|
Square-Toed Boots and Felt Hats:
Irish Revolutionaries and the Invasion of Canada
(1848-1871)
Marta Ramón-García
University of
Oviedo
Copyright (c) 2010
by Marta Ramón-García.
This text may be archived and redistributed both in electronic form and in
hard copy, provided that the author and journal are properly cited and no
fee is charged for access.
Abstract.
The Fenian movement was born in 1858 as an alliance
between the Irish Republican Brotherhood, a revolutionary secret society,
and the Fenian Brotherhood, an Irish-American organisation intended to
supply this society with funds and trained officers. This was not the
first time that Irish nationalists on both sides of the Atlantic had tried
to cooperate, but it was the first time that there was a steady
arrangement in place. The Fenian partnership was extremely successful on
the surface, but it was undermined by fundamental differences in customs,
political attitudes and ultimate goals between Irish and American Fenians.
The clearest evidence of these differences was afforded by the Fenian
Brotherhood’s successive attempts to invade Canada between 1866 and 1871.
As military episodes the Canadian raids were negligible; as Irish
revolutionary attempts they seem absurd. However, they were a perfectly
coherent manifestation of the Irish-American “hyphenated identity”. The
present article traces the parallel evolution of the Irish Republican
Brotherhood and the Fenian Brotherhood up to 1866, and reconstructs the
cultural and political reasons for the revival of the Canadian scheme, the
ensuing split in the Fenian Brotherhood, and the final collapse of the
Fenian alliance.
Key Words.
Ireland, history, nationalism, Fenians, Canada.
Resumen. El movimiento Feniano surgió en 1858 como una alianza entre
la Hermandad Republicana Irlandesa (Irish Republican Brotherhood), una
sociedad secreta revolucionaria, y la Hermandad Feniana (Fenian
Brotherhood), una organización americano-irlandesa concebida para
suministrar a esta sociedad ayuda económica y militar. No era la primera
vez que los nacionalistas irlandeses a ambos lados del Atlántico habían
intentado colaborar, pero era la primera vez que establecían un acuerdo
permanente. La alianza feniana resultaba enormemente provechosa en
apariencia, pero en realidad se veía socavada por diferencias
fundamentales en las costumbres, actitudes políticas y objetivos finales
de fenianos irlandeses y americanos. La prueba más clara de estas
diferencias fueron los sucesivos intentos de la Hermandad Feniana de
invadir Canadá entre 1866 y 1871. Desde el punto de vista militar, las
incursiones en Canadá fueron episodios insignificantes; como intentonas
revolucionarias pueden parecer absurdas. Sin embargo, eran una
manifestación perfectamente coherente de la “identidad con guión” (hyphenated
identity) de los americano-irlandeses. El presente artículo traza la
evolución paralela de la Hermandad Republicana Irlandesa y la Hermandad
Feniana hasta 1866, y reconstruye las razones culturales y políticas del
resurgimiento del proyecto de invasión de Canadá, la consiguiente escisión
en la Hermandad Feniana, y el desmoronamiento final de la alianza entre
fenianos irlandeses y americanos.
Palabras clave.
Irlanda, historia, nacionalismo, fenianos, Canadá.
On 12 April 1866
The Brooklyn Daily Eagle released a third edition of the day’s issue
with the following hurried report from Calais, on the border between the
state of Maine and New Brunswick:
There was much
excitement yesterday and last night in St. Stephens, N. B., opposite this
city.
The fears of a
Fenian raid somewhere on the border have been strengthening for several
days past, but the precise point of attack is not yet known. …
From two to three
hundred men were under arms at St. Stephens all last night, and all the
approaches to the town are strongly guarded, and every preparation made to
receive the Fenians.
The dreaded
“Fenians” were the members of the Fenian Brotherhood, an Irish-American
military society, and the ultimate object of the raid that was causing
such a commotion was the “liberation” of Ireland from British rule. Since
its foundation in 1858 the Fenian Brotherhood had been slowly evolving
from a semi-secret military body at the service of the Irish Republican
Brotherhood, a clandestine movement in Ireland, into a massive
organisation with a weakness for public displays and an alarming potential
for upsetting the delicate balance of post-Civil War Anglo-American
relations. From 1866 to 1871, at the height of Anglo-American tensions,
Fenian parties carried out a series of startling although ineffectual
raids into Canadian territory before the organisation exhausted its
resources and definitely lapsed into decline.
