Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa

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Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa (Irish: Diarmaid Ó Donnabháin Rosa;[1]4 September 1831 (baptised) – 29 June 1915)[2] was an Irish Fenian leader and member of the Irish Republican Brotherhood.

Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa
Member of Parliament
for Tipperary
In office
November 1869 – February 1870
Personal details
Born
Jeremiah Donovan

before 4 September 1831
Rosscarbery, County Cork, Ireland
Died (aged 83)
Staten Island, New York, U.S.
SpouseMary Jane Irwin
Military service
Allegiance
Years of service1858–1915
Battles/wars

Born and raised in Rosscarbery, West Cork, in the South of Ireland during the Great Irish Famine, O'Donovan founded the Phoenix National and Literary Society and dedicated his life to working towards the establishment of an independent Irish Republic. He joined the Irish Republican Brotherhood and after fleeing to the United States as part of the Cuba Five, he joined Irish revolutionary organisations there, beyond the reach of the British Empire. He was a pioneer in physical force Irish republicanism utilising dynamite in a campaign of asymmetrical warfare, hitting the British Empire on its home territory, primarily London.

Biography edit

Life in Ireland edit

Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa was born Jeremiah Donovan in the townland of Reanascreena, Rosscarbery, County Cork, to Denis Donovan and Ellen Driscol, and was baptised on 4 September 1831.[3] His parents were tenant farmers.[4] According to the scholar John O'Donovan, with whom Rossa corresponded, Rossa's ancestors belonged to the obscure but ancient sliocht of the MacEnesles or Clan Aneslis O'Donovans.[5] His ancestors had held letters patent in Kilmeen parish in the 17th century before the confiscations, with his agnomen "Rossa" coming from the townland of Rossmore in Kilmeen.[6] So Jeremiah adopted the surname, Rossa.

Rossa became a shopkeeper in Skibbereen, where, in 1856, he established the Phoenix National and Literary Society, the aim of which was "the liberation of Ireland by force of arms",[7] This organisation would later merge with the Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB), founded two years later in Dublin.

In December 1858, he was arrested and jailed without trial until July 1859. In 1863 he became the business manager of James Stephens' newspaper, The Irish People which was raided and suppressed in September 1865. As part of the raid, Rossa was arrested and held at Richmond Bridewell prison to await trial by Special Commission on charges of treason felony.[8] Fanny Parnell, co-founder of the Ladies' Land League with her sister Anna Parnell attended the trial which was thought to have influenced her thinking.[9] He was sentenced to penal servitude for life due to his previous convictions. He served his time in Pentonville, Portland, Millbank and Chatham prisons in England.[7][10][8]

Rossa was a defiant prisoner, manacled for 35 straight days for throwing a chamber pot at the prison's warden and thrown into solitary confinement on a bread-and-water diet for three days for refusing to take off his cap in front of the prison's doctor.[11] For most of his time in prison Rossa was denied the right to correspond with his associates in the outside world because of his violation of prison rules.[11]

In an 1869 by-election, he was returned to the British House of Commons for the Tipperary constituency, in which he defeated the Liberal Catholic Denis Caulfield Heron by 1054 to 898 votes.[12] The election was declared invalid because Rossa was an imprisoned felon.

Life in the United States edit

 
Cuba Five - John Devoy, Charles O'Connell, Henry Mullady, Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa and John McClure

After giving an understanding that he would not return to Ireland, in effect his exile, O'Donovan Rossa was released as part of the Fenian Amnesty of 1870. Boarding the ship SS Cuba, he left for the United States with his friend John Devoy and three other exiles. Together they were dubbed "The Cuba Five".

O'Donovan Rossa took up residence in New York City, where he joined Clan na Gael and the Fenian Brotherhood. Rossa additionally established his own newspaper dedicated to the cause of Irish national liberation from British rule, The United Irishman.[11] In it Rossa advocated the terroristic use of dynamite bombs as a means of overthrowing the British occupation.[11] His paper was used to raise a so-called "resources for civilisation fund," presumably for the purchase of dynamite and other armaments for the Irish struggle.[13]

Rossa organised the first ever bombings by Irish republicans of English cities in what was called the "dynamite campaign". The campaign lasted through the 1880s and made him infamous in Britain. The British government demanded his extradition from America, but without success. Rossa later justified his revolutionary activities in the following manner;

I have myself been called a madman, because I was acting in a way that was not pleasing to England. The longer I live, the more I come to believe that Irishmen will have to go a little mad my way before they go the right way to get any freedom for Ireland.

