- Thomas Russell (rebel)
Thomas Paliser Russell (
November 21 ,1767 –October 21 ,1803 ) was a co-founder and leader of theUnited Irishmen who was executed for his part in Robert Emmet's rebellion in 1803.Background
Born in
Dromahane ,County Cork to anAnglican family, he joined the British army in 1783 and served inIndia . He returned toIreland in 1786 and commenced studies inscience ,philosophy andpolitics . in July 1790 he metTheobald Wolfe Tone in the visitor's gallery in theIrish House of Commons and they became firm friends.Russell in Belfast
In 1790 Russell resumed his military career as a junior officer in the 64th Regiment of Foot and was posted to
Belfast . With its thrivinglinen and textile industries and mercantile community,Belfast was called the "Athens of the North." As an officer of the garrison, Russell had access to the newly emerging professional and business class, many of whose members were radicals (beingPresbyterians ) excluded from the Ascendancy.The
French Revolution in 1789 was warmly greeted in Belfast as were its ideals of liberty, equality, and fraternity. With his keen mind and radical ideas, Russell soon became a confidante ofHenry Joy McCracken , James Hope,Samuel Neilson and others who were to play a prominent role in the United Irish movement. With them he developed ideas of parliamentary reform, to include the bulk of the people, andCatholic emancipation .Russell left the army in July 1791 and attended a convention of the Whig Club in
Belfast to markBastille Day . The convention was addressed byWilliam Drennan , who proposed a brotherhood that would "go further than speculate or debate … and come to grips with practicalities", promoting separation from England and co-operation with the increasingly radicalCatholic Committee in the pursuit of political and social reforms. However, Russell noted the lack of trust betweenDissenters andCatholics which was due to fears that Catholic radicalism could be bought off by religious concessions. Informing Wolfe Tone of his observations, who within weeks published his "Argument on Behalf of the Catholics of Ireland" to address these suspicions. The pamphlet was extremely well received and provided the impetus for the founding of theSociety of United Irishmen inBelfast on 18 October 1791 whose initial aims were constitutional reform, union among the Irish people and the removal of all religious disqualifications.United Irishman and reformer
In January 1794, Russell took the post of
librarian at the Belfast Society for Promoting Knowledge, later to become theLinen Hall Library . His position as librarian allowed Russell to continue to develop ideas for the emancipation of the Irish people although by now the British authorities in Dublin were becoming increasingly aware of his and others activities and beliefs. Pressure fromDublin Castle would later force the United Irish movement to become a clandestine organisation as the would-be revolutionaries sought to continue their slow progress towards challenging the occupying British.In 1795 Russell,
Wolfe Tone ,Henry Joy McCracken andSamuel Neilson as they led a band ofUnited Irishmen to the top ofCave Hill overlooking the town ofBelfast where they swore an oath "never to desist in our effort until we had subverted the authority of England over our country and asserted her independence" prior to Wolfe Tone's exile to America. The event was noted in Dublin Castle although there was to be no immediate move to disband or arrest the members of the United Irishmen.In 1796, Russell published an ambitious and far-sighted document, "Letter to the People of Ireland", which laid out his vision of social and economic reform for the Irish nation. In addition to his stance on religious freedom, he had made clear his anti-slavery views, in the "Northern Star" on March 17, 1792 whose editorial comment took a less generous view by agreeing with Russell but pointing out the immediate necessity to liberate three million slaves in Ireland. The veteran anti-slavery campaigner,
Mary Ann McCracken , sister of Henry Joy, remembered that as a young officer inBelfast Russell had ' "abstained from the use of slave labour produce until slavery in the West Indies was abolished, and at the dinner parties to which he was so often invited and when confectionery was so much used he would not take anything with sugar in it . . ."'tate prisoner
Russell took an active part in organising the
Society of United Irishmen which spread rapidly assisted by their newspaper, the " Northern Star ", becoming the United Irish commander inCounty Down . However the outbreak of war withrevolutionary France andEngland in 1793 had led to an ongoing campaign against the United Irishmen and in 1796 Russell was arrested and imprisoned as a "state prisoner" (i.e held without trial) in Dublin missing out in participation in the 1798 rising as a result. In March 1799 he, and the other state prisoners were transferred toFort George inScotland , an extensive fortress some miles north ofInverness built in the wake of the failed Jacobite rebellion of 1745-46. He was released on condition of exile to Hamburg in June 1802 following a brief cessation in the war withFrance .Russell and Emmett
Not content to sit things out in
Hamburg , Russell soon made his way toParis where he metRobert Emmet who was planning another insurrection pending the French renewal of the war againstEngland . Russell agreed to return to Ireland in March 1803 to organise the North in conjunction with the veteran of thebattle of Antrim , James Hope. However he met with little success as much of the north was subdued following the suppression of the 1798 rebellion and displayed little appetite for a renewed outbreak. Finally finding some support in the vicinity ofLoughinisland , Russell prepared to take to the field on 23rd July 1803, the date set by Emmett for the rebellion to begin.However the plan was badly thought out and quickly collapsed forcing Russell to flee to Dublin before a shot was fired in anger. Russell managed to hide for a number of weeks but Dublin was a bad place to hide in the days following the failure of Emmett's rebellion as the shocked authorities had launched a massive campaign of raids and arrests in an effort to finally eradicate the United Irishmen. He was promptly arrested and sent to
Downpatrick Gaol where he was executed by hanging on October 21st 1803.ources
* Russell's legendary organisational abilities and influence were commemorated in Florence Mary Wilson's famous ballad [http://www.communistpartyofireland.ie/1798/russell.html "The Man from God Knows Where"]
External links
* Peter Linebaugh, 21st October 2003; [http://www.counterpunch.org/linebaugh10212003.html "Is This the Place? -On the Bicentennial of the Hanging of Thomas Russell"]
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