerrilla warfare.
Michael Doheny suggests in his
Felon’s
Track that “all Dublin was startled by the originality, vigour
and brilliancy of its articles”. It was also at this time that they
first came into contact with
Charles
Gavan Duffy. On Duffy’s next visit to Dublin some six months
later, he discovered that Davis and Dillon had abandoned their
experiment with the
Register. Davis had no way to reach a
wider public, even with his contributions to the
Dublin Monthly
Magazine.
The Nation

Birth of the Nation
The three decided to found a new national newspaper, which they
called
The
Nation. Into this new venture, Dillon brought two young
friends, the barrister
John O'Hagan and
law student
John Edward Pigot.
Davis brought some of his circle of young friends from the
Historical Society, and Duffy brought in the poet
James Clarence Mangan; William O’Neill
Daunt, a County Cork landowner; and T. M. Hughes, former editor of
the
London Charivari , which was later absorbed into
Punch. On 15 October 1842,
the first number of
The Nation was launched. “The
appearance of
The Nation and its immediate and phenomenal
success was a reinforcement for which O’Connell had scarcely dared
to hope”.
For the next three years, the newspaper was a major influence in
nationalist thinking.
O’Connell was aware of the significance of the support of the young men, but was wary of their professed freedom from the “gratitude of the past.” Davis was a skilful propagandist who worked behind the scenes, but exerted a singular influence. The success of the newspaper soon produced significant results. One of the most distinctive developments was the organization of Repeal reading rooms all over the country which The Nation was soon addressed. They found this an effective method of spreading their propaganda. By the spring of 1843, when The Nation had been in existence for six months, agitation for Repeal agitation was becoming formidable, and the Government was beginning to consider the old problem of how to suppress it.
The Secession
When members of the association, the Young Irelanders did not
advocate use of physical force to advance the cause of repeal and
opposed any such policy, O'Connell's introduction of the “Peace
Resolutions” in the Repeal Association was in part an attempt to
suggest the Young Irelanders were forces for violence. The "Peace
Resolutions" stated that physical force could never be justified
under any circumstances, at any time, and this was to be applied
retrospectively.
The use of physical force only became an issue with the Young
Irelanders, after they had left the association, and had formed the
Irish Confederation”.
O'Connell had used the threat of force, as was seen in his campaign
for
Catholic Emancipation, but
afterward he did not have the will.
This was demonstrated by the cancelled
'monster meeting' planned for Clontarf
in
1843. The monster Meetings were long a design of
Thomas Davis,
John Blake Dillon and
Michael Doheny .The object of which was to
train the people to military movements, since this object would
obviously be unsafe to announce, it was to be effected by other
means. Daniel O’Connell was fully aware of their intent at the
time, though he later denied it and repudiated those involved. This
meeting was prohibited by the
British
government, backed up with the threat of military force.
O'Connell took a political decision to not press ahead with the
summoning of the planned meeting for Clontarf, as the government
had plans ready to suppress it. This diminished his credibility
with the British - they were only prepared to concede when they
believed that there was a serious risk of an uprising. The Young
Irelanders had always agreed with
Daniel O'Connell and the
Repeal Association in its demand for
repeal, but split, when it did come, was over O'Connell's attempts
to form an alliance with the
Whig
Party in England, which would have led to the dropping of
repeal, as had happened in 1835. While the pretence used by
O’Connell’s supporters, was the adoption of the Peace
Resolutions.
The Irish Confederation
Late in the autumn of 1846, some prominent men undertook the task
of remonstrating with the Repeal Association. Among them were a,
Mr. Keeley, Mr. Holywood, Mr. Crean and Mr. Halpin all prominent
Dublin citizens . A few weeks later, a remonstrance at the course
pursued by the Association was produced and was signed by fifteen
hundred leading citizens of Dublin. It was delivered to the
Chairman of the Repeal Association on
2
October. This remonstrance was ordered by John O’Connell
(Daniel O’Connell’s son), to be flung into the gutter. The
Remonstrants and the public resented this humiliation, and
determined to hold a meeting in the Rotunda, Dublin, where they
proposed to defend themselves against this indignity. The meeting
was held on
3 November. Mr.
Thomas D'Arcy McGee, who had never been
a Member of the Association attended, and his speech described by
Michael Doheny to be “calm, forcible and conclusive on the points
at issue; and the excitement it created was, in no small degree,
enhanced by the fact that the speaker was a young man theretofore
unknown”.
. The success of the meeting suggested the possibility of an
experiment upon a large scale, as a preliminary to the formation of
the Confederation. The meeting was set for the
2 December. The main object was to reply to the
calumnies which, for nearly six months, had been urged against the
leading seceders. The remonstrant committee offered to defend them
against any allegations put by the Repeal Association. The meeting
was one of the most important ever held in the city. The entire
ability of the seceders was put into its preparation. Michael
Doheny states that “such was the sensation created by the
proceedings that two publishers, one in Dublin and one in Belfast,
brought out reports, in pamphlet form, which were read all over the
country with the greatest avidity”. It was suggested, casually at
the meeting, that the seceders would meet in January to announce
the course of political action they would recommend. On
13 January, the seceders met again, and their
deliberations were supported again by the same men, to secure to
the seceders freedom of speech and of action. It was at this
meeting the
Irish Confederation
was fully established. The foundations of which were to be freedom,
tolerance and truth. There were no declarations or calls for
rebellion, and no pledges of peace were given. The objectives were
they outlined the independence of the Irish nation and no means to
attain that end were abjured, save such as were inconsistent with
honour, morality and reason.
