Subjects
Lives of Victorian Political Figures, Part II:
Daniel O'Connell, James Bronterre O'Brien, Charles Stewart Parnell and Michael Davitt by their Contemporaries
General Editors: Nancy LoPatin-Lummis and Michael Partridge
Volume Editors: Christine Kinealy, David Stack, Michael W de Nie and Carla King
Lives of Victorian Political Figures
978 1 85196 827 5: 234x156mm: £350.00/$625.00
Place your orders by 30th June 2011
Irish independence remains high on the political agenda today. It has its roots in the democratic movements of the nineteenth century. This four-volume facsimile edition looks at the lives and politics of four of the key players in the independence and labour movements of the nineteenth century: Daniel O’Connell (1775-1847) a non-violent campaigner for Catholic emancipation; Charles Stewart Parnell (1846-91) Home Rule MP; Michael Davitt (1846-1906) member of the violent Irish Republican Brotherhood and founder of the Irish Land League; and James Bronterre O’Brien (1805-64) a Chartist leader and working-class reformer. The material collected here allows scholars to explore how they were viewed across the world during their lifetimes, and how their reputations developed after their deaths.
Wide-ranging political issues are addressed: Catholic Emancipation, self-governance, land-reform, universal suffrage and the labour movement, as well as the over-arching question of whether physical force should be used to achieve political ends if the democratic process collapses.
This edition will be useful to those studying nineteenth-century British and Irish history, Chartism, the history of the labour and abolitionist movements, and the rise of Irish Nationalism.
- Includes transcriptions of unpublished material from British and Irish archives
- Rare and difficult-to-access material includes international newspaper commentary, pamphlets, private letters, memoirs, obituaries and eulogies
- Full editorial apparatus includes a substantial general introduction, introductions to each volume, bibliographies, chronologies, headnotes, endnotes and a general index in the final volume
- Each facsimile page is digitally cleaned and enhanced, significantly improving on the quality and legibility of the original
Contents
Volume 1: Daniel O’Connell
[Richard Lalor Shiel], ‘Sketches of the Irish Bar Mr O’Connell’, Dublin Evening Mail (1823); [Anon], ‘Clare Election’, Constitution: Or Cork Advertiser (1828); [Anon], ‘Roman Catholic Association’, Constitution: Or Cork Advertiser (1828); ‘Perdu’, ‘An Irish Trial’, Comet (1832); [Anon], Sketch of the Political, Professional and Moral Character of Daniel O’Connell Esq (1825); Anthony Raftery, ‘Buapo UI Cónaill’ [O’Connell’s Victory], from Songs Ascribed to Raftery (1903); [Anon], ‘Roman Catholic Association’, Warder (1829); [Anon], ‘Mr O’Connell’s Eligibility to Sit in Parliament’, Warder (1829); [Anon], ‘The Petition of the Undersigned Members of the Orange Institution of Ireland’, Warder (1829); James W Doyle, [Letter to Daniel O’Connell], Warder (1829); Debate on Daniel O’Connell taking his parliamentary seat, Hansard (1829); [Anon], ‘A Portrait of a Public Character’, Belfast Protestant Journal (1846); Letter from William Smith O’Brien, on the increasing influence of Catholicism on O’Connell (1847); John Greenleaf Whittier, Sketch of Daniel O’Connell (1839); Daniel O’Connell, ‘Letter of Daniel O’Connell on American Slavery’, Liberty or Slavery? (1863); Hon