And why shouldn't an Irishman be mad; when he grows up face to face with the plunderers of his land and race, and sees them looking down upon him as if he were a mere thing of loathing and contempt! They strip him of all that belongs to him and made him a pauper and not only that, but they teach him to look upon the robbers as gentlemen, as beings entirely superior to him. They are called "the nobility," "the quality"; his people are called the "riffraff—the dregs of society."

— Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa, Rossa Recollections, 1898

On 2 February 1885, Rossa was shot outside his office near Broadway by an Englishwoman, Lucille Yseult Dudley. He was admitted to the Chamers Street Hospital with gunshot wounds to the back. Even though they were not life-threatening, a ball was to remain embedded there for the rest of his life. "I've been wounded in the war" was Rossa's comment to a friend in the hospital.[14] The British government claimed she was mentally unstable, and not acting on its behalf, although Rossa's supporters and even many of his detractors found this hard to believe. More likely, she was incensed at the fund he organised (the so-called "Skirmishing Fund") which was intended to support the arming of those who would fight the British.[7]

Rossa was allowed to visit Ireland in 1894, and again in 1904. On the latter visit, he was made a "Freeman of the City of Cork."

Family edit

O'Donovan Rossa was married three times and had eighteen children. On 6 June 1853, he married Honora Eager of Skibbereen, who had four sons (Denis, John, Cornelius Crom and Jeremiah).[2] She died in 1860. In 1861 he married Ellen Buckley of Castlehaven; they had one son (Florence Stephens; later known as Timothy in the US); Buckley died in July 1863. In November 1864 he married, for the third time, to Mary Jane (Molly) Irwin of Clonakilty. They had thirteen children (James Maxwell, Kate Ellen, Francis Daniel, Maurice, Sheila Mary, Eileen Ellen, Amelia, Jeremiah, Isabella, Mary Jane, Margaret Mary Hamilton, Joseph Ivor and Alexander Aeneas).

O'Dovonan Rossa's great-great-grandson is US international rugby union player John Quill.[15]

Death and funeral edit

 
His funeral procession 1 August 1915
 
Gravestone in Glasnevin Cemetery

Rossa was seriously ill in his later years, and was finally confined to a hospital bed in St. Vincent's Hospital, Staten Island, where he died at the age of 83.

The new republican movement in Ireland was quick to realise the propaganda value of the old Fenian's death, and Tom Clarke cabled to John Devoy the message: "Send his body home at once".

His body was returned to Ireland for burial and a hero's welcome. The funeral at Glasnevin Cemetery on 1 August 1915 was a huge affair, garnering substantial publicity for the Irish Volunteers and the IRB at time when a rebellion (later to emerge as the Easter Rising) was being actively planned.[16] The graveside oration, given by Patrick Pearse, remains one of the most famous speeches of the Irish independence movement stirring his audience to a call to arms.[17] It ended with the lines:

They think that they have pacified Ireland. They think that they have purchased half of us and intimidated the other half. They think that they have foreseen everything, think that they have provided against everything; but, the fools, the fools, the fools! — They have left us our Fenian dead, and while Ireland holds these graves, Ireland unfree shall never be at peace.[18]

His grave was renovated in 1990 by the National Graves Association.

Legacy edit

 
Monument to Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa, in Dublin's St Stephen's Green

A memorial to O'Donovan Rossa stands in St. Stephen's Green, and a bridge over the River Liffey was renamed in his honour. A street in Cork City bears his name, as does a street in Thurles, County Tipperary – the constituency where he was elected. A park in Skibbereen is also named after him as is the local Gaelic football team.

A memorial to O'Donovan Rossa stands in the village of Reenascreena, Rosscarbery County Cork where his descendants run the local village pub. The funeral casket that was used to ship him home is now on display next to the pub.

Other GAA teams throughout Ireland have also been named after him including Ard Bó Uí Dhonnabhain Rossa in the Tyrone GAA, O'Donovan Rossa GAC in Belfast, Ó Donnabháin Rosa Magherafelt in the Derry GAA and Uí Donnabháin Rosa Mullach Breac in Armagh GAA along with Ó Donnabháin Rosa est. in 2018 in Astoria, Queens, New York.

The descendants of Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa made their homes in Staten Island; they include writer William Rossa Cole[19] and New York City Councillor Jerome X. O'Donovan.

