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3 The Weapon of the Weak On May the sixth, 1882, Lord Frederick Cavendish and Thomas Henry Burke were taking a walk through Phoenix Park in Dublin. The former was enjoying his very first day as Ireland’s Chief-Secretary, the most senior political office in the British administration of Ireland, and had arrived with the boat from England only a few hours before. Suddenly, a horse carriage appeared out of nowhere, came to a sudden stop and produced four men armed with long surgical knives. Originally, as later turned out, the four killers had only been after the Chief-Secretary, Lord Cavendish, but upon spotting the Under-Secretary Thomas Burke in his presence, they quickly adjusted their plans and violently stabbed both men to death, rapidly fleeing the scene afterwards. The assassinations in Phoenix Park described above proved to be a relevant event with regard to the Chicago Citizen’s assessment of the Irish struggle. The exact manner in which they affected its appraisal of this struggle is the first issue that will be explored in this chapter. Thereafter the attention of this chapter will be turned towards the general motives inspiring the Irish-American ‘dynamitards.’ On the basis of the editorials from the Citizen, it will take a closer look at the radical form of Irish nationalism they adhered to and the ideology sustaining it. From where did these beliefs originate and what did the men advancing them intend to achieve by means of its most notorious manifestation, dynamite? Apart from dynamite, did they bring forward additional means to further their cause? The Phoenix Park Murders Not only were the Phoenix Park murders significant for the effect they had on Finerty and his journal, they were also to have a great impact on the success and course of the struggle for Irish independence for years to come. Naturally, English public and political opinion was abhorred by the murders. Charles Parnell reacted with great dismay. By that time he had long and cautiously been cultivating a political collaboration with British liberal Prime Minister William Gladstone in his struggle for Home Rule, an attempt that seemed more and more promising, but which continued to depend strongly on a generally positive image of the Irish people. Parnell had invested a lot of patience and hard work in his attempts to convince the British public and the Tory politicians in Parliament of the Irish right and capacity to govern themselves. The fact that Parnell and Gladstone had made any progress at all in this venture was remarkable in itself considering the amount and the force of the prejudices which characterized the British public opinion towards the Irish and the Irish question. The Phoenix Park murders at once shattered this carefully constructed and extremely fragile trust and consequently put a stop to the gradual approach between the Irish agitators and the English politicians. The murders reflect very poorly upon the Irish in general and on Parnell in particular. They generated British accusations and suspicions about Parnell himself somehow being involved in the murder plot. 1 Furthermore, they also reflected badly upon the English Liberal Party and its Prime Minister Gladstone for associating and trying to make accommodations with the representative of such a barbarous people. The New York Times imagined the first question the opposition would ask Gladstone: “What do you hope to gain by offers of conciliation which are answered by assassination?”2 Parnell for his part was so devastated by the events in Dublin and their immediate consequences that for a short moment he was just inches away from abandoning his entire nationalistic political effort. Instead deciding to proceed, it nevertheless took him a long time to get to the point from which new advancements could be made. 3 It turned out that the assassinations had been the work of a small band of radical revolutionists who called themselves the Irish National Invincibles. These men had lost all hope that nonviolent political agitation would ever be able to wrest from the British Parliament concessions of such a scale as they ultimately desired and expected, which was nothing less the establishment of a republican form of government in Ireland. England, they reasoned, was not to be convinced by words alone. Surely, words were useful up to a certain point, but they went only so far and were they ever to have the desired effect, they would have to be backed up by strong and resolute action. 1 R. F. Foster, Modern Ireland, 359n. New York Times, May 7th, 1882. 3 T. N. Brown, Irish-American nationalism, 125. 2 Opinions towards the Phoenix Park murders among the Irish in Ireland and in the rest of the world were more ambivalent than those among the British public, which naturally condemned it in the strongest possible terms. Many Irish also condemned the killing of British officials but many other Irish saw the assassination as a triumph of justice, as an atonement of British sins. The reaction of the Irish radicals was plain. In America, the Fenian Brotherhood attacked the hypocrisy of any Irishman who mourned over the death over Burke and Cavendish: “If you, our fellowcountrymen, have tears to shed, shed them over your own flesh and blood, savagely slain under circumstances of grossest atrocity and barbarity in the past […].” 4 Clues to Irish pubic opinion concerning the expediency of the assassinations might be found first in the intense hatred that was expressed for James Carey, one of the Invincibles who the British arrested and who later, as an informant to the British, betrayed most of his fellow conspirators of the Phoenix Park murders, and a little later in the open celebrations with which the news of his murder was received by Irish men and women all over the world. An article from the New York Times of … conveyed the general atmosphere on the Irish streets following the news of Carey’s murder: “There were bonfires made in celebration of the death of James Carey. Effigies of Carey were burned and mock funerals were held in various Irish towns tonight. Eight enormous bonfires were built around Carey’s late residence. There were also fires in other streets throughout the city. Bands marched through the streets playing national airs, followed by crowds of people, who cheered as they marched. […] The officials fear that the Fenians will be much emboldened by these demonstrations.” 5 James Carey, after he had provided the English with the names and identities of most of the members of the Invincibles, was granted protection by the British government. In the world’s first ever witness protection program, James Carey was given a new identity. However, on board of a ship which would carry Carey and his family all the way to South Africa where he would continue his life in guarded anonymity, a fellow Irish passenger named Patrick O’Donnell killed him before the ship could reach its destination. O’Donnell was put on trial in England. He did not deny having killed Carey but he did deny having murdered Carey intentionally. He 4 5 New York Times, May 21st, 1882. New York Times, August 1, 1883. claimed that he had shot the former Invincible in self-defense during a struggle that followed after Carey had begun to suspect that O’Donnell had become aware of his true identity. Carey felt so threatened that he attacked O’Donnell according to the latter, who then killed Carey as a measure of self-defense. The British jury and the judges, however, would not have any of it and sentenced O’Donnell to death by hanging. Even before he was sentenced and executed, O’Donnell was already idolized by many Irish the world over as a legendary Irish martyr, the slayer of the traitor Carey. He had given his life for the Irish cause and for the salvation of Irish national honor. In the United States a national fund was established by Irish-Americans to raise money for the trial of O’Donnell. Tens of thousands of dollars were collected throughout the United States by Irish foundations, societies and newspapers. Finerty’s Chicago Citizen was no exception. Every week the paper printed a list containing the names of that week’s contributors to the O’Donnell Defense Fund, followed by the amount of their contributions. Advertisements even encouraged readers to buy their own portrait of O’Donnell, so that they could honor this national hero in their own homes. 