1848 Uprising
Widow McCormack's house, later called the Warhouse
The group's turn to violence was prompted by widespread deaths due
to the
1845 Irish
potato blight, government inaction,
and the evictions of numerous tenants from the land by some
landlords. At the same time, the Young Irelanders were inspired by
the
French Revolution, and popular
uprisings in 1848 across Europe in which governments and monarchies
toppled in favor of democratic reforms.
William Smith O'Brien, the
leader of the Young Ireland Party, launched an attempted rebellion
in July 1848, in response to British repression and the
introduction of martial law. He gathered landlords and tenants
together with Young Irelanders. O'Brien's failure to capture a
party of police barricaded in widow McCormack's house, who were
holding her children as hostages, marked the effective end of the
revolt.”, Though intermittent resistance continued till late 1849,
O'Brien and his colleagues were quickly arrested and convicted of
sedition. Originally sentenced to death, the young men received a
great outpouring of public support. The government commuted their
sentences to
penal
transportation to Van Diemen's Land, where they joined
John Mitchel.

Removal of Smith O'Brien under
sentence of death
The "Irish gentlemen" were assigned to different settlements to try
to reduce their continued collaboration.
Bibliography
Books By Young Irelanders (Irish Confederation)
Young Irelanders
See also
Other groups with the name
Notes
- Young Ireland, Sir Charles Gavan Duffy, Cassell, Petter, Galpin
& Co. 1880, Pg.291
- T. F. O'Sullivan, Young Ireland, The Kerryman Ltd.
1945, p. 1-4
- Dennis Gwynn, O'Connell Davis and the Collages Bill,
Cork University Press, 1948, p. 68
- Charles Gavan Duffy, Thomas Davis, The Memoirs of an Irish
Patriot, Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., Ltd pg.
14
- Dennis Gwynn, Young Ireland and 1848, Cork University
Press, 1949, pg 5
- Charles Gavan Duffy, Thomas Davis, The Memoirs of an Irish
Patriot, Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., Ltd pg.
13
- Michael Doheny, The Felon’s Track, M.H Gill & Son,
LTD, 1951, pg 14
- Charles Gavan Duffy, Thomas Davis, The Memoirs of an Irish
Patriot, Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., Ltd pg.
2-3
- Charles Gavan Duffy, Thomas Davis, The Memoirs of an Irish
Patriot, Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., Ltd pg.
3-4
- Michael Doheny, The Felon’s Track, M.H Gill & Son,
LTD, 1951, pg 17
- Charles Gavan Duffy, Thomas Davis, The Memoirs of an Irish
Patriot, Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., Ltd pg.
45
- Charles Gavan Duffy, Thomas Davis, The Memoirs of an Irish
Patriot, Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., Ltd pg.
47
- Charles Gavan Duffy, Young Ireland, Cassell, Petter,
Galpin & Co, 1880, pg 47
- Dennis Gwynn, Young Ireland and 1848, Cork University
Press, 1949, pg 6
- Dennis Gwynn, Young Ireland and 1848, Cork University
Press, 1949, pg 9
- P.A. Sillard, Life of John Mitchel, James Duffy &
Co. LTD, 1908, pg 7
- Dennis Gwynn, Young Ireland and 1848, Cork University
Press, 1949, pg 10
- Dennis Gwynn, Young Ireland and 1848, Cork University
Press, 1949, pg 11
- Michael Doheny, The Felon's Track, M.H. Gill
&Sons, LTD 1951, p. 105
- Michael Doheny, The Felon's Track, M.H. Gill
&Sons, LTD 1951, Pg 106
- Sir Charles Gavan Duffy, Young Ireland, Cassell,
Petter, Galpin & Co. 1880, Pg.274
- Sir Charles Gavan Duffy, Young Ireland, Cassell,
Petter, Galpin & Co. 1880, Pg.374
- The Felon's Track, By Michael Doheny, M.H. Gill &Sons, LTD
1951, Pg 20
- The Felon's Track, By Michael Doheny, M.H. Gill &Sons, LTD
1951, Pg 22
- Young Ireland, Sir Charles Gavan Duffy, Cassell, Petter, Galpin
& Co. 1880, Pg.361
- John Mitchel, The Crusade of the Period, Lynch, Cole
& Meehan 1873, pg 147
- Michael Doheny’s The Felon’s Track, M.H. Gill & Son, LTD,
1951 Edition pg 111-112
- Sir Charles Gavan Duffy, Four Years of Irish History
1845-1849, Cassell, Petter, Galpin & Co. 1888, p. 389
- Michael Doheny, The Felon's Track, M.H. Gill
&Sons, LTD 1951, p. 182
Additional Reading
-
[http://www.astonisher.com/archives/mjb/irishlit/irishlit_ch1.html
Malcolm Brown, The Politics of Irish Literature: from Thomas
Davis to W.B. Yeats, Allen & Unwin, 1973.
- Aidan Hegarty, John Mitchel, A Cause Too Many, Camlane
Press.
- Arthur Griffith, Thomas Davis, The Thinker and
Teacher, M.H. Gill & Son, 1922.
- Brigadier-General Thomas Francis Meagher His Political and
Military Career, Capt. W. F. Lyons, Burns Oates & Washbourne
Limited, 1869
- 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 Collages 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, Labour in Ireland, Fleet Street,
1910.
- 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 1140.
- 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 University
External links