Remembering Martin Hogan
& James McNally Wilson
156 South Bend, Pawtucket, RI
Saturday, October 4, 2014
1-4 pm
Tom Lanigan Band
Norman Payne
Phil Edmonds
Kevin Higgins
Suggested Donation: $10.00
All proceeds to the Chicago Fenian Memorial Committee for the purchase and erection of a grave marker for Martin Hogan.
Donations can be sent by check—made out to
“Fenian Memorial Committee of Chicago"
P.O.Box 477861
Chicago IL 60647-5535
For more information contact George McLaughlin at 401-688-2463.
“What
a death is staring us in the face,” wrote James Wilson in 1873, “the death of a felon in a British dungeon,
and a grave amongst Britain’s ruffians. I am not ashamed to speak the truth,
that it is a disgrace to have us in prison today.
“A little money judiciously expended would
release every man that is now in West Australia. Think that we have been
nearly nine years in this living tomb since our first arrest, and that it is
impossible for mind or body to withstand the continual strain that is upon
us. One or the other must give way.” Fenian James Wilson, was imprisoned with other Irish political prisoners
half a world away, in the dreaded Fremantle penal colony in Western
Australia.
To underline this message Wilson added, “Remember this is a voice from the tomb. For is
this not a living tomb? In the tomb it is only a man’s body that is good for
worms, but in this living tomb the canker worm of care enters the very soul.”
Wilson’s powerful words moved Irish-Americans
and they resolved to help him. In Ireland in the early 1860s Wilson had joined the 5th Dragoon
(British Army) Guards. But in secret he also became a Fenian, taking an oath
to be obedient to his leaders and to do his utmost to secure a democratic
independent Irish Republic.
To
that end he deserted with fellow Fenian Martin
Hogan in November 1865 after they had secretly enrolled many other Irish
soldiers in the organization. But then, as so often in Irish history, local informers
gave away the details of renewed Fenian activities to the British forces and Wilson was quickly arrested.
Wilson was court-martialed
in Dublin on February 10, 1866, where he was found guilty of mutinous conduct
and received a sentence of death, which was later commuted to life
imprisonment in Fremantle prison. It was, in a real sense, a kind of death in
life.
Help
finally arrived in the shape of the Catalpa, an American whaling ship hired
by another Fenian, John Devoy,
from secret donations made by Irish independence organizations across the
United States. Amazingly, informers did not foil the daring rescue plan and
the ship reached Australia without mishap.
The rescuers rowed to shore to collect the six waiting Irish convicts
who had left their posts while working outside the secured area. Their Irish
rescuers were waiting with wagons and weapons. But like all good rescue
dramas, complications clouded their flight. When the freed prisoners began to
row back to the Catalpa a sudden unexpected storm meant they could not reach
the ship for another day, by which time the alarm had been raised and British
police ships launched.
The
British commandeered a gunboat, the Georgette, which they pulled alongside
the Catalpa, requesting that the prisoners be handed over. Captain Anthony, the ship’s
celebrated American captain, defiantly refused this request and raised the
American flag, warning his pursuers that the Catalpa was in international
waters and could not be boarded. If
they fired on the Catalpa they would be firing on the United States. This
parry enraged the Georgette’s British captain, who reluctantly conceded.
Eventually
the Georgette was forced to give up the chase, although all on board were
convinced they had seen the missing men. Shortly after, as John Devoy predicted, the Catalpa
rescue bolstered Irish morale across the globe and spurred the fight for
Irish independence, which was finally won in 1922.
None
of the Catalpa Six ever returned to Ireland.
All remained until their deaths, in America, including the two old
comrades, James McNally Wilson who
lived out his life in Central Falls
and Pawtucket, Rhode Island, where
he is buried, and Martin Hogan,
who spent the remainder of his life in Chicago,
Illinois. Martin Hogan is buried in Mount Olivet Cemetery in Chicago,
without a tombstone or grave marker.
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A very worthwhile and noble attempt to give this fallen Fenian a grave marker..I'd love to donate something myself and will endeavour to have RNU make one also...
ReplyDeleteWould the Committee send their details please, solidarity?