Fenian raids
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The Fenian raids were attacks by members of the Fenian Brotherhood based in the United States, on British army forts, customs posts and other targets in Canada in order to bring pressure on Britain to withdraw from Ireland, between 1866 and 1871. Most of the raids were successfully repelled by British forces and local militias. They divided many Irish-Canadians, many of whom were torn between loyalty to their new home and sympathy for the aims of the Fenians. The Protestant Irish were generally loyal to Britain and fought with the Orange Order against the Fenians. While the U.S. authorities arrested the men and confiscated their arms afterwards, there is speculation that many in government had turned a blind eye to the preparations for the invasion, angered at actions that could be construed as British assistance to the Confederacy during the American Civil War. There were five Fenian raids of note.
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[edit] Campobello Island raid (1866)
This Fenian raid occurred in April, 1866, at Campobello Island. A Fenian Brotherhood war party of 700+ members arrived at the Maine shore opposite the island with the intention of seizing Campobello from the British. The US government intervened and a military force dispersed the marauders. This action served to reinforce the idea of protection for New Brunswick by joining with the British North American colonies of Nova Scotia, Canada East, and Canada West in Confederation to form the Dominion of Canada.
[edit] Niagara raid (1866)
In 1866, the Fenians had split into two factions, with the original faction, led by Fenian founder John O'Mahony focused more on fundraising for rebels in Ireland. The leaders of the more militant "senate faction" believed that even a marginally successful invasion of the Province of Canada or other parts of British North America would provide them with leverage in their efforts. After an April attempt to raid New Brunswick (see "Campobello Island Raid", above) that had been blessed by O'Mahony failed, the senate faction Fenians implemented their own plan for an invasion into Canada West (now southern Ontario) from Buffalo, New York.
Fenian commander John O'Neill and an Irish-American force crossed the Niagara River and skirmished with a brigade of Canadian militia near Ridgeway on 2 June 1866. Several hundred other Fenians (Canadian sources claim up to 3,000) remained in the U.S., prevented from crossing the river by the arrival of the U.S. Navy's side-wheeler gunboat USS Michigan.
O'Neill's 800 Fenian soldiers called themselves the "Irish Republican Army," and some wore uniforms with "IRA" buttons. This is considered to be the first use of the term. (A well-known fanciful painting of the skirmish in the National Archives of Canada depicts a green flag with the letters IRA over a gold harp; in fact, the most common Fenian emblem at this time was a sunburst.)
After assembling with other units from the province and marching all night, the Canadians advanced on the Fenians the next morning at Ridgeway, a small hamlet west of Fort Erie. The Canadian militia consisted of inexperienced volunteers with no more than basic drill training and primarily Enfield rifled muskets comparable to the armaments of the Fenians. A single company of the Queen's Own Rifles had recently been armed with Spencer repeating rifles, but had never been given the opportunity to practice with them. The Fenian forces were mostly battle-hardened American Civil War veterans, armed with weapons procured from leftover war munitions, also Enfield rifled muskets or the comparable Springfield.
Some later accounts attribute the conduct of Canadian forces to being "outnumbered, exhausted, and hungry" and make allegations of vastly superior armaments on the part of the Fenians. Hardware had by both sides was comparable. The turning point in the battle was when Fenian cavalry was erroneously reported and the command was given to form square, the tactic at the time for infantry to repel cavalry. When the mistake was recognized, an attempt was made to reform column but being far too close to the Fenian lines, attempts to reform were hopeless. It is telling that a formal board of inquiry into the conduct of Canadian defenses exhonerated Lt. Colonel J. Stoughton Dennis, Brigade Major of the Fifth Military District, although the President of the Board of Inquiry, Colonel George T. Denison, differed from his colleagues on some key points. Regarding allegations to the misconduct of Lt. Colonel Albert Booker (13th Btn.), upon whom command of Canadian volunteers had devolved, was determined by the same Board of Inquiry to have "not the slightest foundation for the unfavourable imputations cast upon him in the public prints". These allegations dogged Booker for the rest of his life.
The Canadians retreated in broken ranks, taking their dead and wounded with them, while the Fenians celebrated the first Irish victory over British forces since the Battle of Fontenoy in 1745. Nine Canadians had been killed, thirty-seven were wounded.
After the first clash, the Canadians retreated to Port Colborne at the Lake Erie end of the Welland Canal, while the Fenians rested at Ridgeway briefly before themselves returning to Fort Erie. Another fight followed there that saw the surrender of another small group of local Canadian militia that had moved into the Fenian rear. But after considering the inability of reinforcements to cross the river and the approach of large numbers of both militia and British regulars, the remaining Fenians chose to return to Buffalo. They were intercepted by the Michigan, and surrendered to American naval personnel.