6 For weeks the Citizen printed every bit of news about the trial. O’Connell was praised as a national hero. “The splendour of O’Donnell’s heroism and glory of his self immolation have no parallel in the history of the world,” one article said, 7 and the journal spoke of the shot that would “resound forever in the hearts of the Irish race.” 8 The defense fund’s ultimate stated purpose had been to arrange for the best lawyers who would set out to prove O’Donnell’s innocence from first-degree murder and eventually have him walk free. As long as the process was underway, the Citizen adhered to this course and expressed the hope that O’Donnell would eventually be acquitted and released. However, once the news had reached the Citizen that all their efforts had been of no avail and that O’Donnell had been sentenced to death by a ‘hanging jury’ and a partisan judge, the newspaper suddenly stated that from the start it had never really believed in any other outcome than this conviction and swore that “Never again will The Citizen, or any other Irish-American journal, raise a cent to defend any Irishman 6 Citizen, February 23, 1884. Citizen, September 29th, 1883. 8 Citizen, April 19th, 1884. 7 in a British court of law.” 9 It had been a futile and hopeless effort from the start, it argued. Realistically, the Citizen argued, there was never a chance that any amount of money or support would ever prevent what seemed to have been a certainty from day one: “[O’Donnell] had to hang anyhow.” This opportunity to set an example and make a statement was just too expedient for the British. The – in the eyes of the Citizen’s editors– false conviction did a lot to help strengthen the growing conviction of the newspaper that the English could not be bargained with and would never be moved by rational argument or the rule of justice. Moreover, after the conviction the Citizen denounced and deplored the defense’s ‘miserable plea of self-defense,’ which argued that O’Donnell had not intentionally killed Carey. 10 It either didn’t believe it or it didn’t want to believe it. If O’Donnell was to become the great hero of the Irish race and his death by the hands of the British executioners was ever to arouse the entire Irish race into massive support for the national cause, then the shooting of Carey had to have been a heroic and deliberate act in the name of Ireland, and the perpetrator should bravely have to carry the consequences and not deny his superior motives. Refusing to doubt O’Donnell’s motives, Finerty blamed other people for tarnishing O’Donnell’s name and staining his glorious act. Arguing that O’Donnell’s “selfconstituted friends are pursuing a policy that will rid him of all his laurels,” Finerty and his paper would do anything to protect their own interpretation of the act. It wrote: “O’Donnell, by the killing of Carey, did his native land an incalculable service. It was the boldest avengement of history, and the most honorable,” and asserted that O’Donnell was “fired with an impulse which every true Irishman has felt and which shall give him a position among the heroes of our race.” Other, less noble interpretations had to be prevented from reaching the pages of the history books, the Citizen thought. Luckily for Finerty, as he was being taken away after the verdict, O’Donnell was alleged to have shouted: “Three cheers for Old Ireland! Hurray for the United States! To hell with the British Crown!” Now there was a real patriot. “Such [ill.] could only have come from a man who [ill.] no remorse for a crime, but who secretly gloried in his act as a proof of his devotion to his race.” 11 9 Citizen, December 8th, 1883. Ibidem. 11 Citizen, December 29th, 1883. 10 It seems like the O’Donnell trial served as a catalyst and constituted a turning point for Finerty and his Citizen regarding their opinion on how the battle against the British tyrants must be fought. Before the trial the language in the paper’s articles had already been aggressive toward the English and the Ulster Orangemen who had so far bore the brunt of the paper’s verbal assaults. But it looks like the Citizen seized the O’Donnell trial as an opportunity to shift the course of Irish-American nationalism from political agitation to ‘active revolution,’ which amounted to physical violence. The Citizen declared that: “Henceforth, there will be a truce to “conservative expression” and to “slow but sure methods of reform.” The English have again thrown down the gauntlet red with Irish blood. Our race must accept the challenge, and it will.” Then the paper announced: “henceforth the party of violence will be supreme in Irish politics.” 12 The Citizen’s tone and rhetoric now became markedly more inciting and openly aggressive. O’Donnell’s trial had been “the last of Ireland’s experiments with “British fair play,”” it said, and Finerty was now convinced that “Argument is no use. Agitation is powerless. Diplomacy is a myth. Let all Irishmen combine again, whether openly or secretly, for revolutionary action.” A denunciation of agitation was a denunciation of Parnell, the leader of Irish agitation. In an interview with a reporter from the Chicago Herald, printed in the Citizen, Finerty was asked if the death of O’Donnell would be avenged. He answered: ““Believe it? Sure as the sun shines. O’Donnell must be avenged or the Irish race will be dishonored.” 13 Irish national honor was a thing of paramount importance for Finerty. When this honor was insulted or compromised he felt that Irishmen were justified to do whatever was necessary to restore it. The Irish had lost their own country to the British. Robbed of their own state, their honor was pretty much all that the Irish had left; it was all that they had to show for in the world. Radical Irish-nationalists like those of the Citizen must have thought that the Irishmen would forfeit all the respect that was left for them from the nations of the world if they would passively submit to the continuing British crimes and humiliations. They had to show that they were a proud and formidable people worthy of international support and self-governance. Irish willingness to oppose British rule by all means demonstrated such worthiness, the Citizen argued. O’Donnell, the “gallant avenger of his country’s 12 13 Citizen, December 8th, 1883. Citizen, December 22nd, 1883. outraged honor,” had saved the Irish honor, and “the rest of the world, as well as Irishmen,” the Citizen claimed, “exulted when the magnetic tidings were announced that one chivalrous man had redeemed his race and country from the dire disgrace of having produced such a wretch as Carey.” 