It has often been
stated that the alarm caused by the first Fenian raids of 1866 gave the
definite impulse to the Canadian Confederation of the following year (see
for instance Watts 1987: 771; Stacey 1968: 12). In all other respects,
however, the raids have been generally dismissed as little more than
comic-opera episodes (Miller 1985: 336; Wilson 2005: 50). But if they had
little military value in themselves, they are a fundamental piece in the
puzzle of Irish-American nationalism. As an approach to the cause of Irish
independence, the raids illustrate all the complexities of the
Irish-American nationalist commitment. As a revolutionary strategy, they
evidence the chasm between the American Fenians and their Irish Republican
Brotherhood allies “at home”, who were to be set aside when the Canadian
scheme gained momentum. The reasons for the collapse of the Fenian
movement in 1866 are various and complex, but the present article will
trace the divergent evolution of Irish Republican Brotherhood and Fenian
Brotherhood during these years in order to clarify the process leading to
the Canadian crisis and the dissolution of the Fenian partnership.
The Fenian venture
was not the first attempt by Irish-Americans to promote Irish nationalist
efforts, but it was the first time that they had a formal, long-term
agreement with an Irish organisation for this purpose. Although both
O’Connell’s Repeal Association and Young Ireland’s Irish Confederation in
the 1840s had had their respective American branches, they were simply
extensions of the parent organisation, and they did not play an
instrumental role on events in Ireland. This situation began to change in
1848. The Irish Confederation, caught in the republican fever sparked by
the “Spring of the Peoples” and desperate to stop the progress of the
Famine, prepared to make their mark by launching an insurrection after the
harvest. In the United States the newly-founded Irish Republican Union
proposed to contribute to this insurrection by sending off an Irish
brigade. The Nation newspaper reported a meeting of the Irish
Republican Union in New York where it was,
Resolved —That the
real wants of Ireland at this moment are, a want of Republican spirit, and
a want of military science.
Resolved —That the
object of the Irish Republican Union is, to supply her with those
requisites, in the persons of a few thousand Americanized Irishmen, who
are now ready and willing to embark in her battle (The Nation,
22 July 1848; Belchem 1995: 114).
The term
“Americanised Irishmen” might suggest that these nationalists considered
themselves first and foremost Irish, with a smattering of American culture
acquired by contact with their new host society. The situation, however,
was exactly the reverse. Irish nationalist organisations in the United
States followed American procedures, complied with American laws, and
ultimately protected American interests. In fact, their commitment to
their “native land” made these nationalists all the more strident in their
proclamations of American patriotism by way of compensation. In this case,
after a few gentle hints by “friends of Ireland”, including the
influential son of former President Tyler, warning that schemes of
invasion were in violation of the American constitution, the Irish
Republican Union rushed to proclaim their American patriotism and
declared:
The Irish Brigade
had formed themselves for the purpose of acting as citizen soldiers, and
taking their part in that capacity under the American flag (Cheers).
There was nothing to prevent them going forward afterwards as private
citizens, … to aid in her struggle, and in such a manner as would not give
offence to America, or involve her in any way whatever (Belchem 1995:
115).
Their dual
allegiance to Irish independence on the one hand, and American
constitutional legality on the other, helped the Irish-Americans to create
for themselves a distinctive ethnic and political identity while striving
for acceptance within the greater American society. But under these
circumstances, as Thomas N. Brown explains, “in the minds of their members
... these organizations tended to assume a greater importance than the
pursuit of Irish freedom. Ends and means got confused” (Brown 1966: 38).
The immediate necessities of the Irish-American population tended to
overshadow the distant utopia of an independent Ireland. This was stated
explicitly in 1855 by the New York Herald’s correspondent in
Richmond, when after reporting on a meeting of the Irish Emigrant Aid
Society, one of the Irish Republican Union’s successor organisations, he
concluded:
My observation
justifies me in saying that by far the most active influence at work in
this movement, and that which gives it most vitality, is the proscriptive
policy of the Know Nothings. … Believe me, they [the Irish] will make a
bold effort to free their native country from English dominion; not so
much with a view to better the condition of those now resident there, as
to prepare for themselves a place of retreat from Know Nothing
persecution. And if they fail, it is certain they will maintain the
organization, and take a stand here in opposition to them (Tribune,
15 December 1855).
Filibustering
schemes like the one planned by the Irish Republican Union in 1848 were
not in themselves a very serious threat to British authority, especially
when they were not coordinated with an organised uprising in Ireland
itself, but there was a far greater danger across the American border in
the shape of British Canada. Canada had several claims as the perfect
target for Irish-American nationalists. As Irish, they looked on the
Canadian provinces as fellow-victims of British monarchic rule in need of
liberation and admission into the blessings of the Republic; as Americans,
they advocated the annexation of Canada to the United States as part of
the nation’s “manifest destiny” to extend its territory across the
American continent. Although this is not to say that support for
annexation was deep-rooted or widespread in the United States, the idea
was well-established enough in American politics to surface with every
crisis in Anglo-American relations, and Irish-American nationalists simply
added their own particular motives to the general list.
