Michael
Corcoran
Sligo
man
Michael
Corcoran
became
a
close
confidant
of
Abraham
Lincoln.
A
hero
to
the
Irish
soldiers
in
both
the
Union
and
Confederate
armies.
His
life
was
a
classic
hero’s
quest,
but
like
countless
others,
that
of
a
man
not
a
myth.
Mary
McDonagh
of
Carrowkeel
married
Thomas
Corcoran
of
Kilmacallan.
He
had
served
in
the
British
Army
from
1806
to
1817,
in
Nova
Scotia
and
the
West
Indies.
Their
only
child,
Michael,
was
born
on
21st
September
1827
in
Carrowkeel.
He
went
to
school,
probably
in
Ballymote,
until
he
was
eighteen
years
old.
In
August
1845,
Thomas
Corcoran
died
at
age
59.
Michael
had
to
find
work
that
paid
enough
to
support
his
mother
because
his
father’s
army
pension
ceased
at
death.
A
fungus
destroyed
most
of
the
potato
crop
that
autumn;
his
wages
were
sorely
needed.
He
applied
to
the
Revenue
Police
and
was
accepted
into
the
January
1846
class.
Cadet
Corcoran
was
a
lean
sixfoot,
two
inches
tall,
with
clear
blue
eyes,
brown-auburn
hair,
and
a
fair
complexion.
A
career
army
artillery
officer
had
reorganised
the
Revenue
Police
in
1836,
building
the
corps
into
an
an
efficient
and
effective
light
infantry
unit.
Basic
training
took
place
at
the
depot
in
Dublin
and
lasted
six
weeks.
The
cadets
had
classroom
instruction
and
drill
practice.
A
teacher
explained
the
revenue
laws
and
their
duties
in
applying
them,
including
the
use
of
force.
A
drill
sergeant
taught
them
strict
military
conduct
and
discipline,
and
the
care
and
use
of
arms.
Private
Michael
Corcoran
was
assigned
to
serve
at
the
depot
in
Creeslough,
Donegal,
at
a
salary
of
one
shilling
and
three
pence
per
day.
The
revenue
police
walked
miles
daily
to
disrupt
distilling
operations,
destroy
the
equipment,
spill
the
poítín,
and
then
arrest
the
men
and
march
them
to
jail.
Promoted
Michael
was
promoted
to
private
first
class
at
the
end
of
the
year,
at
the
onslaught
of
the
famine,
the
potato
crop
had
rotted
again.
The
winter
of
1846-1847
was
fiercely
cold
and
snowy,
and
disease
and
starvation
escalated.
Suffering
increased
through
1847
as
paupers
were
evicted
and
families
broken
by
unemployment,
death,
and
immigration.
Some
of
the
revenue
police
reacted
covertly
with
either
violent
or
non-violent
insubordination.
Private
First
Class
Corcoran
became
a
Ribbonman
in
1848,
undertaking
midnight
missions.
Michael
kept
up
his
double
life
for
almost
two
years,
and
then
for
reasons
unknown,
resigned
abruptly
from
the
Revenue
Police,
boarded
the
British
bark
Dromahair
exactly
two
and
one
half
weeks
later,
and
sailed
out
of
Sligo
Bay
on
30
August
1849.
There
is
inconclusive
evidence
that
he
was
on
the
run.
The
passage
was
quick
and
uneventful
and
he
stepped
onto
South
Street
in
New
York
City,
found
work
as
a
clerk-bookkeeper
for
a
Mr.
John
Heaney,
the
proprietor
of
Hibernian
House,
a
tavern
at
42
Prince
Street,
across
the
street
from
(Old)
St.
Patrick’s
Cathedral
in
downtown
New
York.
Michael
lived
over
the
tavern,
as
did
the
Heaneys.
Corcoran’s
mother
immigrated
to
New
York
a
year
later.
Michael
became
an
American
citizen
as
soon
as
he
was
eligible,
married
Mrs.
Heaney’s
niece,
Elizabeth,
and
managed
Hibernian
House
for
Mrs.
Heaney
after
Mr.
Heaney
died
in
1854.
That
tragedy
was
compounded
by
the
death
just
days
later,
of
Mary
McDonagh
Corcoran,
from
cholera,
at
the
Hibernian
House
where
Michael
and
Elizabeth
were
caring
for
her.
Corcoran
joined
a
state
militia
regiment
as
required
for
all
able-bodied
young
men,
and
there
he
met
several
veterans
of
the
1848
Young
Ireland
attempt
at
revolution.
Thomas
Francis
Meagher
and
John
Mitchel
also
came
to
New
York
City
after
escaping
from
exile
in
Tasmania,
but
Mitchel
moved
his
family
to
the
South,
and
Meagher
had
had
enough
of
revolution,
and
did
not
get
involved.