14 Of course, non-violent constitutional nationalists were equally intent on demonstrating to the world the Irish’ right to autonomy. But they thought that Irish restraint and patience in the light of continuing British aggression and provocations was morally superior to uncontrolled aggression and more likely to earn and attract the sympathy and cooperation of the rest of the world. The Citizen argued that not only the honor of Ireland but also that of America had been gravely compromised by the manner in which the O’Donnell trial had proceeded. Patrick O’Donnell claimed that he was an American citizen and that fact alone, Finerty argued, should have been more than enough reason for the United States government to exhaust all diplomatic and legal options to assist him in proving his innocence, for example by buying him extra time or providing him with an American jury. But instead the American government had done nothing to help O’Donnell during his trial and hadn’t even raised a word of protest when he was send to the gallows. Finerty saw this as a public humiliation for America, as a disgraceful stain on the American reputation. In 1783 the Americans had won their independence from the British Empire by beating the English on the battlefield. America had since become a big player on the world’s stage, but, according to the Citizen, had now forfeited much of her credibility as a new superpower by letting this inexcusable provocation by the British go unanswered. Finerty, in an address to an Irish crowd called it a disgrace and “the depth of infamy” that a nation of 55 million hadn’t been able to save the life of a citizen for just a single week. 15 Instead, America had just stood by and watched as one of her own citizens was ‘murdered’ by the evil and corrupt British court system. What had happened, Finerty wondered out loud, to the great men of America’s revolutionary days, the Washingtons and the Hamiltons? Surely, these men would never have allowed such an insult. “There was a time,” the Citizen spoke in its characteristic inflated language, “when the cannon of America, feeble today, would have answered the insult and the 14 15 Citizen, September 29th, 1883. Citizen, August 23rd, 1884. defiance of England. That was in the heroic age of the nation, when, at Baltimore and New Orleans, the American sword washed off the diplomatic rust from its glorious blade in the best blood of the red-coated bordes Ross and of Packenham.” O’Donnell’s death sentence and the unlawful way in which it was reached was such a bitter insult to American pride and dignity that it was nothing short of a declaration of war, according to the Citizen. 16 There was indeed some truth to the Citizen’s assertion that the American government had been unwilling to aid or rescue Irish-American radicals in British hands. During the one and a half decades following the Civil War, in which the Irish had ingratiated themselves with native America by conspicuous participation, American Fenians caught by British authorities could count on the aid and sympathy of their own government. And we’ve already seen in the previous chapter how some controversy between the American and the British governments provided an additional reason for the former to condone the Irish radicals. So for a period after the Civil War the US government immediately dealt with each capture and imprisonment of an Irish-American by the British on an individual basis. But around 1880 the American government’s attitude and official policy with regard to the general fate and welfare of the arrested Irish-Americans had shifted. This change in the American administration’s official response towards IrishAmerican caught terrorists was caused by several factors, one of which was a change around 1880 in Irish nationalists’ tactics. More overtly violent and therefore less generally acceptable expressions of the Irish desire for national self-determination alienated large portions of American society and caused American sympathy for the Irish struggle in general and for Irish-American extremists in particular to decline. 17 The Phoenix Park assassination was one of those occasions which caused damage to the reputation of Irish nationalism in the United States. Few people in America could identify or wished to be associated with such subversive and reprehensible acts as the killing of Burke and Cavendish. 16 17 Citizen, December 29th, 1883. M. J. Sewell, ‘Rebels or revolutionaries’, 224-9. The Citizen and Dynamite After the O’Donnell case, as we have just seen, the Citizen began to preach violent resistance against Britain more passionately and more openly. Radical IrishAmerican nationalists had introduced a new tactic into the fight which they rather euphemistically called ‘scientific warfare,’ referring to a recent scientific invention that had given hope and power to the oppressed and powerless all over the world: the invention of dynamite. Alfred Nobel had invented dynamite during the 1860s. In his book about the relevance of dynamite, historian Stephen Brown noted that “Dynamite and other high explosives, cheap, relatively easy for individuals to manufacture on their own, and highly portable, have been used as the weapon of social conflict by anarchists, terrorists, and rebels since their invention.” 18 Irish-American radical nationalists had noticed how Russian Nihilists were applying dynamite in their attempts to assassinate the country’s leaders and highranking officials and realized the potential impact this new mode of warfare could have on the Irish struggle in the future. In a letter printed on the pages of the Citizen, a reader said: “Dynamite, if used judiciously, is a grand, and I believe a God-sent weapon to fight our too strong and too numerous enemies.” 19 The adoption by Irish revolutionaries of dynamite-warfare marked “a new phase of Irish revolution,” the Citizen itself claimed, “and the most terrible yet presented.” 20 As to those Irish people who opposed them, the Citizen regarded them “slaves whose lips refuse to express gratitude.” 21 Many angry and embittered Irishmen welcomed the invention of dynamite as a blessing from the sky. Most native Americans and many other Irish in both Ireland and America, however, were opposed to dynamite for moral and pragmatic reasons. Michael Davitt, one of the leading Irish nationalists, was one those nationalists who were convinced that nothing good could ever come from the use of dynamite as a weapon against the British. Davitt, once an ardent Fenian who had personally suffered greatly at the hands of the British, had in his later years been captured by the ideology of socialism. For many months the weekly columns Davitt wrote for another Irish 18 S. R. Brown, A most damnable invention: dynamite, nitrates, and the making of the modern world (New York) 118. 19 Citizen, December 8th, 1883. 20 Citizen, June 7th, 1884. 21 Ibidem. newspaper were printed in the Citizen. In one of those articles Davitt explained why he thought the wounding and killing of British citizens was only contra-productive. Davitt believed that the poor toiling classes in English cities such as Manchester and London were suffering under the same English capitalist classes as the poor rural Irish and were thus in reality allies in the Irish and in fact the worldwide struggle for social justice. Irish dynamite terrorism would only alienate these potential allies and make them enemies of the Irish cause. Furthermore, Davitt argued, British angry responses to the dynamite attacks would probably be directed towards the many Irish living and working in the English cities. So apart from killing innocent people and hurting the ‘sacred cause’ by alienating the English working-class element, Davitt argued that Irish dynamiters also compromised the lives of many of their own countrymen. 