S P Chase, ‘Letter of Hon S P Chase in Reply to Daniel O’Connell’, Liberty or Slavery? (1863); William Lloyd Garrison, Letter to Louis Kossuth, Concerning Freedom and Slavery in the United States (1852) (excerpts); Gregory XVI, The Pope’s Bull and the Words of Daniel O’Connell (1856); Daniel O’Connell et al, The Irish Patriot: Daniel O Connel’s [sic] Legacy to Irish Americans (1863) (excerpt); ‘Runneymede’ [Benjamin Disraeli], ‘To the Chancellor of the Exchequer’, The Times (1836); [Henry Cooke], The Repealer Repulsed! (1841) (excerpts) ; [Queen Victoria on O’Connell and Repeal, 1843 and 1844], Journals of Queen Victoria; Letter from Alexander Bannerman to Lord John Russell (1846); Letter from Lord Bessborough to Lord John Russell (1846); Letter from Thomas Verner, Magistrate in Belfast, with a Copy of Deposition by John Rea (1847); Walter Cox, The Cuckoo Calendar (1833); Feargus O’Connor, A Series of Letters from Feargus O’Connor to Daniel O’Connell (1836) (excerpts); John O’Connell, ‘Preface’ to The Life and Speeches of Daniel O’Connell, MP (1846); ‘Speranza’ [Jane Francesca Elgee], ‘A Lament’, Nation (1846); Letter from Thomas Carlyle to Margaret Carlyle (1847); William J O’Neill Daunt, Personal Recollections of the Late Daniel O’Connell MP (1848); [Anon], ‘O’Connell’s Mission No II’, Ireland and O’Connell (1835); Jacob Venedey, Ireland and the Irish during the Repeal Years (1844) (excerpt); [Anon], ‘Repeal in Boston’, Boston Post (1843); Charles Montalembert, De l’Avenir Politique de l’Angleterre (1856); [Anon], ‘Repeal Association – This Day’, The Times (1847); [Anon], ‘Death of the Liberator’, Weekly Freeman’s Journal (1847); [Anon], Editorial Comment on O’Connell’s Death, The Times (1847); [Anon], ‘Death of Mr O’Connell’, The Times (1847); [Anon], ‘Mr O’Connell’, The Times (1847); Father Kenyon, Letters on the Death of O’Connell [1847], Father Kenyon: A Patriot Priest of ’48 (1921); Gioacchino Ventura, ‘Padre Ventura’s Funeral Oration’ [1847], Popular Life of Daniel O’Connell (1875); William H Seward, An Oration on the Death of Daniel O’Connell (1847); Robert Young, ‘Stanzas on the Death of Daniel O’Connell, Esq, MP’, The Poetical Remembrancer (1854); [Anon], ‘Who will Succeed O’Connell?’, Boston Post (1847); Wendell Philips, ‘A Centenary Oration’ [1875], Popular Life of Daniel O’Connell (1875); W E Gladstone, ‘Daniel O’Connell’, Nineteenth Century (1889)
Volume 2: Charles Stewart Parnell
Thomas Sherlock, The Life of Charles Stewart Parnell, with an Account of His Ancestry (1881) (excerpts); T P O’Connor and R M McWade, Gladstone–Parnell and the Great Irish Struggle (1886) (excerpts); ‘The Irish “Leader”’, Funny Folks (1880); [Anon], ‘Mr Parnell at Home’, The Derry Journal (1880); T Wemyss Reid, The Life of the Right Honourable William Edward Forster (1888) (excerpt); Emily Monroe Dickinson, A Patriot’s Mistake (1905) (excerpt); William O’Brien, Recollections (1905) (excerpt); ‘The Irish Sphinx’, Weekly Irish Times (29 September 1883); ‘St Dunstan and the — (Say, And Mephistopheles, for the Look of the Thing)’, Judy (1885); [Anon], ‘Grex Parnellii’, Saturday Review (1886); Lord Randolph Churchill, ‘The Proposed Abandonment of Ulster’ (1886); [Anon], ‘Mr Charles Stewart Parnell, MP The Irish Home Rule Leader’, Penny Illustrated Paper (1886); ‘Resurgam!’, Funny Folks (1886); ‘Good Health!’, Weekly Freeman (1889); [Anon], ‘Parnellism and Crime Mr Parnell and the Phœnix-Park Murders’, The