Corcoran
did;
he
embraced
it.
There
was
freedom
and
opportunity
in
America
but
also
violent,
ugly,
virulent
bigotry
directed
at
immigrants,
especially
the
Irish
ones,
and
Catholics.
Both
John
O’Leary
and
James
Stephens
admired
him.
John
O’Mahony,
Michael
Doheny
and
John
Savage
were
among
his
closest
friends.
Enlisted
Michael
had
enlisted
as
a
private
in
the
69th
Regiment;
he
served
in
every
rank
and
was
promoted
to
captain
within
three
years.
This
was
a
state
militia
unit
composed
of
citizens,
not
soldiers.
None
of
them
had
the
military
knowledge
and
experience,
with
arms,
drilling,
and
protocol,
that
Corcoran
did,
and,
he
was
a
natural
leader.
The
first
time
the
69th
was
activated,
to
keep
the
peace
after
a
riot,
the
brigade
inspector
recorded
that
Captain
Corcoran
had
a
“well-known
reputation
as
the
best,
if
not
the
very
best,
infantry
officer
in
the
4th
Brigade
...”
He
was
a
rising
star
in
Democratic
politics,
that
is,
Tammany
Hall:
he
could
deliver
the
Irish
vote.
Before
long,
“Mike”
(as
they
called
him)
was
the
district
leader,
a
member
of
the
judicial
nominations
committee,
an
elected
school
inspector
for
his
ward,
and
a
member
of
the
Fourteenth
Ward
General
Committee.
Michael
had
still
another
option
for
his
future.
In
1858
James
Stephens
and
Thomas
Clarke
Luby
founded
the
Irish
Republican
Brotherhood
(IRB)
in
Dublin
and
planned
to
expand
the
organisation.
Consequently,
John
O’Mahony
founded
the
Fenian
Brotherhood
in
New
York
City
the
following
year.
Michael
Corcoran
was
the
first
one,
and
thus
the
first
American,
to
be
sworn
in.
Not
long
afterward,
he
was
elected
colonel
of
the
69th
Regiment
as
well
as
military
commander
of
the
Fenians.
Tammany
Hall
gave
him
a
patronage
job
in
the
post
office
with
the
highest
salary
he
ever
had.
Then
it
all
fell
apart.
Just
one
event
put
an
end
to
Michael’s
easy
success
and
initiated
the
trials
he
would
have
to
endure
and
overcome.
In
late
1860,
the
nineteen-year-old
Prince
of
Wales
visited
New
York
City
during
a
tour
of
Canada
and
the
United
States.
There
would
be
a
parade,
fireworks,
banquets,
a
ball;
society
doyennes
panted
for
an
invitation
to
the
ball.
Colonel
and
Mrs.
Corcoran
were
invited,
as
were
the
colonels
of
all
the
local
militia
regiments.
Colonel
Corcoran
wrote
a
polite
note
declining
the
invitation.
One
assumes
that
Mrs.
Corcoran
was
not
pleased.
Colonel
Corcoran
also
refused
to
order
his
men
to
parade
in
honour
of
the
prince
because
they
had
voted
not
to,
with
his
approval.
They
had
lived
through
a
famine
during
which
more
than
1
million
Irish
people
emigrated
and
more
than
1.5
million
died,
many
believed
from
Britain’s
tepid
concern.
Many
New
Yorkers
were
outraged
that
this
ingrate
Irish
immigrant
had
the
effrontery
to
insult
the
royal
guest
of
the
city,
and
demanded
that
he
be
removed
from
his
federal
job,
that
his
citizenship
be
revoked,
that
he
be
thrown
out
of
the
country.
Colonel
Corcoran
was
court-martialed.
During
the
trial:
Abraham
Lincoln
was
elected
president
of
the
United
States;
the
southern
states
(whose
economy
depended
on
slavery)
began
seceding
from
the
Union;
the
Irish
community
in
San
Francisco,
California
sent
Corcoran
a
one-pound
gold
medal,
and
the
one
in
Charleston,
South
Carolina
sent
an
ornate
gold-tipped
palmetto
cane,
both
in
admiration
of
his
integrity
and
for
backing
his
men.
Michael
attended
a
state
Democratic
convention
in
Albany
(New
York),
where
he
was
noted
as
“one
of
the
prominent
Democrats,”
but
then
contracted
an
illness
so
debilitating
that
he
was
confined
to
bed
for
several
weeks.
Fort
Sumter
was
fired
upon
in
April
1861
and
the
Civil
War
began.
President
Lincoln
called
for
volunteer
militia
units
to
defend
Washington,
D.C.,
and
the
69th
Regiment
voted
to
answer
the
President’s
call.
War
Colonel
Corcoran’s
court-martial
was
dropped
and
the
69th
prepared
to
go
to
war.