22 The Citizen responded to this latter allegation not by denying that British retaliation would fall on the Irish population in England, but instead by confirming this assertion and stating that such British retaliatory measures would ultimately have advantageous effects on the fight for Irish nationhood. One article stated that the Citizen had “no doubt that the English, as they threaten, will make bloody reprisals on the Irish population resident among them. If so, the Irish in England, driven to desperation, will retaliate in kind […]” 23 British reprisals would only stir up a more intense hatred among the Irish and make them more willing to fight and make sacrifices for Ireland’s glorious cause. So the Citizen advocated ‘scientific warfare’ as the most effective and legitimate way of opposing English occupation. What did the journal imagine would be the role of the American Irish in this liberating effort? Should Irish-Americans cross the Atlantic, place and detonate the bombs themselves? Or instead, should they only organize the operations from the United States, provide funds and other material support and leave the rest to the people in Ireland? How much risk were the IrishAmericans willing and able to take in the fight against Britain? A critical Irish-American reader from Boston reacted to an early-1884 article in the Chicago Citizen. In the article, called “Deeds, not Words,” an editor from the Citizen had spoken in favor of dynamite warfare against the English, and had made the claim that the dynamiters were the only real agents of change because they alone 22 23 Citizen, November 24, 1883. Citizen, June 7th, 1884. were willing to use forceful and risky measures. The Irish reader from Boston strongly disagreed with this interpretation of affairs and argued instead that “Parnell is the apostle of the doctrine of deeds, and the men who are the apostles of the doctrine of words are men who at the distance of thousands of miles urge upon their countrymen at home the adoption of policy which their common sense must tell them that their countrymen at home are neither prepared or able to support.” 24 The Citizen’s attitude towards the projected role of the American Irish in the national cause is somewhat clarified in an article from the early days of the dynamite campaign. Irish attempts at frightening the English with dynamite, the writer argued, were not yet effective. He went on to argue that the scale of the efforts had been too small as to effect any notable improvements in the “temper of the British public in regard to Ireland.” If the ‘practical revolutionists’ really wanted to strike terror into the hearts of the British enemies, the writer argued, a larger and more coherent organization led by well trained men had to be established. This would be imperative, he argued, because in response to the Irish dynamite threat, England’s detection and security system had become quite formidable and most secret Irish nationalist societies involved in dynamite schemes were being infiltrated and uncovered by Irish spies in British service, both in Ireland as well as in America. This had led to much tension and suspicious among the rank and file of these organization. Furthermore, the harbors in England were constantly subjected to the most rigorous and effective measures to detect and intercept suspected cargo and persons, which made it difficult and risky for the dynamiters. The writer came to the conclusion that the only Irishmen who could remain undetected while preparing for dynamite attacks against England were those Irishmen who were and had been living in England for a long time, the people he called the ‘Hiberno-English.’ They wouldn’t have to face the problem of entering Britain undetected and furthermore, no suspicion would be cast upon them because they had been living in Britain for such a long time. The writer had no doubts whatsoever as to the strong hatred for everything British still lingering in their hearts, even after all those years living amongst Britons. He did mention that it would be quite indecent towards these men to ask of them to face “the gap of danger” all alone. 24 Citizen, March 1st, 1884. In reality, however, the Irish dynamite-element was almost exclusively IrishAmerican, from the planning to the financing to the execution. In the United States, Irish-American radical nationalists were free to go about plotting, planning and advertising their ‘outrages’ in the open, unhindered and unpunished by American authorities. For a long time this state of affairs remained a great source of diplomatic discord between the Americans and the British governments. The British were extremely annoyed by the apparent American unwillingness to prevent the Atlantic crossing of Irish-American terrorists and dynamite. American dynamiters had to search for ways to enter Britain and import the dynamite. But producing it in America and exporting it out of the country did not pose a problem. The Citizen quoted an article from the New York Herald which captured British irritation: “Once more the cry is raised in London that the dynamite comes from America, that the trouble is entirely American, that the Americans are awfully wicked and that they ought to catch someone and hang him […]” 25 One of the British grievances was the American reluctance to deal with the socalled ‘dynamite press.’ Through the pages of these Irish-American newspapers IrishAmericans all over the country were allowed to conspire and talk freely and loudly of planned assassinations of high-ranking British judges and politicians and of upcoming dynamite ‘outrages’ in Britain, and no caution or secrecy was required to collect private funds for these schemes. Naturally, the Chicago Citizen belonged to this dynamite press. The British thought that the passive and negligent posture of the American government towards such illegal and pernicious activities was highly improper and in violation of the principles which governed relations between friendly nations. Britain demanded intervention by the American authorities and asked for full American cooperation with British authorities in the prevention of Irish dynamite attacks on British soil and in the apprehension and trying of the perpetrators. So the American government was unwilling to help apprehended IrishAmerican in British prisons but was neither prepared to prevent them from ending up in those prisons in the first place. In addition with the American sympathy generated by Irish participation in the Civil War, their existed a pragmatic political reason for American reluctance to crack down on Irish-American dynamite. The Irish-American community constituted a large voting bloc and for a long time American politicians 25 Citizen, March 8th, 1884. were afraid to loose Irish-American votes and decided not to confront the issue of dynamite. An article in the New York Times, printed in the Citizen, said that Irish politicians in America “not only choose their politics on Irish grounds, but demand that American politicians shall sympathize with Ireland as deeply as they do themselves” and it continued, “The American politician never fails to respond to this requirement. He knows how suicidal a failure would be.” 26 In connection with this, one article in the Citizen observed that “In the present temper of the American people, Englishmen do not expect much assistance from America in unearthing dynamite conspiracies or in tracing out plots to blow up government buildings in England.” American laxity with regard to Irish-American dynamite conspiracies in the United States subsided along with the change in the American attitude towards the Irish and their cause, which was already mentioned above. This shifted mood was demonstrated in politics during and after the 1884 presidential campaigns and assumed some concrete form in the subsequent introduction in the American Congress of the Dynamite Bill, which signified greater American willingness to assist Britain in the prevention of further terrorist outrages on British soil. 27 Motives for Dynamite One might wonder what mindset motivated the men who applauded the bombing of British cities and the men who actually placed these bombs beneath English bridges, public buildings and monuments and who were willing to risk their own lives and those of the British citizenry. One of the terms the dynamitards used to designate themselves is elucidating in this context. They often called themselves ‘desperate men,’ which implied both an acknowledgement of the futility and randomness of their violent mode of warfare, and an excuse or justification for it. English evil was said to have driven them to this desperation. The Citizen claimed that centuries of English cruelty had produced a ‘maddened’ Irish nation and had driven the Irish people to ‘political insanity.’ 