James Mullin

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James Mullin (1846-1920) was born in Cookstown, County Tyrone. He left school at the age of eleven and worked on a farm, after which he spent nine years as a carpenter. He was one of the first recruits of the Fenian Brotherhood which he joined in 1865. Aged 22, he worked his way whilst attending the Cookstown Academy.

He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree at Queen's College, Galway. He tutored students to fund himself for the degree of Doctor of Medicine. He later practised in London and Cardiff. At one period of his life he served as a ship's surgeon.

A journalist later in life, he wrote an autobiography, The Story of a Toiler's Life.

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Although he was a Catholic, he attended a Protestant school. Of this experience he was quoted as saying:

"The intermingling of the sects was attended by the happiest results, inasmuch as it allowed the young people to understand one another and contract friendships which no subsequent surroundings or whispers of bigotry could ever wholly efface".

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Ulster Biography