Voyage of Erin's Hope
Background
After the failed
Young Ireland
Uprising of 1848,
many of its leaders
were captured,
sentenced and
transported to penal
colonies in
Australia. Those who
evaded capture ended
up in France on in
the United States.
Two of the leaders,
James Stephens and
John O’Mahony, who
had escaped to
France, spent the
ensuing five years
discussing and
planning for another
uprising in Ireland.
In
1853, O’Mahony, an
Irish language
scholar and
linguist, left Paris
for New York where
he met other fellow
Young Irelanders
including
John
Mitchel, who had
escaped from a penal
colony in Tasmania.
After taking up
residence there he
completed and
published several
literary works and
joined several Irish
organizations,
including the Emmet
Monument
Association. On 28
February 1858, he,
together with
Michael Doheny,
James Roche,
Thomas J. Kelly,
Oliver Byrne,
Patrick O’Rourke,
and Captain Michael
Corcoran
founded the Fenian
Brotherhood.
In
the meantime,
Stephen’s bided his
time in Paris until
it was safe for him
to return to
Ireland. After eight
years in exile, he
believed the time
had come when he
could return safely.
He arrived back in
Dublin in February
of 1856.
Having lost contact
with his 1848
compatriots during
his prolonged exile,
Stephens reasoned
that his first move
should be a trip
around Ireland to
reacquaint with old
comrades and start
the process of
organizing for the
next uprising. After
completing that
odyssey, he,
together with Peter
Langan,
Thomas
Clarke Luby, Charles
Kickham,
Joseph
Denieffe and Garrett
O'Shaughnessy
founded the Irish
Republican
Brotherhood on St.
Patrick’s Day in
1858.
The
aim of the
organization was
“the establishment
of an independent
Irish Republic by
force of arms”.
Because of the close ties and interdependencies of the IRB and the
Fenian Brotherhood, any possibility of launching an uprising in Ireland
took a backseat to the American Civil War that lasted from
1861 through 1865.
After the Civil War ended in 1865, the Fenians(1) began preparing for
the uprising. The IRB in Ireland was well along in its recruitment
campaign that included a covert effort to recruit Irish soldiers serving
in the British army. In the United States, the Fenian leadership
increased its fundraising effort and started planning to send an
expeditionary force to Ireland to support the uprising. They collected
about 6,000 firearms and had as many as 50,000 men willing to fight.
Unfortunately for the Fenians, the British became aware of their plans
when a Fenian emissary lost them at Dun Laoghaire railway station.
Aware of the planned uprising and ongoing updates from their informer,
Pierce Nagle, who worked in the IRB’s newspaper office, the British, at
the opportune time, raided the newspaper office and arrested several of
the IRB leaders including John O’Leary, Thomas Clarke Luby and
O’Donovan
Rossa. Shortly afterwards, Stephens and several other leaders were also
arrested. Within two weeks of his arrest. Stephens was sprung from
Richmond prison in Dublin by prison wardens
J. J. Breslin and Daniel
Byrne, both of whom were Fenians.
After his escape, Stephens hid out in Ireland for several months before
making his way to France. After a stay of six weeks in France he set
sail for New York. On arriving there he found himself in the middle of a
Fenian power struggle between two factions, one headed by John O’Mahony
and the other by William R. Roberts. His efforts to reunite the faction
failed. In a last-ditch effort to force the factions to resolve their
differences, he announced that he was returning to Ireland, in short
order, "to unfurl the flag of rebellion".
Having failed to follow through after an interval of several weeks, he
was accused of having lost his nerve and deposed as head of the Irish
Republican Brotherhood. He was replaced by Colonel Thomas J. Kelly who
immediately began to prepare for an uprising.
On March 5, 1867 the uprising started in Dublin, Drogheda and Cork. From
the onset, nothing went right for the Fenians. Unbeknownst to the men in
the field, General Massey, who was in command of the uprising was
betrayed by the traitor J. J. Croydon, arrested and imprisoned. Without
a central command the uprising failed to spread as anticipated.
Kelly, who was stationed in London, sent word to America for more arms
and expertise. In answer to his call, Erin’s Hope sailed from Sandyhook
the following month carrying three cannon and 5,000 modern rifles with a
million and a half rounds of ammunition.
The last battle of the uprising was fought in Kilclooney Wood in Co.
Cork on March 31, 1867, where Peter O'Neill Crowley, a local Fenian,
lost his life.
The Voyage
On April 12, 1867, 50 or so Fenians, many of whom were Civil War
veterans, boarded the Jackmel, a 200-ton brigantine-type vessel
docked at Sandy Hook in New Jersey. The commander of the expedition was
a former U.S. army officer who assumed the name ‘John F. Cavanagh’ to
hide his identity and further allay any suspicion as to the true nature
of the Jackmel's destination. James Kerrigan was in command of
the Fenians. William J. Nagle and John Warren were his assistants.