28 Insane and desperate men couldn’t reasonably 26 Citizen, April 10th, 1886. Citizen, January 31st, 1885. 28 Ibidem. 27 be expected or counted upon to act rationally and sensibly. This paragraph shall attempt to explore and elaborate on this subject. What justified dynamite warfare against England according to the Citizen? How did the Citizen explain itself and how did it defend its ideas and actions? First of all it addressed the practical motives. Pointing out current Irish circumstances the journal ruled out any peaceful measure as a feasible option. England’s iron grip on Ireland supposedly ruled out any agent other than ‘the sword’ through which Irishmen could address an unjust state of affairs. They argued that for the near future the omnipresent English authorities rendered any armed rising in Ireland foolish and impossible. “The situation is this,” the Citizen explained, “England has entirely disarmed Ireland. She has filled every town and fort with troops. She has left the people no military resources, and then she asks Ireland to confine herself, unarmed as she is, solely to the rules of war? Can anything be more absurd?” the Citizen asked its readers rhetorically. Dynamite, that “new and terrible enemy of despotic power,” was the only weapon, the only instrument of defiance left in the hands of vengeful Irishmen. 29 Each different circumstance demanded a specific response and a specific remedy and in the case of Ireland, the Citizen argued, the befitting remedy was dynamite. Instructive in this context is the Citizen’s response to the Haymarket Affair. When a dynamite bomb exploded at a labor demonstration at the Haymarket in Chicago, in May 1886, killing at least eleven people under whom many policemen and wounding many more, the Citizen was quick to condemn the use of dynamite in America. They decidedly disapproved of terrorism within the democratic American context. In the United States, the Citizen claimed, the ballot could purportedly “remedy every existing evil” and “must decide the struggle one way or the other in the end. Anarchy will never do it.” 30 This last utterance raises the question what objective anarchy would ever be able to achieve in Ireland. Anyhow, no such democratic roads as open to disadvantaged and angry people in the United States were available to the Irish in Ireland, the Citizen reasoned, conveniently forgetting Parnell en his increasingly successful political campaign. Next, the emotional motives. The Citizen reasoned that the last thing the Irish should do was to tamely submit to English will, for such passive capitulation, it 29 30 Ibidem. Citizen, May 8th, 1886; August 7th, 1886. argued, meant “the blight of death.” 31 The Citizen warned Britain not to fall “into the error of supposing that she is dealing with a poor and isolated Ireland, whom she can kick and caress at pleasure.” 32 It argued that before the Irish had adopted violence as a means of defiance, the Christian world had “either derided [Ireland] as a beggar or despised her as a slave.” 33 (It might be supposed that the ‘beggar’ was a reference to the Irish politician.) But supposedly, assertive and defiant Irish radicals had modified that image and saved the Irish from disgrace. So the humiliating experience of being conquered was quoted as one of the major justifications. In fact, the Citizen reasoned, Ireland’s centuries long suffering at the hands of the British provided not only a justification but also a moral obligation to resist. For many centuries England had perpetrated acts of “supreme and unjustifiable atrocity that put her outside the pale of civilized nations.” 34 English oppression sanctioned any form of resistance, including dynamite, the paper stated. All justification could be found in the “bloody handbook of English suppression,” it wrote. 35 The Citizen argued aggrievedly that the English press and the ‘echoing’ Anglo-American press were guilty of applying double standards, for they remained silent on the countless and ongoing atrocities against Irishmen but reacted with indignation and horror when now and then a desperate Irishman decided to do something back. The journal contrasted the heroic and courageous Irish dynamiters with the evil and cowardice British mercenaries who, “armed to the teeth, daily assist sheriffs in Ireland to evict a helpless, and utterly unarmed peasantry […].” 36 The Citizen further expounded on the historical roots of Irish desperation, and recalled how “the starvation of the Irish peasantry, the utter disarmament of the country, the flooding of it with soldiers and armed constables, the utter uselessness of agitation to obtain the end sought by the Irish people, the right of self-government, and the refusal of the British government to concede even the moderate justice demanded by Mr. Parnell, [had] produced a feeling of despair, out of which desperation is born as a matter of course.” 37 Much reference in this respect was made to the Great Famine, which the journal presented as undeniable proof of British evil. 31 Citizen, June 7th, 1884. Citizen, October 10th, 1885. 33 Citizen, February 20th, 1886. 34 Citizen, January 31st, 1885. 35 Citizen, October 10th, 1885. 36 Citizen, January 31st, 1885. 37 Ibidem. 32 What act could possibly be crueler than the starving to death of more than a million innocent people? Anything the Irish were doing or could do to the British would never come anywhere near this act in sheer scale and atrocity. At a gathering on dynamite warfare in 1883 in Brooklyn, New York, one of the speakers claimed that the new violent mode of warfare was a strategy of selfdefense and was therefore “sanctioned by both religion and natural law.” 38 The dynamiters often applied this argument of self-defense. “Desperate methods of a war Ireland will be compelled to wage for self-preservation,” the Citizen once claimed. 39 The proponents of dynamite didn’t consider themselves terrorists. In their earlier life quite a few had personally experienced the effects of English rule. Many now lived in America because Britain had forced them into exile. They argued they were soldiers fighting a war to defend their country and deliver its people from an alien invader and during a time of war different sets of rules simply applied. “England shows no mercy. Why would Ireland show mercy?” the Citizen wondered. 40 The Citizen presented not only Britain’s conduct in Ireland, but also her actions and operations in other parts of her worldwide empire, and especially those in Africa and India, as additional proof of English rapacity and as justification for the measures applied by the Irish dynamiters. England was said to be “the assassin in India, the robber in Burmah, the annexationist in Africa and the bully in Canada.” 41 The 1882 British bombardment of Alexandria was brought forward by the Citizen as one of the examples of British imperial misrule. The paper called this operation a criminal act which “stamped her as a savage not fit to be an associate of civilized nations.” 