Times (1887); [Anon], Parnellism and Crime (1887) (excerpts); ‘The Challenge’, Punch (1887); ‘Re-opening of the Special Commission Mr Parnell in the Witness Box’, Illustrated London News (1889); John MacDonald, Diary of the Parnell Commission (1890) (excerpts); A V Dicey, The Verdict (1890) (excerpt); ‘The Parnell Peep Show’, Fun (1890); T D Sullivan, Recollections of Troubled Times in Irish Politics (1905) (excerpt); [Michael Davitt], ‘Mr Parnell’s Position’, Labour World (1890); [Anon], ‘Mr Parnell and the Irish People’, The Nation (1890); ‘In Sight of Port’, Weekly Freeman, (1890); [Anon], ‘Mr Parnell’s Manifesto’, The Nation (1890); [Anon], ‘Mr Parnell’, Freeman’s Journal (1891); ‘Public Opinion’, United Ireland – ‘Suppressed’ Edition (1890); [Anon], The Parnellite Split (1891) (excerpts); Robert McWade, The Uncrowned King (1891) (excerpt); [Anon], ‘The Death of Mr Parnell’, Freeman’s Journal (1891); [Anon], ‘Chas S Parnell: A City of Mourning’, Dublin Evening Telegraph (1891); [Anon], ‘Mr Parnell’s Legacy – The Scene on Sunday’, Limerick Reporter and Tipperary Vindicator (1891); ‘Let There be Peace’, Weekly Freeman (1891); ‘No!’, United Ireland (1891); T M Healy, ‘A Great Man’s Fancies – I’, Westminster Budget (1893); T M Healy, ‘A Great Man’s Fancies– II’, Westminster Budget (1893); Lionel Johnson, ‘The Man Who Would be King’, Academy (1898); Louis Garvin, ‘Parnell and His Power’, Fortnightly Review (1898)
Volume 3: Michael Davitt
Sabina Davitt, account of Davitt’s youth, from Chief and Tribune (1919); Letters from Francis and Martin Haran to Mrs Mary Davitt (1907); John Denvir, The Life Story of an Old Rebel (1910) (excerpt); William O’Brien, Recollections (1905) (excerpt); [Anon], ‘Supposed Capture of Fenians’, The Times (1870); [Anon], ‘The Capture of Supposed Fenians’, The Times (1870); [Anon], ‘Central Criminal Court, July 18’, The Times (1870); [Anon], ‘Central Criminal Court, July 18’, The Times (1870); Account of John O’Connor Power’s Proposal to Amend the Prison Bill, Hansard, (1877); John Devoy, The Land of Eire (1882) (excerpt); Letter from Corporal Thomas Chambers to John Boyle O’Reilly, [1878], Letter from Doctor William Carroll to John Devoy [1878], Letter from Doctor William Carroll to John Devoy [1878], Letter from Doctor William Carroll to John Devoy [1878], Letter from Doctor William Carroll to John Devoy [1878], Letter from John O’Leary to John Devoy [1878], Letter from John Devoy to James Reynolds [1878], Letter from John Devoy to James Reynolds [1879], Letter from Richard Pigott to an unknown correspondent [1879], Letter from Michael Davitt to John Devoy [1880], Letter from Patrick Egan to John Devoy [1882], Letter from James O’Kelly to John Devoy [1882], Letter from John O’Leary to John Devoy [1882] Devoy’s Post Bag (1948); [Anon], ‘The Released Political Prisoners’, Freeman’s Journal (1878); John Devoy, ‘Davitt’s Relations with the Fenians’, Gaelic American (1906); John Devoy, The Land of Eire (1882) (excerpt); Evidence of Charles Stewart Parnell, Report of the Special Commission on Parnellism and Crime (1890) (excerpts); Richard Pigott, Personal Recollections of an Irish Nationalist Journalist (1883); D B Cashman, The Life of Michael Davitt, Founder of the National Land League (1882); William O’Brien, Recollections (1905) (excerpts); Letter from Governor Clifton to Sir William Harcourt (8 February 1881); Letter from Governor Clifton to Sir William Harcourt (6 May 1882) (excerpt); Henry George, ‘Davitt A Splendid Interview with the Released Chief’, Irish World (1882); Henry George, ‘The Phoenix Park Affair and its Effect in London’, Irish World (1882) (excerpt); Henry George, [Letter to the Irish World], Irish World (1882) (excerpt); Evidence of Matthew Harris, Report of the Special Commission on Parnellism and Crime (1890) (excerpt); [Anon], ‘Michael Davitt on the Rampage’, Connaught Telegraph (1882) ; William O’Brien, Evening Memories (1920) (excerpt); Lord and Lady Aberdeen, “We Twa”: Reminiscences of Lord and Lady Aberdeen (1926) (excerpt); [Anon], ‘Dublin of Today’, Daily Telegraph (1886) (excerpt); Jose Martí, [Account of Visit to Ireland], La Nación (1887); [Anon], ‘Arrival of Mr M Davitt’, Freeman’s Journal (1887); [Anon], ‘Presentations to Mrs Davitt’, Freeman’s Journal (1887); Sophie O’Brien, ‘Memoir of Mr and Mrs Michael Davitt’; Wilfred Scawen Blunt, The Land War in Ireland (1912); Wilfred Scawen Blunt, The Land War in Ireland (1912) (excerpts); [Anon], ‘Jubilee Eviction Campaign’, Freeman’s Journal (1887); Major-General Sir Alfred E Turner, Sixty Years of a Soldier’s Life (1912) (excerpts); John Macdonald, Diary of the Parnell Commission (1890) (excerpts); D D Sheehan, Ireland Since Parnell (1921) (excerpt); [Anon], ‘The Labour Question’, Freeman’s Journal (1890); [Anon], ‘The Liverpool Strike’, Freeman’s Journal (1890); [Anon], ‘The Labour Meeting in Phœnix Park’, Freeman’s Journal (1890); Edward Byrne, ‘Parnelliana’, Irish Weekly Independent (1898) (excerpt); Maud Gonne McBride, A Servant of the Queen (1938) (excerpt); J G Swift MacNeill, What I Have Seen and Heard (1924) (excerpt); Arthur Lynch, Ireland: Vital Hour (1915) (excerpt; Arthur Lynch, My Life Story (1924) (excerpt); ‘Pat’ [P D Kenny], ‘Michael Davitt and the Boers’, Saturday Review (1908); [Arthur Griffith], [‘Mr Davitt’s letters from South Africa’], United Irishman (1900); [Arthur Griffith], [‘Mr Davitt, as we surmised’], United Irishman (1900); William O’Brien, An Olive Branch in Ireland and its History (1910) (excerpts) ‘Nationalist’ [Arthur Griffith], ‘The Game of Humbug’, United Irishman (1901); H M Hyndman, Further Reminiscences (1912) (excerpt); [William Bulfin], ‘Interview with Mr M Davitt’, The Southern Cross (1904); Sir William Orpen, Stories of Old Ireland and Myself (1924) (excerpt); Alfred Webb, Alfred Webb: The Autobiography of a Quaker Nationalist (1999) (excerpt); [Anon], ‘Thos Brennan’s Tribute’, Gaelic American (1906); [James Connolly], ‘A Text for a Revolutionary Lecture’, Harp (1908); ‘Pat’ [P D Kenny], ‘Patriana’, Irish Peasant (1906); Wilfred Scawen Blunt, ‘Michael Davitt, A Personal Recollection’, Speaker (1906); F Sheehy-Skeffington, ‘Michael Davitt’s ideals’, National Democrat (1907); J Keir Hardie, ‘Michael Davitt I – The Democrat’, Socialist Review (1908); T M Kettle, ‘Michael Davitt II – the Nationalist’, Socialist Review (1908); F Sheehy Skeffington, ‘Frederick Ryan’, Irish Review (1913) (excerpt); J P Dunne, ‘Memoir of Michael Davitt’ (1941); [Anon], ‘A New Song on Michael Davitt’ (1881); [Anon], ‘Davitt: 1882’, Irish World (1882); [Anon], ‘Our Cartoon’, United Ireland (1887)
Volume 4: James Bronterre O’Brien