At
that
time,
Michael
Corcoran
was
also
the
acting
chieftain
of
the
Fenian
Brotherhood
because
O’Mahony
was
in
Ireland
attending
a
funeral.
Corcoran
wrote
a
letter
to
the
regiment
assuring
the
men
that
his
active
duty
would
be
good
practice
for
the
liberation
of
Ireland.
Flag-waving
New
Yorkers
cheered
the
regiment
as
it
marched
to
the
transport’s
pier;
the
colonel
rode
in
a
carriage
because
he
was
still
too
weak
to
walk
or
ride
a
horse.
After
a
short
stay
in
Annapolis,
Maryland
the
69th
went
to
Washington,
D.C.,
and
encamped
and
commenced
training
on
the
Georgetown
University
campus.
Captain
Thomas
Francis
Meagher
had
raised
a
company,
the
Irish
Zouaves,
and
soon
joined
them.
The
Union
army
invaded
Virginia
after
that
state
seceded
from
the
Union
in
late
May,
and
the
regiment
occupied
Arlington
Heights
where
they
built
Fort
Corcoran
in
record
time.
The
militia
units
had
been
activated
for
three
months’
duty
and
were
within
days
of
returning
home
in
late
July
when
combat
exploded
near
a
creek
called
Bull
Run,
near
the
town
of
Manassas.
The
weather
was
stifling
hot
and
so
was
the
day
long
battle,
which
the
Confederates
won,
routing
the
Yankees
and
chasing
them
back
to
Washington.
Michael
Corcoran
was
wounded
in
the
leg,
captured,
and
imprisoned
in
Richmond,
Virginia
with
men
and
officers
from
his
and
other
regiments.
His
captors
repeatedly
offered
him
parole/release
from
captivity
if
he
would
vow
not
to
take
up
arms
again
-
but
he
always
refused.
Also,
he
would
not
leave
his
men.
Several
officers
and
men
were
transferred
to
an
island
prison
in
Charleston,
South
Carolina,
among
them
Colonel
Corcoran.
Michael
asked
for
money
in
his
letters,
for
his
men.
Most
of
them
were
poor
and
had
no
means
to
buy
warm
clothing
as
winter
approached.
The
prisoners
of
war
were
moved
to
an
old,
damp
jail
in
the
city,
where
one
day
in
November
a
Confederate
officer
informed
Corcoran
that
he
was
now
hostage.
He
would
be
the
first
officer
hanged
in
retaliation
if
the
Union
hanged
some
southern
privateers
the
Yankees
regarded
as
pirates.
Solitary
confinement
Michael’s
name
had
been
drawn
first
by
lot;
other
officers
in
turn
would
also
be
hanged
if
the
pirates
were
executed.
Colonel
Corcoran
was
put
into
solitary
confinement
in
a
drafty
unheated
tower,
the
cells
for
condemned
prisoners.
The
sanitary
conditions
were
poor
and
the
nutrition
inadequate.
Michael,
growing
more
feeble
by
the
day,
became
deathly
ill
from
typhoid
fever
and
was
removed
from
the
tower.
He
had
barely
recovered
when
a
raging
fire
in
the
city
moved
towards
the
jail
-
which
was
locked.
The
guards
had
been
sent
to
fight
the
fire.
Smoke,
ashes
and
burning
embers
swirled
around
the
prisoners,
but
the
fire
bypassed
the
building.
Colonel
Corcoran
did
his
duty
as
a
prisoner
of
war:
he
ordered
an
escape.
The
men
fashioned
a
rope
from
bed
ticking
eyelets
and
anchored
it
at
a
second
floor
window.
One
man
went
down
to
test
the
rope
but
the
others
refused
to
leave
until
their
colonel
was
out.
Michael
got
down
and
the
next
man
was
starting,
when
some
soldiers
came
running
around
the
corner
and
seized
them.
They
thought
their
prisoners
were
fleeing
only
the
fire,
which
destroyed
more
than
a
dozen
square
blocks
in
the
city.
On
New
Year’s
Day,
1862,
the
captives
were
sent
by
train
to
Columbia,
South
Carolina,
and
two
months
later
to
a
prison
in
Salisbury,
North
Carolina.
During
all
that
time
Corcoran
remained
a
hostage
under
constant
threat
of
hanging.
He
heard
that
his
political
friends
in
New
York
had
been
lobbying
Congress
to
have
him
freed
in
a
prisoner
exchange,
a
common
procedure
that
benefited
everyone.
The
South
refused.
It
was
learned
that
the
authorities
believed
that
he
was
as
much
a
hero
to
the
Confederate
Army
Irish
soldiers
as
he
was
to
the
Union
Irish
soldiers,
and
they
feared
that
if
Corcoran
were
released,
those
soldiers
would
desert
the
South
and
fellow
him
north.