President Andrew Johnson's proclamation requiring enforcement of the laws of neutrality issued five days after the beginning of the invasion, guaranteeing that it would not continue. Both US General Ulysses S. Grant and U.S. General George Meade went to Buffalo, New York to assess the situation. In the meantime, following instructions from General Grant, General Meade issued strict orders to prevent anyone from further violating the border. General Grant then proceeded to St. Louis while General Meade, finding that the battle at Ridgeway was over and the Fenian army interned in Buffalo, proceeded to Ogdensburg, New York to oversee the situation in the St. Lawrence River area. The US Army was then instructed to seize Fenian weapons and ammunition, and to prevent more border crossings. Further instructions on 7 June 1866 were to arrest anyone who looked like they might be a Fenian.
Ironically, although they did not do much to advance the cause of Irish independence, the 1866 raids and the efforts of Canadian colonial troops to repulse them helped to galvanize support for the Confederation of Canada in 1867. Some historians have argued that the debacle tipped the final votes of reluctant Maritime provinces in favour of the collective security of nationhood, making Ridgeway the “battle that made Canada.”
In June 2006 the Ontario’s heritage agency dedicated a plaque at Ridgeway on the commemoration of the 140th anniversary of the battle. Many members of today's Canadian army regiment, The Queen's Own Rifles of Canada, return to the Ridgeway battle site each year on the weekend closest to the June 2nd anniversary for a bicycle tour of the battle sites.
Alexander Muir, a Scottish immigrant, author of the former Canadian anthem "The Maple Leaf Forever" and member of the Orange Order, fought at Ridgeway with the Queen's Own Rifles. A Fenian commander was US General Thomas Sweeney.
[edit] Pigeon Hill raid (1866)
This Fenian raid occurred in July 1866, at Pigeon Hill.
[edit] Mississquoi County raid (1870)
This Fenian raid occurred during 1870 and the Canadians, acting on information supplied by Thomas Billis Beach, were able to wait for and turn back the attack.
[edit] Pembina raid (1871)
In 1871 an invasion was planned in Saint Paul, Minnesota to invade Manitoba near Winnipeg, Canada. Around 35 men, led by John O'Neill and William B. O'Donoghue, traveled to Canada in hopes of meeting up with Louis Riel's Métis. The group managed to capture a Hudson's Bay Company post just north of the international border on 5 October, before being taken prisoner by U.S. soldiers near Pembina, North Dakota.[1]
[edit] Agitation in Pacific Northwest
The Fenian Brotherhood organized openly in the Pacific Northwest states during the 1870s and 1880s, agitating to invade British Columbia. Although no raids were ever launched, tensions were sufficient that the British posted a number of large warships to the new railhead at Vancouver, British Columbia for the celebrations opening the Canadian Pacific Railway in 1886.
[edit] Results and long term effects
Support for the Fenian Brotherhood's Invasion of Canada leveled out and there was no real threat of any more raids after the 1890s. The raids, however, did have a large effect on Canada-U.S. relations for years after the last raid.
There was a great deal of anger in Canada with the U.S. government, who Canadians felt had looked the other way and failed to prevent the raids on their end. There is even some indication that U.S. President Andrew Johnson may have given his blessing to the early raids, saying that he would "recognize the accomplished facts,"[2] implying that if the Fenians were successful, he would support them.
Canada-U.S. relations remained strained until Anglo-American rapprochement in the first decade of the 20th century. However, though relations markedly improved after this period, Canadian-American relations remained considerably distant until co-operation during the Second World War.
We are the Fenian Brotherhood, skilled in the arts of war, And we're going to fight for Ireland, the land we adore, Many battles we have won, along with the boys in blue, And we'll go and capture Canada, for we've nothing else to do. -- Fenian soldier's song
[edit] References
- ^ Regan, Ann (2002). Irish in Minnesota. Minnesota Historical Society Press, 44-45. ISBN 0-8735-1419-x.
- ^ The Fenian Raids
[edit] Further reading
- Senior, H. (1996). The last invasion of Canada: The Fenian raids, 1866-1870. Dundurn Press. ISBN 1-55002-085-4
- MacDonald, John A. Troublous Times in Canada, A History of the Fenian Raids of 1866 and 1870. 1910
[edit] External links
- "Here Comes That Damned Green Flag Again"
- Archives of Ontario - Information about raids in Ontario in the 1860's
- "Security-Intelligence Functions of the Toronto Police During the Civil War Era and the Fenian Threat"
- Thomas Billis Beach, aka Henri le Caron - Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
- The Fenian Raids, 1866-1870 - Manitoba Historical Society