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Mark Bailey - Nine Irish lives: the thinkers, fighters, & artists who helped build America

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NINE IRISH LIVES

The Thinkers Fighters Artists Who Helped Build America Edited by Mark - photo 1

The Thinkers, Fighters, & Artists Who Helped Build America

Edited by Mark Bailey Illustrations by Edward Hemingway ALGONQUIN BOOKS OF - photo 2

Edited by

Mark Bailey

Illustrations by Edward Hemingway

Picture 3

ALGONQUIN BOOKS OF CHAPEL HILL 2018

Also by Mark Bailey

Written by Mark Bailey

Of All the Gin Joints

Hemingway & Baileys Bartending Guide to Great American Writers

American Hollow

BOOKS FOR CHILDREN

Tiny Pie

Edited by Mark Bailey

The Tibetans: A Struggle to Survive

The island it is silent now,

But the ghosts still haunt the waves,

And the torch lights up a famished man,

Who fortune could not save.

Did you work upon the railroad,

Did you rid the streets of crime,

Were your dollars from the White House,

Were they from the five and dime?

Did the old songs taunt or cheer you,

And did they still make you cry,

Did you count the months and years,

Or did your teardrops quickly dry?

Thousands Are Sailing, by Philip Chevron, The Pogues

Contents

R

R

Introduction

BY MARK BAILEY About thirty years ago I came across a brief essay titled Nine - photo 4

BY MARK BAILEY

About thirty years ago, I came across a brief essay titled Nine Famous Irishmen. Id be hard pressed to say exactly where I found it; those were the days before Google, before the Internet really. But somehow, that essay reached the shores of my consciousness and then proceeded to quickly beat a path down to my heartwhere it has remained. The essay reads as follows:

In the Young Irish disorders, in Ireland in 1848, the following nine men were captured, tried, and convicted of treason against Her Majesty, the Queen, and were sentenced to death: John Mitchell, Morris Lyene, Pat Donahue, Thomas McGee, Charles Duffy, Thomas Meagher, Richard OGorman, Terrence McManus, Michael Ireland.

Before passing sentence, the judge asked if there was anything that anyone wished to say. Meagher, speaking for all, said: My lord, this is our first offense but not our last. If you will be easy with us this once, we promise, on our word as gentlemen, to try to do better next time. And next timesure we wont be fools to get caught.

Thereupon the indignant judge sentenced them all to be hanged by the neck until dead and drawn and quartered. Passionate protest from all the world forced Queen Victoria to commute the sentence to transportation for life to far wild Australia.

In 1874, word reached the astounded Queen Victoria that the Sir Charles Duffy who had been elected Prime Minister of Australia was the same Charles Duffy who had been transported 25 years before. On the Queens demand, the records of the rest of the transported men were revealed and this is what was uncovered:

THOMAS FRANCIS MEAGHER , Governor of Montana.

TERRENCE MCMANUS , Brigadier General, United States Army.

PATRICK DONAHUE , Brigadier General, United States Army.

RICHARD O GORMAN , Governor General of Newfoundland.

MORRIS LYENE , Attorney General of Australia, in which office

MICHAEL IRELAND succeeded him.

THOMAS D ARCY M C GEE , Member of Parliament, Montreal, Minister of Agriculture and President of Council Dominion of Canada.

JOHN MITCHELL , prominent New York politician. This man was the father of John Purroy Mitchell, Mayor of New York, at the outbreak of World War I.

To this day, the author of this essay remains unknown. As does its veracity. Is the story true? Most of it is, and some of it likely is not. Though to me that was never so important. Nine Famous Irishmen has persisted, a little nugget of Irish mythology, the very kind of historical gem found on posters, placemats, the backs of pub menus, a sheet of paper left in a drawer to be read over corned beef and cabbage around the dinner table on St. Patricks Day.

So ignore the details; push whatever inaccuracies there might be aside. Stories like this persist not because they are necessarily true, but because they speak to a larger truth. And this truth we can probably all agree on: a large number of men, women, and children left Ireland, the country of their birth, and went out into the world to do great things. Whether it was political violence that drove them, whether it was hunger, oppression, or just the dream of a better life, off they wentfirst in ships, later in planesinto the unknown. This was the Irish Diaspora.

What I found meaningful, what I still find meaningfulwhy I carried this essay with me, a photocopy in a shoebox of letters carted around for three decadesis the idea that nine young men could have died quite brutal deaths, but instead, they left and went on to lead extraordinary lives, to achieve so much. All the energy, the brightness and daring, in those nine young men, it could so easily have been snuffed out. But that didnt happen. Instead that energy was released, sent out on a boat across the seas, where it would touch so many lives, light up a new world.

TH ERE IS NOTHING much any of us can do about the circumstances into which we are bornour parents, our class, our countrybut these are the factors that by and large determine our lives, that most often shape who we are and what we are able accomplish. Yet since time immemorial, humans have struggled against this: whether they were forced to flee their homes or left of their own volition, they have chosen to believe in the possibility of a different life, a better future. Roughly fifty thousand years ago, our Afro-Asian ancestors built crude boats and headed across the waters to Australia. About fifteen thousand years ago, foragers in Northern Siberia made their way to Alaska pursuing better game, and then later, once the ice sheets had receded, pressed south further into North America. In a way, the journey of those nine famous Irishmen, along with the millions of other Irish immigrants, mirrors that movement, the movement of mankind itselfthe perhaps uniquely human drive that has settled the planet and brought about civilization as we know it.

Certainly, no country in modern history has benefited from this drive more than the United States. Not just because we have been the recipients of so many Irish but because we have been (and still are) the recipients of so many other peoples tooimmigrants from elsewhere fleeing hardship, fleeing pain and want. I was born here because my great grandparents, who were Jewish, put their belongings in a bag and boarded a ship. If maybe that sounds easy, it wasnt. Once here, they became storekeepers, seamstresses, traveling salesmen. My grandfather owned the Westville movie theater in New Haven, Connecticut; my grandmother was a schoolteacher; my other grandparents were lawyers in Knoxville, Tennessee. And I am now a part of that continuum, just as my childrenwhom Ive moved out west to Californiawill be.

TH IS BOOK EXISTS for a fairly simple reason. I wanted to share the stories of nine Irish lives. Not the famous Irishmen from the essay above, but nine other men and women who left Ireland and came to America. Spanning generations, from the dawn of our republic to today, their lives paint a particular portrait of our nations rise. Through the battles they fought, the cases they argued, the words they wrote, the people they helped, these nine Irish men and women not only became American but also helped make America great.

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