Canada had posed a
security problem for the United States ever since the Revolutionary Wars,
and annexation had emerged as a desirable development not only on economic
but also defensive grounds. The scheme was thwarted during the eighteenth
century owing to the lack of vital French support and the United States’
own weakness in the aftermath of independence (Horsman 1987: 7). At the
time of the Anglo-American war of 1812, however, the American government
included Canada in their military plans and launched several campaigns
into Canadian territory. On this occasion,
the editor of the Shamrock newspaper vowed that “Ireland would be
rescued on the plains of Canada”, and encouraged both Irish-American
citizens and Irish immigrants to enlist in order to prove their devotion
to America (Senior 1978: 10). Now in 1848 one of the leaders of the Irish
Republican Union declared:
Canada contains
hundreds of thousands of patriotic Irishmen and of Canadians, who sigh for
annexation to this great and glorious republic. … It is therefore our
manifest duty to Ireland, to Canada and to Freedom, to send such agencies
as we deem most efficient to prepare the people of that oppressed colony
for annexation to these United States, and thus complete the work that
Washington began (
The Irish Republican
Union’s warlike projects were frustrated by the failure of Young Ireland’s
insurrection in July 1848, but Irish-American nationalism was again
revitalised by the trickle of exiles who arrived in the United States in
the aftermath of the rising. One of the first to arrive was Michael Doheny,
a prominent veteran of both the Repeal Association and the Irish
Confederation. Doheny placed much of the blame for their failure on their
lack of preparation and military training, and he immediately set out to
address the problem. The highly militarised American environment offered a
ready-made solution in the shape of state militias, and Doheny threw
himself into the work of organising volunteer Irish regiments. As he wrote
to William Smith O’Brien ten years later, by 1853 the Irish regiments had
swollen up to 25,000 members, but they went into rapid decline in the face
of two main obstacles: the first one was the lack of support from Thomas
Francis Meagher and John Mitchel, the two official leading lights of
Irish-American nationalism; the second one, which Doheny partly blamed for
the first, was the members’ own social shortcomings. As he lamented
himself to Smith O’Brien,
The officers were
very generally so unlettered, untutored and even rude that association
with them was disagreeable. You can have no conception of them from
anything you experienced in the committee of the R[epeal] A[ssociation]
because there after all education or rank commanded respect and deference
whereas here the inevitable tendency of equality between an educated and
uneducated and a superior and inferior man is to beget rudeness by way of
an assertion of the equality (W. S. O’Brien Papers, NLI MS. 446/3058, 20
August 1858).
Doheny was a
self-made man, the son of a farmer who had succeeded in becoming a
barrister, and one of Young Ireland’s most politically advanced
personalities, but even he could not escape the cultural shock that the
Young Irelanders usually experienced on finding themselves in an actual
republican society, where labourers were invited to attend presidential
receptions and chambermaids on vacation socialised with ‘respectable’
people at holiday resorts (The Irishman, 29 September 1849).
In spite of these
little roughnesses, however, American volunteer militias embodied many of
the aspirations of “physical force” Irish nationalists. Holding arms was
heavily restricted by British legislation in Ireland, and in times of
unrest the government would immediately proclaim the troublesome districts
and make it illegal altogether. In the United States, however, the right
to bear arms was enshrined in the constitution itself, and the military
spirit was extended to every aspect of American life. One British
traveller even alluded to the “ludicrous, yet unmeant sarcasm on the abuse
of military titles [which] exists in the appellation of ‘kitchen
colonels’, given by servants in America to men servants in families.”
(Thomas Colley Grattan in Allen 1971: 273). Volunteer militias multiplied,
and Irish-American nationalists took full and enthusiastic advantage of
them. From 1848 to 1857 the Irish Republican Union was succeeded by
organisations such as the Silent Friends, the Irishmen’s Civil and
Military Republican Union, the Irish Emigrant Aid Society, and especially
the Emmet Monument Association. All of these organisations were closely
linked to the different state militias, and all of them intended to send
military aid to Ireland in one shape or another.[1]
Then, in the summer
of 1857 the Sepoy rebellion in India again resuscitated the spirit of
“England’s difficulty” — the eternal “Irish opportunity”— and the Emmet
Monument Association set out to revive old projects. Its governing
committee, led by Michael Doheny and John O’Mahony, sent an envoy to
Ireland with a letter for James Stephens, a fellow 1848 veteran, offering
a volunteer force of 500 men and asking him to organise the country in
preparation for their arrival. Stephens agreed on condition of receiving
at least three instalments of £80 to £100, and especially of being
appointed “a provisional dictator” (Denieffe 1969:
159-60). He did not specify
whether he meant to dictate over the Irish organisation or the whole
enterprise, but the Americans responded by appointing him “Chief Executive
of the Irish Revolutionary movement” with “supreme control and absolute
authority over that movement in Ireland” (Davitt
Papers, TCD MS. 9659d/207, 28 February 1858). On
receiving this appointment and the first money instalment, on 17 March
1858 Stephens and other Dublin nationalists founded the Irish Republican
Brotherhood. The second instalment never arrived, however, and in October
Stephens travelled to the United States in order to consolidate the new
partnership and secure steady funding for the Irish Republican
Brotherhood. At the end of the year the EMA became reorganised as the
Fenian Brotherhood under John O’Mahony, but as part of the new arrangement
Stephens also obtained a new commission as “Chief Executive of the Irish
Revolutionary Movement” with “supreme control and absolute authority … at
home and abroad”, that is, ultimate power over both the Irish and American
branches of the new organisation (Davitt Papers,
TCD MS. 9659d/208, 9 December 1858).
