John O'Leary ( born 23 July 1830; died 16 March 1907[1]) was an Irish separatist and a leading Fenian. He studied both law and medicine but did not take a degree and for his involvement in the Irish Republican Brotherhood he was imprisoned in England during the nineteenth century.
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Born in the town of Tipperary, County Tipperary, the catholic O'Leary was educated at the local Protestant Grammar School, The Abbey School, and later the catholic Carlow College. He identified with the views advocated by Thomas Davis and met James Stephens in 1846.[1]
He began his studies in law at Trinity College, Dublin, in 1847, where, through the Grattan Club, he associated with Charles Gavan Duffy, James Fintan Lalor and Thomas Francis Meagher.
After the failure of the 1848 Tipperary Revolt, O'Leary attempted to rescue the leaders from Clonmel Gaol, and was himself imprisoned for a week from September 8, 1849. He took part in a further attempted uprising in Cashel on September 16, 1849, but this proved abortive.[2]
O'Leary abandoned his study of law at Trinity College because he was unwilling to take the oath of allegiance which would be required of a barrister. He enrolled at Queen's College, Cork, in 1850 to study medicine, and later moved to Queen's College, Galway and on to further studies at the Meath Hospital, Dublin, and in Paris and London. In 1855, he visited Paris, where he became acquainted with Kevin Izod O'Doherty, John Martin and the American painter, John Whistler. O'Leary subsequently became financial manager of the newly formed Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB) and was joint editor of the IRB paper The Irish People.
On 16 September 1865 [3] O'Leary was arrested, and tried on charges of high treason, reduced to 'treason felony'.[4] He was sentenced to twenty years' penal servitude, of which five years were spent in English prisons prior to his release and exile in January 1871. During his exile he lived mainly in Paris, also visiting the USA, and remained active in the IRB and its associated organizations and wrote many letters to newspapers and journals.[5]
On the expiry of his 20-year prison term and therefore of the conditions associated with his release, he returned to Ireland in 1885. He and his sister, the poet Ellen O'Leary, both became important figures within Dublin cultural and nationalist circles which included W. B. Yeats, Maud Gonne, Rose Kavanagh, Rosa Mulholland, George Sigerson, and Katharine Tynan.[6] He also functioned as an elder statesman of the separatist movement, being active in the Young Ireland Society and acting as president of the Irish Transvaal Committee which supported the Boer side in the Boer War.[7]
O'Leary was a separatist, believing in complete Irish independence from Britain. However, he was not a republican but a constitutional monarchist. He believed in physical force, but was opposed to individual acts of violence such as those promoted by O'Donovan Rossa with his Skirmishing Fund, believing that revolutionary action should be thoroughly prepared. He was strongly opposed to the land agitation promoted by Michael Davitt and Parnell. For most of his life, he was opposed to any form of parliamentary action, being particularly hostile to the former Fenian M.P. John O'Connor Power. However, he supported Parnell during the early days of the Split of 1890-91. He was a secularist, believing that the Church should stay out of politics, and in an article published in the Dublin University Review in 1886 showed some awareness that Protestants would require guarantees of their liberties within an independent Ireland. Like most intellectuals of his generation, he was not interested in the Irish language, although sympathetic to organizations of the Gaelic revival of the 1880s onwards.[8]
O'Leary never married, although he had an early love affair with a young woman who is thought to have later entered a convent. He acted as best man for James Stephens in 1864. He was brought up a Catholic but abandoned the religion for all of his life until close to his death, when he was reconciled to the church around Christmas 1906. He inherited property from his family in the town of Tipperary and for most of his life this provided a reasonably comfortable income, so that he did not have to earn money and was able to assist fellow separatists financially. However, he did become a victim of agitation during the Plan of Campaign in 1889-91, when rental payments to him largely ceased. He was remembered in the town of Tipperary as a 'hard landlord'.[9]
In his poem, September 1913, the poet W.B.Yeats laments the death of O'Leary with the line:
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Preceded by John O'Connor |
President of the Irish Republican Brotherhood 1885-1907 |
Succeeded by Neal O'Boyle |