Costello was one of the eight other officers on board.
The consignment paperwork in possession of the captain indicated that
the vessel was preparing to sail to the Caribbean with merchandise for a
merchant firm in Cuba. The purpose of the subterfuge was to hide from
the authorities that the intended destination of the Jackmel was
Ireland and that the men and cargo aboard were to support a Rising by
the Irish Republican Brotherhood, a sister organization of the
U.S.-based Fenians. The arms and ammunition were concealed in piano
cases, sewing machine cases and wine barrels.
After a day’s sailing southwards, out of Sandy Hook, the Jackmel
changed course for Ireland. After nine days sailing the men aboard
hoisted a Fenian flag and renamed the vessel Erin’s Hope. After
that Captain Cavanagh opened his sealed orders that directed him to sail
to Sligo Bay where he was to land his men and arms. If he could not land
there, he was to find sail to another location. On May 10th, they
arrived in Sligo Bay and for the following six days sailed from Sligo
Bay to Donegal Bay sending unanswered signals to the shore. When
questioned by Captain Cavanagh, local fishermen were not aware of a
Fenian Rising.
While traversing the Sligo coastline between Sligo and Donegal bays a
suspect crew member, Daniel Buckley,
discharged a weapon injuring several men. It turned out that Buckley was
a British informer who testified against his former comrades. After
two weeks of sailing off the Sligo coastline, Captain Cavanagh received
Richard O'Sullivan Burke
on board who informed him that the insurrection was in disarray and
ordered him to proceed to Skibbereen in Co. Cork where Captain Lomasney
was still active. His overdue departure from Sligo Bay narrowly
avoiding a confrontation with an English gunboat sent there to
investigate the 'on and off presence’ of Erin’s Hope in Sligo
Bay.
Erin’s Hope arrived offshore near Skibbereen on May 27th. For
the following three days, it cruised between Toe Head Bay and the Galley
Head near Rosscarbery in Co. Cork in hopes of contacting Captain
Lomasney and effecting a landing there. Unable to contact onshore
Fenians Captain Cavanagh decided to send John Warren ashore to ascertain
the situation and to replenish provisions that were running low. Before
he could act, two coastguard vessels appeared on the scene forcing him
to hold off. The following day he tried again but was forced to sail
eastwards due to heavy winds.
Early on Saturday, June 1st, Erin’s Hope arrived off Helvic Head
at the mouth of Dungarvan Bay where they sighted a fishing boat. Captain
Cavanagh asked the skipper, Paud O'Faolain, to take some men ashore,
which he agreed to do. However, when he pulled alongside Erin’s Hope,
32 men climbed aboard the fishing boat, dangerously overloaded the small
boat. Afraid to wait for evening to drop them as directed by Cavanagh,
O'Faolain proceeded to shore and dropped them on the beach near
Ballinagoul pier where they were spotted by the coastguard who alerted
the police stations in and around Dungarvan. All the men, except four
who escaped the police dragnet, were arrested and held in Waterford Jail
pending trial. After some time in Waterford Jail they were transported
to
Kilmainham Jail in Dublin.
After having put the Fenians ashore Captain Cavanagh sailed off into the
Bristol Channel, with the remaining Fenians including the leader,
Kerrigan. They cruised off Land's End for a few' days and returned to
Minehead on June 6th where they seem to have expected instructions on
what to do with the arms on board. After waiting several days without
any communication with the men put ashore some days earlier, Cavanagh
concluded that were either in hiding or captured leaving him with no
option other than to abandon the mission and set sail for New York.
The Erin’s Hope may not have rendezvoused with the onshore Fenians but
her Captain had outmaneuvered the English navy in Ireland for over three
weeks, landed men, exchanged communications and, after a voyage of over
9,000 miles, returned safely with his ship and cargo. The craft made
three landings in Ireland and one in England, during which time they
came close to capture several times. At no time were they over twelve
miles from a British man-of-war, a frigate, ram, or gunboat, and were
continually harassed by pilots. They were at sea 107 days in which they
sailed a grand total of 9,265 miles.
In the wake of the Erin’s Hope three gunboats which had attempted to
capture her were sunk: the gunboat ‘Lapwing lost in Killala Bay, the
‘Revenge wrecked on Daunte’s Rock and another gunboat which foundered in
a gale off Cape Clear.
Notes:
(1) The name “Fenians” was an umbrella term used to describe the
transatlantic partnership of the Fenian Brotherhood in America and the
Irish Republican Brotherhood in Ireland. A member of either organization
was generally referred to as a “Fenian”.
Contributed by Tomás Ó Coısdealha