Stephens’s nominal
position within the Fenian apparatus was more a symbol of the relationship
between the new partners than any real measure of his authority, but the
changes that it was to suffer over time did act as a barometer of the
evolution of the Fenian Brotherhood itself. With a supreme commander based
in Europe, it was understood — by Stephens, at any rate — that the Fenian
Brotherhood existed to fulfil the revolutionary needs of the Irish “at
home”. In this as in other issues he was catastrophically unaware of the
deeper nature of Irish-American nationalism. And the mutual lack of
understanding between Irish and American Fenians was evident even from
Stephens’s first contacts with his new partners.
In the course of his
New York visit Stephens wrote a remarkable diary where he recorded the
early days of the Fenian Brotherhood, but also his impressions as an
Irishman of what he plainly called “the land of Self, Greed and Grab”.
Ever the self-sufficient European, he judges American culture against Old
World standards and invariably finds it wanting. The diary describes, and
criticises, numerous aspects of life in America, from taste and customs to
architecture and urban planning; his favourite word to describe the
country is “ramshackleness”. And his American associates are but the
natural product of this environment’s “debasing influences”: mediocre,
poorly educated and lacking in any real political influence. And yet, as
he deplores,
The saddest — most
disgusting — thing in this is, that these men are taught to fancy they have
as good a right to sign documents, sit on committees, nay, lead
nations, as the wisest—best of the children of men! We have far too much
of this deplorable pretension in Ireland … but here it is incurable idiotcy, that is, the moment an Irishman becomes an American politician;
and I am sorry to learn that too many of them are such (Ramón 2008:
16-17).
Yet American culture
held many attractions for less fastidious revolutionaries than Stephens.
The rank and file of the Irish Republican Brotherhood, working for “the
Irish Republic, now virtually established” as their initiation oath would
have it, adopted American republicanism as a model of behaviour and almost
a state of mind. Being an Irish republican involved not only conspiring
against the government in secret, but also disregarding social conventions
in public. In the strongly hierarchical Irish society, refusing to abide
by the laws of deference was a political statement in itself. One informer
told the police in August 1864 that,
In conversation a
Fenian will use no kind of policy to any outside his society, or rarely
any person or reverence a clergyman but they never salute either a
nobleman or clergyman though knowing them well. ... In a word everything
republican in Society is practised by the Fenians and in yankee fashion as
far as can be by those who never were in Yankee Land (Fenian Police
Reports, NAI, no. 44a, 19 August 1864).
On the other hand,
this sort of self-assertion was reserved to those in power outside
the organisation. Irish Fenianism during Stephens’s time was described,
although with some exaggeration, as “the most completely despotic system
in the world” (Devoy 1969: 95), and even though the members were often
discontented with Stephens’s leadership they never made any serious effort
to challenge his authority. This was to be the key to the differences
between the Irish and American Fenians. While the Irish Republican
Brotherhood was designed as a secret army under one commander-in-chief
with theoretically unquestionable authority, the Fenian Brotherhood was a
mixture of volunteer militia and American political organisation whose
leader had to contend with differences of policy, internecine power
struggles and democratic procedures that did not always work in his
favour.
Up to 1863 the
Fenian Brotherhood had worked under a very similar structure to that
governing the Irish Republican Brotherhood: a series of cells or “circles”
each led by a “centre”, and all under the direction of a “Head Centre”, in
this case John O’Mahony. However, this arrangement was not suitable for
political life in the United States, and the organisation had come under
damaging accusations of being a secret society (Proceedings 1863:
58). Moreover, tension had been escalating between Stephens and O’Mahony
over lack of progress and the relative position of the partners, and
nominal subordination to Stephens had become impractical and obnoxious to
O’Mahony. In November 1863 O’Mahony called a national convention in order
to effect a series of changes. Before its commencement he wrote to
Stephens:
Brother, The time is
come when I feel called upon to resign my position as H.C.F.B. into
the hands of my constituents as they are to be represented at the
forthcoming general Convention ...
In order to be a
perfectly free agent thereat I have herewith sent you my resignation as
an officer of your command, a thing implied by my acceptance of
an appointment from you, though as far as regards you personally I am an
unpledged man (Pender 1976: 130-1).[2]
At the end of the
convention the Fenian Brotherhood became divided into state organisations,
circles and sub-circles, each with its presiding officer. The whole
structure was governed by a Head Centre and a Central Council of five
members, besides a Central Treasurer and Assistant Central Treasurer, all
to be elected annually. But the most important consequence of this
convention for the Irish Fenians was the change that took place in the
relative status of the Fenian Brotherhood and the “home organisation”.