[Anon], ‘Spy Report’ (1830); [Anon], ‘Mr Hunt and the Electors of Preston’, A Penny Paper for the People by the Poor Man’s Guardian (1831); John & James Powell, Proceedings of the Second Co-operative Congress, Held in Birmingham, October 4, 5, and 6 1831 (1831) (excerpts); Thomas MacConnell, ‘To the Editor of Bronterre’s National Reformer’, Bronterre’s National Reformer (1837); John Ward, ‘To Bronterre’, Bronterre’s National Reformer (1837); [Anon], ‘The Anarchists and the “Weekly Chronicle”’, Weekly Chronicle (1838); [Anon], ‘“Treachery in the Camp,” or the Anarchists at a Discount’, Weekly Chronicle (1838); Richard Carlile, ‘Kings, Lords, Priests, &c &c’, Operative (1839); Richard Carlile, ‘Another Attack on Us by Mr Carlile’, Operative (1839); Richard Carlile, ‘To the Editor of “The Operative”’, Operative (1839); Richard Carlile, An Address to that Portion of the People of Great Britain and Ireland Calling Themselves Reformers (1839); Francis Place, ‘The Northern Star Newspaper O’Connor O’Brien Stephens and Oastler’; Francis Place, [O’Brien and the Operative newspaper] (excerpt); Francis Place, ‘Public meeting at Kilmarnock, 11 June 1839’; Richard Brookes, ‘Bronterre and his Constituents’, Operative (1839); John Warden, ‘Bronterre O’Brien and Physical Force’, Operative (1839); George Julian Harney, ‘To the Editor of “The Operative”’, Operative (1838); ‘SW’, ‘To the Editor of “The Operative”’, Operative (1838); William Morgan, ‘The “Operatives” in Bristol’, Operative (1838); James Devlin, ‘The Phoenix Pamphlet’, Cordwainers’ Companion (1844); James Bronterre O’Brien, ‘Bronterre’, Northern Star and Leeds General Advertiser (1838); George Julian Harney, ‘John Bell and the Bradford Radicals’, Northern Star and Leeds General Advertiser (1838); [Anon], ‘The Operative’, Northern Star and Leeds General Advertiser (1838); [Anon], ‘Bronterre and the “Operative”’, Northern Star and Leeds General Advertiser (1838); [Anon], ‘Direction of the Movement’, Northern Star and Leeds General Advertiser (1839); [Anon], ‘The Southern Star’, Northern Star and Leeds General Advertiser (1839); [Anon], ‘Bronterre O’Brien’s New Paper’, Northern Star and Leeds General Advertiser (1839); [Anon], ‘The Stamp Office and the Southern Star’, Southern Star and London and Brighton Patriot (1840); George Julian Harney, ‘To James Bronterre O’Brien’, Southern Star and London and Brighton Patriot (1840); [Anon], ‘Chartist Meeting in Newcastle on Sunday Evening’, Tyne Mercury: Or, Northumberland, Durham, and Cumberland Gazette (1839); Letter from Lord John Russell to the Post Master General (1839); [Anon], ‘Bow-Street Arrest of A Delegate’, Charter (1839); [Anon], ‘Police’, The Times (1839) (excerpt); [Anon], ‘Police’, The Times (1839) (excerpt); [Anon], ‘Political Prosecutions’, Charter (1840); [Anon], ‘Chartist Trials’, Southern Star and London and Brighton Patriot (1840); [Anon], ‘Mr O’Brien’s Defence’, Southern Star and London and Brighton Patriot (1840); [Anon], ‘Defence of Bronterre O’Brien’, Southern Star and London and Brighton Patriot (1840); Sophia O’Brien, ‘To the Editor of The Times’, The Times (1840); Petition and Letters in Campaign to Secure O’Brien’s Release; John Ogden, ‘Bronterre O’Brien’, Northern Star and Leeds General Advertiser (1841); [Anon], ‘The Imprisoned Chartists’, The Times (1840); William McDonald, ‘Visit to Kendal of Mr J Bronterre O’Brien’, Northern Star and Leeds General Advertiser (1841); [Anon], ‘Bronterre O’Brien in London’, Northern Star and Leeds General Advertiser (1841); [Anon], ‘The Leeds Times and Bronterre O’Brien’, Northern Star and Leeds General Advertiser (1841); [Anon], ‘Public Meeting – Bronterre O’Brien’, Northern