42 How did the Citizen explain and defend British the civilian casualties occurring as a result of Irish outrages? In reality, as we shall see, only a limited number of British civilians were actually wounded or killed as a result of IrishAmerican terrorist attacks. Be that as it may, the journal refused to consider the British public as innocent. It argued that during all the centuries of cruel and bloody oppression the British people had never protested Britain’s unjust policies in Ireland. Unquestionably, the Citizen asserted, they had known about the atrocities which had 38 Citizen, December 29, 1883. Citizen, June 12th, 1886. 40 Citizen, December 8th, 1883. 41 Citizen, August 14th, 1886. 42 Citizen, February 14th, 1885. 39 accompanied centuries of oppression and exploitation of Ireland, and yet they had never undertaken anything to stop them. Not only had they failed to object to them, the journal argued, they had fully endorsed them. In the eyes of the Citizen, this made the people of England just as culpable as the British rulers giving the orders and the men executing them. In the words of the Citizen: Whatever a few English Radical newspapers may declare, the masses of the English favor a policy of brutal coercion for Ireland. This being the case, no Irishman, in America or elsewhere, ought to feel sorrowful because of Irish violence in Great Britain or in Ireland itself. The “state of war” still continues. Everything is force, and forceful acts are sure to beget bloody retaliation. Men who are face to face with relentless tyranny are not going to be deterred from the use of dynamite or the poniard by the outcries of terror-stricken foes or moralizing friends. 43 Goals of Dynamite In his book on Chicago’s Irish nationalists from 1881 to 1890 historian Michael Funchion states that “Though interested in making Ireland a nation, IrishAmericans were equally concerned, perhaps more so, with humiliating proud Britannia.” Indeed, on multiple occasions the Citizen and its chief editor expressed similar sentiments. Finerty, Funchion asserted took “delight every time the British suffered humiliation.” 44 The journal seemed to derive satisfaction from each and every occasion on which England brought international shame upon herself. It welcomed every military defeat or political scandal with great satisfaction and amusement. “It must be pleasant,” it said on one of those occasions, “to all true Americans, as well as to all true Irishmen, to see England quailing in a fashion at once so ludicrous and disgraceful.” England’s pretensions to the position of a first-class military power, it observed, were “laughed to scorn in Europe, Asia and Africa today.” 45 This raises questions about how the Citizen assessed its priorities. Like we saw earlier in this essay, the IRB in Ireland considered it as it first priority to procure complete separation through conventional warfare and open rebellion against the English oppressor. The Irish-American ‘irreconcilables’ of the Citizen considered 43 Citizen, November 24, 1883. M. F. Funchion, Chicago’s Irish nationalists, 32-3. 45 Citizen, May 9th, 1885. 44 such military schemes to be very manly and honourable, in fact even more so than dynamite. They also wholeheartedly subscribed to the principles and the motives which underlay this mode of warfare and fully shared its objective of complete separation. And just like the Irish Fenians themselves during the 1880s, the Citizen deemed this strategy inoperable and unrealistic at the present. The main thing which set the Irish-American Fenians apart from those in Ireland was the former’s unwillingness to await the arrival of the day when the Irish would be strong enough to rise up in arms against the British. Until that day finally came the Citizen indicated that they approved of “any means, however violent and repulsive to general humanity, for [England’s] annoyance or destruction.” 46 In a reaction to a dynamite outrage in 1885, an article in the Citizen cried out euphorically: “let us be thankful for God’s mercy, manifested in splendid violence, which makes tyrants tremble on their thrones […].” 47 The Citizen’s thoughts and comments on dynamite often contained the motives of scaring and irritating the British. In one article Finerty praised the dynamiters for causing the English “very great inconvenience,” which seems only a very limited objective. On another occasion it admitted that the danger represented by dynamite “may be purely imaginary.” But England, the paper contended, “quails before imaginary terrors.” 48 Apparently the Citizen didn’t cherish such high expectations concerning dynamite warfare as the Irish Fenians did concerning their strategy. The journal cherished different and more limited ambitions and considered any dynamite attack successful once it succeeded in frightening or agitating England’s political leaders and its citizens for a few moments. It seems as though for both adherents and perpetrators, dynamite rather served as a tool of vengeance, as a personal outlet for bottled-up frustration and aggression towards England and more as a demonstration of continued defiance in the face of foreign oppression than as a serious means towards the attainment of self-governance. According to the logic of the Irish Fenians of the 1860, historian Richard English asserted, “political achievement lay less in contemporary victories than in the bequeathing of a rich legacy to later nationalist generations.” The same held true for the Irish-American Fenians of the 1880s. None of the Irish revolutionaries of the past 46 Citizen, August 7th, 1886. Citizen, January 10th, 1885. 48 Citizen, August 7th , 1886. 47 whose names and deeds they held in such high esteem had come even close to realizing their dream. But it was not the act and its result that mattered the most. What was most important was the manifested intention. As Richard English formulates it: “The kind of methods you used demonstrated the kind of nation you were […].” 49 The Irish dynamiters often succeeded in their limited objective of taunting and occasionally terrifying the British public and its leaders and representatives. Nevertheless, these ‘active revolutionists’ as they also called themselves occasionally, continued to envision the dawning of that beautiful day when Ireland would finally cast off the British imperialist yoke, even if they realized that they themselves would probably neither live to see this day nor be instrumental in bringing it substantially nearer. But the ideal of national deliverance remained firmly fixed in their mind, and in the meantime the objective of annoying and harassing the British as much as possible seemed sufficiently honorable and satisfactory. Principally aiming for a symbolic effect and despite all its aggressive rhetoric the Citizen more than once expressed its admiration for the skill and ability with which Irish dynamiters managed to avoid human casualties. The paper once called the objective to spare lives “a very commendable feature of their programme.” 50 In reaction to an outrage in London a Citizen editor remarked that the fact that no one had been killed or seriously injured was “an agreeable outcome of the attempts,” because this demonstrated that the conspirators “desire more to inflict financial loss upon their enemies than to destroy non combatants.” The Citizen was willing, however, to make an exception for the present English constabularies whose death they would not have regretted as these men had long forfeited their innocence. 