Thenceforth Stephens was acknowledged as “the Representative of the Fenian
Brotherhood in Europe” (Ryan 1967: 192). Not only had the Brotherhood
become a conventional American political organisation, it had also
reversed the balance of power and asserted itself as the sponsor and
ultimate controller of the Irish movement. Both circumstances, the
adoption of a political structure and the declaration that this structure
was sovereign and independent from the revolutionary movement in Ireland,
was to have a crucial effect on future developments.
For the moment, in
1864 Stephens travelled to the United States a second time in a bid to
counteract the effects of the Fenian Brotherhood’s reorganisation and
boost their fund-raising efforts in favour of the Irish Republican
Brotherhood. In the course of his visit he pushed for the appointment of
paid organisers and secured the adoption of measures giving him a more
direct access to collected funds (Ramón 2007: 164-5). But more
importantly, he also made a public announcement that the Fenian revolution
would take place by the end of 1865. This new deadline was associated with
the launch of a “final call” on the eve of the insurrection: a programme
that included the issue of Fenian bonds to finance the last preparations,
and the dispatch of discharged officers from the American Civil War to
serve as military instructors to the Irish circles and take command of the
Fenian army once the revolutionary war had started.
The American
officers who immediately started arriving on every steamer were widely set
apart from their would-be Irish forces, not the least because in contrast
with regular, “civilian” Irish Republican Brotherhood leaders, their
commission carried a salary.[3]
But there were other features that made them conspicuous even to
outsiders’ eyes, and more particularly the British authorities; if their
American accent did not betray them on arrival, their clothes inevitably
did. One informer supplied the following description to the police:
The newly arrived
envoy from Ireland is Captain O’Reilly. … O’Reilly is a man about 5 feet 5
inches in height, well made, but not stout. ... Beard dark consisting of
slight moustache and side whiskers. Dress black hat, black American cloth,
over-coat, long skirts, dark pantaloons, square-toed boots... (Fenian A
Files, NAI, no. 125).
The clothing issue had become obvious
enough for a Fenian leader to suggest in one of his letters that “a man
with square-toed shoes or boots will be ‘dogged’ everywhere if these
precautions are not taken. … If going to remain here no new clothes should
be bought beyond” (Pender 1971: 47).
But clothing was not the only issue
separating the visitors from the Irish members. The American officers were
far more impatient for action and far less submissive to the dictates of
the Irish Republican Brotherhood’s high command. Stephens, as always
trying to keep a tight grip on the movement’s reins and prevent untimely
personal initiatives, decided to keep them completely isolated from the
circles. This arrangement was not calculated to favour cohesion and
discipline in an eventual war of independence, but it was justified from
Stephens’s point of view when one of them, a Colonel Buckley, attempted to
bypass him and induce the rest of the officers to start the rising
themselves (“An Account of
Fenianism from April 1865 till April 1866 By one of the Head Centres for
Ireland”, 100, in S. L. Anderson Papers, NLI MS.
5964; Takagami 1990: 118).
The colonel was not successful, but this was a signal of more serious
challenges to come from Stephens’s unruly American lieutenants.
Meanwhile in October 1865 the
Brotherhood held their third annual convention in Philadelphia, and at the
end of it they adopted a new constitution that gave expression to the
Fenian Brotherhood’s Americanness to the point of extravagance. The
executive was reorganised as consisting of a President (O’Mahony) and a
Senate of fifteen members, along with various other high-sounding
executive posts including a Secretary of the Treasury and a Secretary of
Naval Affairs (The Fenians’ Progress 1865: 75). After the
Convention the Fenian Senate rented Moffat Mansion, near Union Square, to
serve as the Fenian headquarters for $1,000 a month, and flaunted the
Fenian flag of harp and sunburst from its windows. After all these changes
the Fenian Brotherhood became a full-fledged Irish government in exile, a
replica of the American Republic complete with its own capitol, president
and house of representatives. Tensions, however, had been brewing for
several years between O’Mahony and the different Fenian executives, and
predictably now they were to explode under the pretext of a conflict over
constitutional procedures.
In September 1865 an
informer handed the British authorities a document containing evidence of
the “year of action” programme in Stephens’s own handwriting. This
compelled the government to act against the Irish Republican Brotherhood
once and for all, and on the night of 15 September 1865 they suppressed
the Irish Republican Brotherhood newspaper the Irish People, put
most of the leaders in prison, and started making wholesale arrests. From
his hiding place Stephens wrote to the “American brothers”:
Well, long as I
am free I answer for everything. But once you hear of my arrest, only a
single course remains to you. Send no more money from the States. Get all
you can, though, and with it purchase all the war-material you can. Gather
all the fighting men you [can] about you and then sail for Ireland. The
heads here may be in the hands of the enemy and much confusion may
prevail; but, with a Fenian force to rally them, be sure that overwhelming
numbers shall be with you. But this must be done before next Christmas,
after which date I would have no man risk his life or his money (Pender
1975: 65).