Finally,
in
August
1862,
Colonel
Corcoran
was
exchanged
for
a
southern
colonel.
Great
celebrations
greeted
the
exchanged
prisoners
when
they
arrived
in
Washington,
D.C.
Colonel
Corcoran
dined
with
President
Lincoln
who
made
him
a
Brigadier
General.
He
asked
Michael
if
he
would
prefer
to
lead
an
existing,
leaderless
regiment,
or
recruit
his
own.
All
through
his
ordeal
Corcoran
had
dreamed
of
leading
his
beloved
69th
Regiment
into
battle
again,
but
alas,
the
69th
was
now
part
of
the
Irish
Brigade,
commanded
by
Brigadier
General
Thomas
Francis
Meagher.
Michael
returned
to
New
York
to
recruit
Corcoran’s
Irish
Legion.
On
the
day
of
his
arrival,
the
largest
crowd
ever
seen
in
New
York
packed
the
lower
part
of
the
city.
When
The
Irish
Legion
was
sent
to
Fairfax,
Virginia;
Corcoran
was
subordinate
to
the
commander
there.
Then
he
received
a
telegram:
his
wife
had
died
suddenly.
Michael
went
back
to
New
York
to
Washington,
called
upon
President
Lincoln
and
asked
to
be
transferred
to
a
combat
zone.
He
also
learned
that
the
court
martial
had
not
been
preferred
yet
because
none
of
the
commanders
of
the
districts
he
had
passed
through
would
do
so.
Lincoln
would
consider
the
transfer
request.
Corcoran
wrote
Lincoln
a
gracious
thank-you
note
but
waited
in
vain
for
a
reply.
Then
one
day
in
camp,
he
fainted.
After
fainting
again,
he
requested
leave
to
go
back
to
New
York
to
consult
a
physician.
The
doctor
said
he
was
debilitated
due
to
the
prolonged
imprisonment,
malnutrition
and
exertion;
that
he
needed
to
rest,
eat
oatmeal,
and
drink
barley
water.
Frail
and
exhausted,
Michael
got
married
instead.
His
bride
was
John
Heaney’s
eldest
granddaughter.
He
returned
with
her
to
Virginia.
The
brigadier
general
in
charge
was
about
to
leave;
Lincoln
had
made
him
an
ambassador.
Brigadier
General
Michael
Corcoran
was
the
new
division
commander
in
that
theatre.
Unwell
In
November
the
Fenian
Brotherhood
held
its
first
national
convention,
in
Chicago.
Corcoran
did
not
attend,
but
as
the
military
commander
of
the
Fenians
he
was
made
a
member
of
the
five-man
central
council.
Although
Thomas
Francis
Meagher
had
resigned
his
commission,
he
still
spent
time
visiting
some
of
the
camps.
Michael
invited
him
and
Mrs.
Meagher
to
stay
with
the
Legion
at
Christmas.
Corcoran’s
new
mother-in-law
would
also
come
down
from
New
York
for
the
holiday.
On
the
day
the
ladies
were
to
arrive,
Michael
woke
up
feeling
unwell.
Nonetheless,
he
went
to
6am
mass
as
usual,
had
his
coffee,
and
then
accompanied
his
guest
to
the
railway
station.
Meagher
was
going
to
Washington
to
meet
the
ladies
and
escort
them
back
to
camp.
After
adjusting
the
picket
lines
along
the
railroad,
Corcoran
turned
back
towards
camp,
riding
ahead
of
his
escort
party.
The
men
saw
him
suddenly
raise
his
hand
as
he
rode
around
a
curve
in
the
road,
out
of
their
sight.
They
quickly
caught
up
with
him.
General
Corcoran
was
lying
in
a
ditch
having
a
violent
convulsion;
his
face
was
purple.
The
men
commandeered
a
wagon
and
rushed
him
to
the
doctors
at
camp.
It
was
about
two
o’clock
in
the
afternoon.
The
doctors
thought
a
blood
vessel
had
burst
in
the
brain,
causing
his
fall
from
the
horse;
there
was
little
they
could
do.
Michael
died
at
eight
o’clock
that
evening
of
22nd
December
1863,
without
regaining
consciousness.
He
was
thirty
six
years
old.
His
body
was
embalmed
and
arrived
back
in
New
York
on
Christmas
Day.
He
lay
in
state
in
the
Governor’s
Room
in
City
Hall
(where
other
officers
-
President
Lincoln
-
would
lie).
The
flags
in
the
city
flew
at
half-staff.
After
the
requiem
mass
at
(Old)
St
Patrick’s
Cathedral
on
Mott
Street,
he
was
interred
in
Calvary
Cemetery,
Long
Island
City,
in
Queens
County,
with
his
mother
and
first
wife.
-
courtesy
of
the
Sligo
Champion
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