Star and Leeds General Advertiser (1841); [Anon], ‘Bronterre O’Brien in London’, Northern Star and Leeds General Advertiser (1841); ‘Original Correspondence’, British Statesman (1842); ‘A Shopkeeper’, ‘To James Bronterre O’Brien’, British Statesman (1842); Nathaniel Morling, ‘To the Chartists of Great Britain’, British Statesman (1842); James Dodd, ‘To B O’Brien’, British Statesman (1842); Enock Payne et al, ‘To the Chartists of the United Kingdom’, British Statesman (1842); ‘A Member’, Brief Sketches of the Birmingham Conference (1842); Feargus O’Connor, ‘To The Imperial Chartists’, Northern Star and Leeds General Advertiser (1842); [Anon], ‘How to Convict Leach’, Northern Star and Leeds General Advertiser (1842); [Anon], ‘The Last of the “Starved Viper”’, Northern Star and Leeds General Advertiser (1842); Feargus O’Connor, ‘To Mr O’Brien’, Northern Star and Leeds General Advertiser (17 September 1842)152; [Feargus O’Connor], ‘The “Infernal Paper-Money” Scheme, and Its Hired Advocate’, Northern Star and Leeds General Advertiser (1845); Feargus O’Connor, ‘To Mr James Bronterre O’Brien’, Northern Star and Leeds General Advertiser (1845); [Anon], ‘To Readers & Correspondents’, Northern Star and Leeds General Advertiser (1845); Thomas Fraser, ‘A Few Cheering Words from an Old friend and True Democrat’, National Reformer and Manx Weekly Review of Home and Foreign Affairs (1846); William King, ‘John-Street Meetings – O’Brienism versus Owenism’, National Reformer and Manx Weekly Review of Home and Foreign Affairs (1847); William Emmerson, ‘To the Editor of the National Reformer’, National Reformer and Manx Weekly Review of Home and Foreign Affairs (1847); [Anon], ‘Mr J Bronterre O’Brien’, Reynolds’s Political Instructor (1850); [Anon], ‘James Bronterre O’Brien’, People’s Paper (1853); [Anon], ‘The O’Brien Testimonial’, People’s Paper (1853); [Anon], ‘Grand Soiree in Honour of the “Star of Freedom”’, Star of Freedom (1852); Ernest Jones, ‘To the Supporters of “The People’s Paper”’, People’s Paper (1854); [Anon], ‘The People’s Paper’, People’s Paper (1854); [Anon], ‘The Secret Work’, People’s Paper (1854); [Anon], ‘Mr Gammage and Mr O’Brien’, People’s Paper (1854); [Anon], ‘The People’s Paper’, People’s Paper (1854); [Anon], Mr O’Brien and the Co-Editorship’, People’s Paper (1854); [Anon], [Review of James Bronterre O’Brien, Odes to Lord Palmerston and Louis Napoleon], Reynolds’s Newspaper (1856); [Anon], [Review of James Bronterre O’Brien, An Elegy on the Death of Robespierre], Reynolds’s Newspaper (1856); Letter from H E Neal to Joseph Cowen (1859) (excerpt); Alexander Somerville, Conservative Science of Nations (1860) (excerpt); G E Harris, ‘Death of Mr Bronterre O’Brien’, National Reformer (1865); [G E Harris], ‘The Funeral of Mr James Bronterre O’Brien, BA’, National Reformer (1865); Hugh Felton, ‘Lines on James Bronterre O’Brien’, National Reformer (1865); J Matthews, ‘Death of James Bronterre O’Brien’, National Reformer (1865); Letter from Victor Hugo to G E Harris (30 December 1864); W H Cockburn, ‘To the Editor of The Times’, The Times (1865); John Rogers et al, ‘The National Reform League’, Supplement to the Working Man (1867); John Rogers et al, ‘Bronterre O’Brien To the Editor of the Bee-hive’, The Bee-hive (1869); ‘Whyte Thorne’, The Democracy (1876) (excerpt); ‘Spartacus’ [W J Linton], ‘Dedication’ to James Bronterre O’Brien, The Rise, Progress, and Phases of Human Slavery (1885)