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Title: The Fenian Brotherhood Letter
ID1424
CollectionIrish Emigration Database
FileHerbert, Henry Fitz (Fenian Brotherhood)/1
Yearunknown
SenderHerbert, Henry Fitz
Sender Gendermale
Sender Occupationunknown
Sender Religionunknown
OriginSpringfield, Mass., USA
Destinationunknown
Recipientunknown
Recipient Genderunknown
RelationshipMr. Herbert writes on behalf of
SourceThe Armagh Guardian, Friday 27 January 1880
ArchiveThe Central Library, Belfast
Doc. No.9903230
Date27/01/1880
Partial Date
Doc. TypeEMG
LogDocument added by LT, 30:03:99.
Word Count958
Genre
Note
TranscriptFENIAN BROTHERHOOD IN AMERICA.

Sir,- One of the most extraordinary developments in the
intense hostility which exists among Irishmen in America
to the mother country is strongly illustrated by the
formation in the States of the extensive organization
known as the Fenian Brotherhood. This organization, not
composed exclusively of Irishmen, nor even of Catholics,
now numbers over half a million of men, and has at its
disposal over 1,000,000 dollars, and already forms a
powerful element in American politics. The movement
for the formation of this body originated in Chicago,
Illinois, about three years ago, and since then the
organization has spread almost universally throughout
the Northern States, and even gained a foothold in
Canada. It was originally intended that the objects of
the body should be kept profoundly secret, but it was an
Irish organisation, and little by little, the objects
at which the Fenians aimed leaked out, until now no
secret whatever is made of the end in view, and in a
call for a general convention of Fenians to be held at
Cincinatti, Ohio, a few weeks hence, it is stated that
"before the necessity for another convention exists the
fires of liberty will be rekindled upon the altars of
Ireland, and Irishmen from all parts of the world will
be flocking back to the Emerald Isle to right the many
centuries of British wrong".
That the organization has consistency and the strength
which unanimits gives there can be no doubt; neither can
we doubt that it will finally involve the entire Irish
element in the States, and by uniting Irish men everywhere
in this country, enable them to wield a much-more powerful
influence than heretofore, and an influence which will
always be intensely adverse to Great Britain. Today the
Fenians are in the most active state of progression.
Every Irishman who can read and write, and who has no
property at stake, is an "organizer" among the Fenians,
and lodges are springing up with incredible rapidity.
In their published documents the Fenians state their object
to be simply to restore Ireland "to an independant position,
such as it was before the union with England and Scotland",
but in their daily conversation they talk of the Independence
of Ireland, and this object they seek to accomplish by their
secret organization, either by involving Great Britian and
the Northern States in war, or by lighting the fires of revolt
in Ireland itself. An active correspondence is kept up with
the discontented in Ireland; the poorest labourer here
subscribes his dollar towards the general fund, and arms are
being purchased and distributed among the members of the body,
and others are being stored for shipment to Ireland as
opportunity offers. Each Fenian is solemnly pledged to promote
revolt in Ireland, to hasten [thither?] at the first
outbreak, and to sacrifice his life for the cause. In addition
to this every member of the entire Fenian body of 500,000 men
is pledged by a solemn oath to instantly take up arms against
Great Britain in case of war being declared between that country
and the Government claiming to represent the United States.
The Fenians do not, as might at first appear probable, rest
their chief hopes of success upon the probability of a rupture
between Great Britain and the Government of Washington. They
seem to know somehow that such an essentially selfish people as
the Americans will never go to war for the sake of the Irish
whom they flatter, whose votes they buy and sell, and whom they
despise with a depth of contempt which is perfectly astonishing
when one considers to what an extent the Yankees are under
obligations to the Irish; the Fenians do not rest their hopes
of success on this so much as upon the feasibility of raising
a revolt in Ireland. The idea that obtains among them is that
it would be possible to land surreptitiously an organized body
of 10,000 Fenian brothers [in?] Ireland, and then proceed to
"regenerate" their beloved isle after their own fashion and to
"cripple England, the enemy of democracy". It never seems to
occur to those misled men that the peaceable inhabitants of
Ireland might object to be regenerated, or that England might
have something to say about being "crippled". Ireland, they
say, is all ready; and it must be admitted that the only sources
of information which most of those ignorant men possess - viz.,
the correspondence of their friends and relatives in Ireland,
tends to confirm their decision.
The American politicians carefully foster the hallucination
under which these men labour. The Springfield Republican,
which is about the most candid exponent of American opinion
in this country and which is conducted by the first newspaper
talent in New England, says of them that "the objects at which
they aim will keep them on the right side of American politics."
And it probably will, for "the right side" of American politics
is hatred to England, not because she is the enemy of democracy,
but because they consider, with a lately deceased politician,
"that it is proposterous that the inhabitants of a little island
in the middle of the ocean should govern one quarter of the
habitable globe, and rule 150,000,000 of people." Whether the
gentleman's estimate is correct or not the principle is the
same.
Inordinate national vanity and [?] say are the parents of bitter
hatred. It is impossible for one who has watched the Fenians as
the writer has no doubt their mischievous intentions or their
ability to create trouble. Whatever they might attempt would,
of course, result in disastrous failure for them. In the
meantime
it would be well to convince them beforehand of the chimerical
nature of their projects, and so confound them at the start.-
Yours truly, HENRY FITZ HERBERT, (in [?] Times).

Springfield, Massachusets Dec.26.