Square-Toed Boots and Felt Hats: Irish Revolutionaries and the Invasion of Canada (1848-1871)

The Fenian movement was born in 1858 as an alliance between the Irish Republican Brotherhood, a revolutionary secret society, and the Fenian Brotherhood, an Irish-American organisation intended to supply this society with funds and trained officers. This was not the first time that Irish nationalist...

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Main Author: Marta Ramón-García
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Asociación Española de Estudios Irlandeses 2010-03-01
Series:Estudios Irlandeses
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.estudiosirlandeses.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/Marta_Ramón-García.pdf
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spelling doaj-04dfa3e75de14e84ab434788cfddae232020-11-24T23:10:29ZengAsociación Española de Estudios IrlandesesEstudios Irlandeses1699-311X1699-311X2010-03-015581912274Square-Toed Boots and Felt Hats: Irish Revolutionaries and the Invasion of Canada (1848-1871)Marta Ramón-García0 University of Oviedo The Fenian movement was born in 1858 as an alliance between the Irish Republican Brotherhood, a revolutionary secret society, and the Fenian Brotherhood, an Irish-American organisation intended to supply this society with funds and trained officers. This was not the first time that Irish nationalists on both sides of the Atlantic had tried to cooperate, but it was the first time that there was a steady arrangement in place. The Fenian partnership was extremely successful on the surface, but it was undermined by fundamental differences in customs, political attitudes and ultimate goals between Irish and American Fenians. The clearest evidence of these differences was afforded by the Fenian Brotherhood’s successive attempts to invade Canada between 1866 and 1871. As military episodes the Canadian raids were negligible; as Irish revolutionary attempts they seem absurd. However, they were a perfectly coherent manifestation of the Irish-American “hyphenated identity”. The present article traces the parallel evolution of the Irish Republican Brotherhood and the Fenian Brotherhood up to 1866, and reconstructs the cultural and political reasons for the revival of the Canadian scheme, the ensuing split in the Fenian Brotherhood, and the final collapse of the Fenian alliance.http://www.estudiosirlandeses.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/Marta_Ramón-García.pdfIrelandHistoryNationalismFeniansCanada.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marta Ramón-García
spellingShingle Marta Ramón-García
Square-Toed Boots and Felt Hats: Irish Revolutionaries and the Invasion of Canada (1848-1871)
Estudios Irlandeses
Ireland
History
Nationalism
Fenians
Canada.
author_facet Marta Ramón-García
author_sort Marta Ramón-García
title Square-Toed Boots and Felt Hats: Irish Revolutionaries and the Invasion of Canada (1848-1871)
title_short Square-Toed Boots and Felt Hats: Irish Revolutionaries and the Invasion of Canada (1848-1871)
title_full Square-Toed Boots and Felt Hats: Irish Revolutionaries and the Invasion of Canada (1848-1871)
title_fullStr Square-Toed Boots and Felt Hats: Irish Revolutionaries and the Invasion of Canada (1848-1871)
title_full_unstemmed Square-Toed Boots and Felt Hats: Irish Revolutionaries and the Invasion of Canada (1848-1871)
title_sort square-toed boots and felt hats: irish revolutionaries and the invasion of canada (1848-1871)
publisher Asociación Española de Estudios Irlandeses
series Estudios Irlandeses
issn 1699-311X
1699-311X
publishDate 2010-03-01
description The Fenian movement was born in 1858 as an alliance between the Irish Republican Brotherhood, a revolutionary secret society, and the Fenian Brotherhood, an Irish-American organisation intended to supply this society with funds and trained officers. This was not the first time that Irish nationalists on both sides of the Atlantic had tried to cooperate, but it was the first time that there was a steady arrangement in place. The Fenian partnership was extremely successful on the surface, but it was undermined by fundamental differences in customs, political attitudes and ultimate goals between Irish and American Fenians. The clearest evidence of these differences was afforded by the Fenian Brotherhood’s successive attempts to invade Canada between 1866 and 1871. As military episodes the Canadian raids were negligible; as Irish revolutionary attempts they seem absurd. However, they were a perfectly coherent manifestation of the Irish-American “hyphenated identity”. The present article traces the parallel evolution of the Irish Republican Brotherhood and the Fenian Brotherhood up to 1866, and reconstructs the cultural and political reasons for the revival of the Canadian scheme, the ensuing split in the Fenian Brotherhood, and the final collapse of the Fenian alliance.
topic Ireland
History
Nationalism
Fenians
Canada.
url http://www.estudiosirlandeses.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/Marta_Ramón-García.pdf
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