51 Instead of killing and injuring British citizens, the preferable purpose of the dynamiters was to create and maintain among Britain’s urban residents a constant and threatening sense of uncertainty and imminent danger. Seemingly uncontrollable and representing an ‘unseen and lurking’ danger, the dynamiter constituted a dreaded enemy. But the damage as a result of dynamite remained limited. Apart from the reluctance of the dynamiters to cause massive physical damage this seems to have also been the result of amateurism and sometimes just plain bad luck on the part of the dynamiters. It was not so much due to an efficient and watertight British security 49 R. English, Irish Freedom, 187-90. Citizen, January 31st, 1885. 51 Citizen, June 7th, 1884. 50 system, for the Irish extremists repeatedly demonstrated that they were able to penetrate to the very heart of British power and prestige. The whole thing seemed almost like a game, like a highly charged cat and mouse play between the dynamiters and the British policing authorities, which were on constant high alert but despite all safety and precautionary measures continued to be outsmarted by this relatively small band of conspirators who set out to defame Britain’s reputation by striking at her most symbolic and heavily-guarded national monuments. With these attacks the perpetrators defied and exposed the twin myths of British invulnerability and Irish helplessness. They attempted to expose British impotence when faced with Irish courage, passion and ingenuity and wanted to make them feel that they were at the mercy of a power which they could neither see nor control. Dynamite gave these men the illusion that they still retained some agency and control in Ireland’s struggle. Despite causing mostly only symbolic, financial and emotional damage the British public demanded and the British authorities responded with remorseless exemplary punishment of those men caught for outrages and those suspected of them. Between 1883 and 1885 twenty-seven Irish-Americans were thrown into British prisons where they were basically left to languish. The Citizen continually voiced its indignation over the cruel treatment and the hopeless plight of these men and against the corrupt British justice system which had put them there. But the terrifying consequences of apprehension at the hands of the British also made the intentions of the dynamiters seem even more heroic and patriotic. Each Irish terrorist hanged or thrown into prison by the British became a martyr for the Great Cause and provided additional motivation to avenge the British. The men of dynamite entertained no serious aspirations to procure independence for Ireland through dynamite except, as we shall see, on a few occasions when they actually hoped something grander might be obtained through dynamite. But overall they believed that this task belonged to a later generation. These desperate men cherished one scenario however, in which national deliverance would be realized within their own lifetimes, and that was when some foreign enemy would distract or weaken Britain to such a degree that she would be forced to weaken or surrender her claim on Ireland. Furthermore, a nation in war with Britain would be much helped by an alliance with Ireland. This was a widely shared sentiment throughout the Irish-American community. “England’s difficulty is Ireland’s opportunity,” was the slogan that captured this hope. “May we live in the hope that God will raise up an enemy to England that will smite her even as Samson smote the Philistines?” the Citizen asked its readers in one article. In another article the Citizen called upon all the Irish: “Let the Irish in Ireland and the men of Irish blood in America keep cool, but keep the flag flying. Let them prepare to take advantage of England’s difficulties and misfortunes […].52 This coolness and preparation would pay off eventually, because the Citizen was certain that “Great Britain must eventually get into some difficulty which would compel her to allow Ireland to snap her chains and be the mistress of her own destinies.” 53 That is why there arose great anticipation among the ranks of the Citizen every time that England became involved in some foreign war or conflict. In the early months of 1885, for example, when a war between Britain and Russia seemed inevitable, the Citizen could hardly contain its excitement. “If Russia and England were at war to-morrow,” the Citizen imagined, “the latter nation, with all her wealth and strength, might be only to glad to purchase the good will of the Irish race by concessions vastly greater than the most extreme Home Ruler would dream of asking.” 54 Although the Citizen admitted to feeling no sympathy for Russia because of the tyrannical character of its reign (the Citizen often compared and identified the Irish cause with that of Poland, which struggled under Russian oppression), it regarded Britain as an even greater tyrant. Furthermore, any state that Britain regarded as its enemy could count on the sympathies of the Irish people. 55 Grandiose plans were drawn up to send an Irish delegation to the Russian tsar to forge a Russian-Irish alliance. 56 Naturally, such an alliance never came about. While hoping that soon God would raise up an enemy to England, the journal simultaneously regretted the current state of affairs which forced the Irish to resign to such a degrading and subordinate position. It stung terribly that for a successful outcome of its struggle for independence Ireland still remained at the mercy of foreign parties and external circumstances. In its own words, the Citizen lamented “the 52 Citizen, April 4th, 1885. Citizen, March 22nd, 1884. 54 Citizen, August 21st, 1886. 55 Citizen, May 2nd, 1885. 56 Citizen, March 21st, 1885. 53 necessity that forces [Ireland] to plead the cause of her nationality in the court of the stranger and the tyrant […]. 57 Alternatives to Dynamite For John Finerty and the Citizen, dynamite constituted the foremost agent of resistance, but the journal identified additional ways to express anti-British sentiment and national pride and identity. National American politics was one of those. The Citizen thought it could be harnessed to harass the English foe. Britain and the United States were diplomatically friendly nations but that didn’t take away the Citizen’s suspicion about the former’s imperial designs on North America. Such ambitions, it argued, were always lurking just below the thin layer of British formal courtesy. The Citizen reminded its readers that during the still recent American Civil War Britain had supported the Confederacy and the paper warned that when a new opportunity would come along for her to take back what she once possessed, she would seize it. England, the Citizen held, dreamed of regaining political supremacy in America “not only when she is asleep, but also when she is wide awake.” 58 The Citizen’s founder and editor-in-chief John Finerty, once he was elected to Congress as an independent Democrat in 1882, harnessed all his political influence to advance Irish and hinder British interests. Before long he was making pleas before Congress for the expansion and strengthening of the US army. The army, he stated, was not worthy of its great generals among whom, he unsurprisingly argued, were a great many men of Irish ancestry. Even more alarming to Finerty was the deplorable condition of his country’s naval forces. The Citizen lamented America’s “criminal apathy in regard to our navy and coast defenses.” 59 America’s weak and tiny fleet stood in stark contrast to Britain’s huge and powerful fleet, which was still unrivaled throughout the world. America needed a fleet that was ready for battle. Should she need to assert her power in her sphere of influence, Finerty mentioned the Panama Canal, or should some foreign country decide for whatever reason to attack the United States or to harass its commercial fleet, 57 Citizen, November 3, 1883. Citizen, January 24th, 1885. 