Stephens himself was
arrested on 11 November, but his capture was followed by a spectacular
rescue from Richmond prison only two weeks later. Before the news reached
America, O’Mahony rushed to issue the Bonds of the Irish Republic in order
to come to the Irish Republican Brotherhood’s assistance as Stephens’s
letter had urged. When the Bond Agent, Patrick Keenan, refused to endorse
them and finally resigned, O’Mahony sent in his own name to be engraved on
the bonds. This was in theoretical violation of the Philadelphia
constitution, so on 2 December the Senate deposed O’Mahony and set William
Randall Roberts in his place (D’Arcy 1971: 103-4). Then O’Mahony denied
the Senators access to Moffat Mansion, and they set up new headquarters at
706 Broadway. With this move the Fenian Brotherhood was officially split
into two wings.
The differences
between these wings were curiously matched by the personalities of their
respective leaders. Both had been born in Ireland. However, while O’Mahony
remained a nostalgic exile, only longing for the day when he could return,
Roberts was a professional American politician of the sort that had
disgusted Stephens so much back in 1859. After his Fenian career was over
he turned to mainstream politics and went on to hold various public posts,
from congressman to US Ambassador in Chile (D’Arcy 1971: 279 fn.). Thus,
while O’Mahony’s efforts remained focused on the original plan of
insurrection in Ireland, Roberts and his wing had a much more flexible
approach to the cause, and picking up on a familiar tradition, concluded
that the most practicable way to start the war of independence was to
invade Canada. At least in theory, there were solid strategic reasons for
this: Canada was closer than Ireland, and because of its size, much less
heavily defended by the British army. Anglo-American tensions were at an
all-time high after Britain had taken the Confederacy’s side during the
Civil War, and again there were talks about annexing Canada to the United
States in retaliation (Neidhardt 1975: 17).
Just before the
Philadelphia convention a Fenian delegation to President Johnson had been
given to understand, though guardedly and never in writing, that if they
managed to occupy Canadian soil the government would acknowledge
accomplished facts. Even if they could not set up a permanent base of
operations, the “Canada Fenians” at least hoped that a raid might trigger
a war between Britain and the United States. But whatever the outcome, the
beleaguered Irish Republican Brotherhood “at home” had ceased to have any
part or say in Fenian calculations. Pressure for immediate action was so
intense that even O’Mahony gave in to the appeals of his secretary of the
treasury, Bernard Doran Killian, and authorised the first Fenian raid on
the Canadian border.
The first week of
April 1866 several hundred O’Mahony Fenians flocked into Eastport, in the
state of Maine, and waited for their ship, the E. H. Pray, to bring
arms and ammunition for an attack on the small island of Campobello, in
the Bay of Fundy, just on the border between Maine and New Brunswick. The
Johnson administration did not intend to allow this attack to take place,
but they could not afford to alienate the Irish-American electorate only a
few months before the congressional elections by issuing an official
condemnation, so they opted for a quiet intervention. Before the E. H.
Pray could reach the Fenians it was intercepted by an American revenue
cutter and its arms detained. On 19 April General George Meade arrived on
the scene, warned the Fenians against violating the neutrality laws under
pain of arrest, confiscated their arms and simply sent them back on their
way (Davis 1955: 322-32).
All these events
were putting increasing pressure on Stephens’s leadership. The
government’s intervention had forced him to break his “year of action”
pledge, and the Fenian Brotherhood split threatened to leave the Irish
Republican Brotherhood stranded at the moment of its worst crisis. In
March 1866 he was smuggled out of Ireland, and two months later he
disembarked in New York, accepted O’Mahony’s resignation, and started his
own campaign to revert the Brotherhood’s attention towards action in
Ireland. Despite his proverbial inflexibility where the cause was
concerned, he was keenly aware of the allurements offered by the Canadian
scheme. In a speech delivered on 24 August 1866 he told his audience:
I make no complaint
whatever; but there has been manifested through the press of this country,
and by individual Americans, a certain amount of sympathy for parties who
go and invade Canada (a voice—‘We don’t want Canada’) Now, little real
sympathy has been shown for those who would liberate Ireland on Irish
soil. It will be said by all intelligent and impartial people that this is
merely a question of interest. The annexation of Canada would benefit
America, whereas she has nothing to gain by the independence of Ireland.
