John
Boyle O'Reilly, the famous Irish rebel who lived
in Boston from 1870 until his death, died suddenly at
his home in Hull, Massachusetts on August 10, 1890.
Born on
June 28, 1844 in Dowth Castle along the River Boyne, O'Reilly
was conscripted into the British Army as a young man. He was later
charged with sedition against the British Crown and sentenced to life
imprisonment in an Australian penal colony. O’Reilly made a daring escape
aboard a New Bedford whaler, Gazelle, in 1869, a feat
that helped shape his legend by the time he landed in America.
Arriving
in Boston in 1870, he spent the next 20 years reconciling the city's
racial and ethnic factions who struggled against one another. He
became editor and then owner of The Pilot, the
leading Irish Catholic paper in America, using the paper as a bully pulpit
to advance various causes. He befriended the Yankee establishment
while admonishing them for the prejudices. He defended African Americans who were still looking for post Civil War equality. He
welcomed new immigrants such as Italians, Jews and Chinese, insisting that they
get the same privileges as nativist Americans. Throughout his life
he pursued freedom of Ireland from Britain, advocating for home
rule and land reform.
In 1885
he delivered a thunderous speech in defense of the rights of African-American citizens at
Faneuil Hall before the Massachusetts Colored League. He said
"So long as American citizens and their children are excluded from
schools, theaters, hotels, or common conveyances, there ought not to be among
those who love justice and liberty any question of race, creed, or color; every
heart that beats for humanity beats with the oppressed."
O'Reilly was
a popular poet and speaker, often called upon to deliver poems at noteworthy
occasions such as the unveiling of the Boston Massacre Monument on
Boston Common in 1888. There, he read a poem dedicated to Crispus
Attucks, killed by British soldiers at the Boston Massacre of 1770.
Attucks' father was an African slave and his mother an American Indian.
O'Reilly
died on August 10, 1890 from an accidental overdose of medication. He was taken back to St. Mary's Church
in Charlestown for the funeral, one of the largest in Boston's
history. "The greatest of Irish-Americas" is dead, proclaimed The
Pilot.
A
memorial to O'Reilly was commissioned to noted sculptor and friend Daniel
Chester French. Vice President Adlai Stevenson and hundreds
of Boston's prominent and ordinary citizens attended the official
unveiling on June 20, 1896. The bust of O'Reilly is set against a Celtic design
stone, and the back of the memorial has bronze allegorical figures
of Erin, flanked by Poetry and Patriotism. The O'ReillyMemorial is located in Boston's Fens at the intersection of Boylston
and Fenway Streets, and is part of Boston’s Irish Heritage Trail.
O'Reilly lived
at 34 Winthrop
Street in Charlestown,
where there is a plaque in his honor. In 1988 the city dedicated a plaque
to O'Reilly in Charlestown at Austin and Main Streets. His summer home in Hull is today the town's public library.
O'Reilly is buried at Holyhood Cemetery in Brookline, Massachusetts.
Comments
Post a Comment