59 Citizen, July 31st, 1886. 58 the Americans would be powerless, Finerty argued. “It is impossible for us,” he said in a speech in front of Congress, “to have any moral influence with European powers without a navy.” 60 Hiding his true motives, Finerty reasoned that the project for strengthening America’s fighting forces would only serve the public American interest by protecting the United States’ worldwide influence and by providing great opportunities to domestic industries. He desired that “every one of these ships should be built of American material and only by American workmen.” 61 The tariff issue was another American political issue that acquired significance to Finerty and the Citizen due to its relation to Britain. Finerty deemed a trade tariff crucial as a measure to protect American manufacturing. Once free trade reigned, he argued, American markets would be flooded with foreign manufactures, especially from England. Under the motto “burn everything that comes from England but the coal,” the Citizen passionately resisted free trade. “Individually,” Finerty declared, “I consider free trade an anti-American doctrine.” 62 He framed those who were in favor of free trade as unpatriotic individuals “who derive their inspiration mostly from America’s deadliest foe – England.” 63 Before Congress he spoke of the attempts of the British lobby in America: “In America [Britain] seeks to accomplish by pamphlets and dinners what in China and in Ireland she won by the bolder operation of brute force. She wants to be the workshop of the world, and the American advocates of what is called “free trade” are doing their utmost to gratify her ambition.” 64 In the passing of most American political measures that could benefit Britain and in the rejection of all that worked to its disadvantage the Citizen perceived the manipulative hand of the British. Complots and conspiracies were everywhere. The 1884 presidential elections provide a telling example. During his national campaign, Democratic presidential candidate Grover Cleveland publically and provocatively voiced his concern and disapproval over the pernicious influence of the Irish political element on the Democratic Party and on American politics in general. When to the great dismay of the Citizen Cleveland won the elections, the journal concluded that British intrigue and machination must have been at work. There was no doubt about this. As one article formulated it: “There are people who would not believe that the 60 Citizen, November 10, 1883; March 15th, 1884. Citizen, March 22nd, 1884. 62 Citizen, March 15th, 1884. 63 Citizen, March 29th, 1884 64 Citizen, May 10th, 1884. 61 sun was south in the northern hemisphere every day at 12 o’clock, if it did not suit them to believe so, and there may be people who do not believe that Grover Cleveland was elected by English influence.” 65 In addition to physical force and American politics the Citizen named other, more indirect and peaceful ways to express Irish defiance and nationalism. For example through national songs and poetry. Politically and militarily Ireland had been conquered by England, the journal argued, but as long as Irish culture and traditions remained alive and vital the British conquest of Ireland would be incomplete. The Citizen placed most emphasis on cultural themes and motives and avoided divisive ethnic and religious ones. Irish national history supposedly possessed an important instructive value and imbued the Irish with a unique and distinct character. As one reader put it in a letter to the Citizen: “When Irish music and song shall cease to have a lingering enchantment for the soul of our nation, England’s chain will be bound around her securely forever, and her indestructible vitality will be a thing of the past.” The Citizen itself wrote: “We cannot surely be earnest in our desire to make Ireland free, if we are wholly unsolicitous about Ireland’s language and music.” 66 The Citizen also attached great significance to the revitalization and preservation of the old Gaelic language. It still regretted the fact that both the Irish and the Americans had adopted English as their national language, for wasn’t that the tongue of respectively their present and former oppressor? The paper claimed it would rather have seen America adopt French instead as English as the national language and argued that this would have made more sense as well because the French language was not only one of the world’s most beautiful languages in addition to being universally known and spoken, but the French nation had also been “America’s ally in her hour of need.” Language, the journal reasoned, was not only a neutral medium through which people communicated. “We need our language and our history to know ourselves,” one article claimed. “The death of the national language is a sure sign of national decadence.” 67 It regarded the English language as the main vehicle of British cultural values and the principle agent of Britain’s imperial conquest. The Americans and the Irish were increasingly adopting English customs and values, the Citizen worriedly 65 Citizen, January 24th, 1885. Citizen, January 31st, 1885. 67 Citizen, March 28th, 1885; Citizen, January 24th, 1885. 66 observed and it attributed this alarming trend to the adoption of English as the national language. In arguing this the Citizen echoed the nationalist Thomas Davis, an important Irish national figure of the 1840s, who had said that “to lose your native tongue, and learn that of an alien, is the worst badge of conquest – it is the chain on the soul,” 68 and that “A people without a language of its own is only half a nation.” 69 The Citizen reprimanded the ‘modern school of Irish political agitators,’ by which they meant both the contemporary Irish politicians and those of the past, mainly O’Connell, for neglecting or otherwise not sufficiently attending to their duties with regard to the promotion and maintenance of the crucial aspects of Irish culture and nationality. Irish politicians didn’t seem to mourn the demise of their country’s cultural and lingual heritage and failed to realize its great significance in the strengthening of the national idea. Their efforts, the Citizen argued, were of a purely pragmatic nature and if Ireland could free itself from Britain by effectively becoming British than they would go ahead anyway. But the Citizen observed that “however coldly some of the prominent leaders of public opinion in Ireland may feel towards Gaelic, the masses of the Irish people, if a popular vote were taken, would vote in an overwhelming majority for fostering the national language under a native parliament […].”70 The Citizen made all kinds of – mainly rhetorical – attempts to rekindle the cooling embers of Ireland’s cultural pride. Among other initiatives, it proposed the foundation of a movement directed towards reviving and keeping alive Irish traditional sports and games, 71 extensively recounted and venerated Ireland’s glorious past and the great deeds of its heroes and promoted the instruction of the Gaelic language at Irish schools. 72 Almost every week’s issue contained at least one Gaelic text or poem, along with translation, from a reader or from a famous historical or contemporary Irish writer or poet. The journal deemed the restoration and preservation of Irish and Celtic cultural institutions extremely relevant as a form of passive resistance to British imperialism and as an expression of Irish cultural vitality. 68 R. English, Irish Freedom, 141. Ibidem, 147. 70 Citizen, May 1st, 1886. 71 P. Darby, ‘Emigrants at Play’, 58. 72 Citizen, January 31st, 1885. 69