But I say that this is a grave mistake, the mistake of narrow minds who
sacrifice everything to party; for America would gain more than almost any
man can calculate in the liberty of Ireland. In the first place the
annexation of Canada would follow as a certain consequence from her
liberation. ... A time of trouble may come once more in these States. All
is not so consolidated here yet. You are not sure that a restored union
will continue a fixed fact. Should war arise again in this country, and
England’s army be free ... she would send out her fleets and armies to
crush this country. But it is certain that if this country remains in
power for a century, or even half that time, it will certainly crush
England. And England knows this well (Fenian A Files, NAI, no. 180).
Despite Stephens’s
persuasive efforts, however, the Roberts wing remained by far the larger
and more powerful side of the Fenian split. At the end of May 1866 it was
their turn to carry out their own, more sophisticated attempt at invasion.
In contrast with the straightforward Campobello scheme, General Thomas
Sweeny had planned a simultaneous attack on three fronts.[4]
The left column under Brigadier Charles Tevis was to proceed to the area
around Chicago and Milwaukee; the centre column under Brigadier William F.
Lynch was to gather around Lake Erie; and the right and largest column
under Brigadier Samuel P. Spear was to assemble at St Albans, in Vermont.
Tevis and Lynch were supposed to lead a diversionary attack on Toronto
while Spear’s men crossed into Quebec and proclaimed the Irish Republic
(Ellis 1986: 246-7). This plan was scarcely more successful than the
“Campobello fiasco” had been, but it did lead to the only Fenian victory
against British troops. On 1 June Colonel John O’Neill crossed the Niagara
river at Black Rock, near Buffalo, and the following day he defeated the
volunteer corps of the Queen’s Own in the so-called “battle of Ridgeway”,
but he had no men or supplies to continue the campaign, and was forced to
withdraw almost immediately afterwards. When O’Neill’s troops tried to
cross the Niagara back into Buffalo to seek reinforcements they were
intercepted by the US authorities, arrested, fined and finally released a
few days later.
The failure of the
two Fenian raids of 1866 hastened the decline of the Fenian Brotherhood.
Although enthusiasm seemed to outlast the disaster for a while, the
treasury on both sides had been exhausted, the leaders of both wings were
caught up in internal quarrels, and membership began to fall away due to
disappointment. Stephens spent the remainder of 1866 holding public
meetings and making repeated vows to be in Ireland to lead the promised
revolution before the end of the year. By the middle of December, however,
he was preparing to postpone action for the third time in a year.
Unfortunately for him, the officers of his American military council were
not as understanding or as compliant as his Irish centres had been on the
two previous occasions, and yielding to what Stephens bemoaned as “the
false notion of equality” prevalent in the United States, at the end of
December they deposed him from leadership (Pender 1976: 123; Ramón 2007:
222-4). The new Fenian executive then went on to launch the abortive
rising of 5 March 1867.
At the end of 1867
W. R. Roberts resigned the presidency of his wing in favour of John
O’Neill, the “hero of Ridgeway”, and O’Neill continued to make plans of
Canadian invasion, this time without even the slightest pretence of
connection with the remnants of the Irish Republican Brotherhood in
Ireland. After a last attempt along the Quebec-New York border in 1870
which ended with the defeat at Eccles Hill, and a futile incursion into
Manitoba in 1871, the Canadian strategy was definitely abandoned.[5]
As is the case with
so many other episodes in Irish nationalist history, the Canadian raids
are more significant as a symbol than as a material achievement, but as
far as the symbol is concerned, few other episodes illustrate to the same
degree the complex and ultimately precarious nature of the alliance
between the Irish nationalists on both sides of the Atlantic. The Fenian
Brotherhood was the Irish Republican Brotherhood’s greatest strength, but
also its greatest weakness. Although the Irish-American nationalists liked
to regard themselves as Irish, their efforts to accommodate the
conflicting sides of their “hyphenated identity”, in John Belchem’s
expression, engendered a variety of nationalism where the dream of Irish
independence had to be made compatible with, and often subservient to, the
demands of life in their adopted country (Belchem 1995: 111). Fenian
proclamations of loyalty to the laws and institutions of the United States
were not just a rhetorical convention; in the context of post-war
Anglo-American tensions the Fenians were justified in believing that by
twisting the letter of American laws, they were also indirectly honouring
the spirit of American interests. American Fenians had to divide their
attentions between the land of their birth and the land of their adoption,
and Canada seemed to offer the opportunity to serve both masters at the
same time. It is not surprising that this should prove impossible; as it
is not surprising that the Fenian Brotherhood’s successor, the Clan na
Gael, should have a much longer and ultimately successful career as an
effectually secretive organisation with none of the Fenian sensationalism,
a more flexible, but also more stable relationship with the Irish
Republican Brotherhood “at home”, and a new determination to cultivate the
two sides of their “hyphenated identity” independently of each other.