In popular culture edit

In James Joyce's "Araby," written between 1905 and 1907, the narrator is walking across Dublin, when he hears "the nasal chanting of street-singers, who sang a come-all-you about O'Donovan Rossa".

Rossa appears as a character in Harry Harrison's alternate history Stars and Stripes trilogy.

Works edit

  • O'Donovan Rossa's Prison Life : Six Years in Six English Prisons (1874: New York)
  • Rossa's Recollections. 1838 to 1898. (1898: New York).
  • Irish Rebels in English Prisons : A Record of Prison Life (1899: New York)

Republications

  • Rossa's Recollections 1838 to 1898: Memoirs of an Irish Revolutionary (Globe Pequot, 2004)

Further reading edit

  • McWilliams, Patrick, O'Donovan Rossa: An Irish Revolutionary in America. Catalonia. Nuascéalta (2016). ISBN 978-1530992188.
  • Kenna, Shane, Unrepentant Fenian: Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa. Dublin (2015).
  • Whelehan, Niall, The Dynamiters: Political Violence and Irish Nationalism in the Wider World 1867–1900. Cambridge (2012).
  • Ó Lúing, Seán, Ó Donnabháin Rosa two Vols. Dublin (1969).
  • Malins, Edward, 'Yeats and the Easter Rising', in L Miller (ed.), Yeats Centenary Papers. Dublin (1965).
  • Le Roux, Louis, Patrick H. Pearse (tr. Desmond Ryan). Dublin (1932).
  • Papers relating to O'Donovan Rossa and the Fenians are housed in the Archives of The Catholic University of America, American Catholic History Research Center and University Archives, Washington, D.C.

See also edit

 
O'Donovan Rossa renovated 1990

References edit

  1. ^ "Ó Donnabháin Rosa á cheiliúradh". Peig.ie. 12 September 2015.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ a b Con O'Callaghan, The Story of O'Donovan Rossa, Reenascreena Community Online (dead link archived at archive.org, 29 September 2014)
  3. ^ "Roscarberry parish baptismal records". IrishGenealogy.ie. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
  4. ^ Boylan, Henry (1998). A Dictionary of Irish Biography, 3rd Edition. Dublin: Gill and MacMillan. p. 320. ISBN 0-7171-2945-4.
  5. ^ Rossa's Recollections, pp. 339 ff
  6. ^ Diarmuid Ó Murchadha, Family Names of County Cork. Cork: The Collins Press. 2nd edition, 1996. pp. 128–9.
  7. ^ a b c Shane Mac Thomáis, "Remembering the Past: Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa", in An Phoblacht/Republican News, 4 August 2005. Archived 18 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ a b Campbell, Dr. Sarah. "Loyalty and Disloyalty: The Fenian treason trials, 1865-1867". danton.us. Archived from the original on 23 August 2019. Retrieved 23 August 2019.
  9. ^ "Anna & Fanny Parnell". History Ireland. 5 February 2013. Archived from the original on 21 September 2021. Retrieved 21 September 2021.
  10. ^ Kostal, R.W. (1999). "Rebels in the Dock: The Prosecution of the Dublin Fenians, 1865–6". Irish-American Cultural Institute. 34 (2).
  11. ^ a b c d Timothy Messer-Kruse, The Haymarket Conspiracy: Transatlantic Anarchist Networks. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 2012; pg. 107.
  12. ^ A. M. Sullivan, New Ireland, London, n.d. [c. 1877], pp. 329–330
  13. ^ Messer-Kruse, The Haymarket Conspiracy, pg. 108.
  14. ^ McWilliams, P., O'Donovan Rossa: An Irish Revolutionary in America, p. 142.[1] Archived 23 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ "Youghal man Quill part of the 'Irish mafia' helping US rugby to new heights". CRY104FM Community Radio Youghal. 7 November 2018. Retrieved 9 January 2020.
  16. ^ Bureau of Military History WS 497, cited by Townshend, p.115.
  17. ^ C Townshend, "Easter 1916: The Irish Rebellion", (London 2006), p.114-5.
  18. ^ Townshend, p.116.
  19. ^ Heaney, Seamus (October–November 2001). "In Memory of Bill Cole". The Brooklyn Rail. Archived from the original on 2 February 2014. Retrieved 1 January 2014.

External links edit

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Tipperary
1869–1870
With: Charles William White
Succeeded by