Works Cited
Manuscripts
Samuel L. Anderson Papers. National Library of Ireland. MS. 5964
William Smith O’Brien Papers. National Library of Ireland. MS. 446
Davitt Papers. Trinity College Dublin. MS. 9659d
Fenian A Files. National Archives of Ireland
Fenian Police Reports. National Archives of Ireland
Official publications
Hansard’s Parliamentary Debates
Newspapers
Brooklyn Daily Eagle
(New York)
The Nation
(Dublin)
Tribune
(Dublin)
The
Irishman
(Dublin)
Books and theses
Allen, Walter E. (ed.). 1971. Transatlantic Crossing, American Visitors
to
Britain and British Visitors to America in the Nineteenth Century.
London: Heinemann.
Anon. 1865. The Fenians’ Progress: A Vision. New York: John
Bradburn.
Anon. 1863. Proceedings of the First National Convention of the Fenian
Brotherhood, held in
Chicago, Illinois, November 1863.
Philadelphia: James Gibbons.
Brown, Thomas N.. 1966.
Irish-American Nationalism 1870-1890.
Philadelphia & New York: Lippincott Company.
D’Arcy, William. 1971 (1947).
The Fenian Movement in the
United States: 1858-1886.
New York: Russell & Russell.
Denieffe, Joseph. 1969 (1906). A Personal Narrative of the IRB.
Shannon: Irish U. P..
Devoy, John. 1969 (1929). Recollections of an Irish Rebel. Shannon:
Irish U. P..
Funchion, Michael F. (1983). Irish-American Voluntary Organizations.
Westport: Greenwood Press.
Miller, Kerby A. 1985. Emigrants and Exiles:
Ireland and the Irish Exodus to North America.
New York: Oxford University Press.
Morgan, Jack. 2006. Through American and Irish Wars: the Life and Times
of General Thomas W. Sweeny 1820-1892. Dublin: Irish Academic Press.
Neidhardt, W. S.. 1975. Fenianism in
North America.
University Park, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State U. P.
Ramón, Marta. 2007. A Provisional Dictator: James Stephens and the
Fenian Movement. Dublin: UCD Press.
_______ (ed.). 2008. The Birth of the Fenian Movement: James Stephens’s
American Diary,
Brooklyn 1859.
Dublin: UCD Press.
Ryan, Desmond. 1967. The Fenian Chief: a Biography of James Stephens.
Dublin: Gill & Son.
Senior, Hereward. 1978. The Fenians and
Canada.
Toronto: MacMillan of Canada.
Takagami, Shin-Ichi. 1990. “The
Dublin Fenians 1858-1879”. Ph.D. thesis, Trinity College Dublin.
Articles
Belchem, John. 1995. “Nationalism, Republicanism and Exile: Irish
Emigrants and the Revolutions of 1848”. Past and Present 146.
103-35.
Davis, Harold A.. 1955. “The Fenian Raid on New Brunswick”. The
Canadian Historical Review 36.
316-334.
Ellis,
Peter Berresford. 1986.
“The
Battle of Ridgeway, 2 June 1866”. The Irish Sword 16, no. 65.
245-67.
Horsman, Reginald. 1987. “On to Canada: Manifest Destiny and United States
Strategy in the War of 1812”. The
Michigan Historical Review,
vol. 13, no. 2, 1-24.
Pender, Seamus. 1969–77. ‘Fenian Papers in the Catholic University of
America: a Preliminary Survey’. Journal of the Cork Historical and
Archaeological Society lxxiv–lxxxii.
Stacey, C. P.. 1968. “The Defence Problem and Canadian Confederation”.
Revista de Historia de América 65/66. 7-14.
Toner, Peter M. 1971. “The Military Organisation of the ‘Canadian’ Fenians
1866-1870”. The Irish Sword X, no. 38. 26-37.
Watts, Ronald L.. 1987. “The American Constitution in Comparative
Perspective: A Comparison of Federalism in the United States and Canada”.
The Journal of American History, vol. 74, no. 3. 769-792.
Wilson, David. 2005. “A Rooted Horror: Thomas D'Arcy McGee and Secret
Societies, 1845-68”. The Canadian Journal of Irish Studies, vol.
31, no. 1, 45-51.
[1]
For an excellent account of these and other Irish-American
organisations see Funchion 1983.
[2]
The series by Seamus Pender ‘Fenian Papers in the Catholic University
of America’, in the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society,
was published in annual instalments between 1969 and 1977. For the
sake of convenience the present article will omit the individual
bibliographical information for each article and provide an
abbreviated reference by year and page number.
[3]
By February 1866 the police had identified at least 500 of these
strangers, 160 in Dublin alone (Hansard’s Parliamentary Debates,
third series,
Vol. CLXXXI,
Habeas Corpus
Suspension (Ireland) Bill, 17 February 1866, 678).
[4]
For details of General Sweeny’s career
see Morgan 2006.
Received 1 December 2009 Revised version accepted 6 February
2010
 |