On April 11, 2001, the Parnell Society of Dublin placed a granite marker at the grave site of Ms. Fanny Parnell at Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, honoring her role as a patriot and poet of Ireland. The ceremony was led by Ireland’s ambassador to the United
States Sean O hUuiginn, Irish government official Frank Murray and members of
the Society.
Fanny was known as the Patriot Poet, a determined
Irish woman of strong-mind born into a famous family with Boston
connections. Fanny Parnell used her
gifts of language and intellect to express the eloquence and fury of Irish
unrest in the late 19th century, and was the leading spokeswoman
throughout the United States for the Ladies Land League. Her sister Anna had founded Ladies Land
League as an adjunct to the reform movement sweeping rural Ireland in the 1870s
and1880s. Their brother Charles Stewart
Parnell, Ireland's great home rule leader in the latter half of the 19th
century, was in jail with Land League founder Michael Davitt when the Ladies
League formed.
Born in Avondale, County Wicklow, Fanny was the second of
four daughters and two sons to John Henry Parnell and Delia Tudor, the
American-born daughter of Admiral Charles Stewart of the United States Navy and
commander of the USS Constitution.
Fanny visited Boston in May 1881 to address supporters of
the land league movement. She spoke at
the Music Hall, introduced by Patrick Collins, then the head of the American
Land League movement and future mayor of Boston in 1902. Joining them on stage were poet and editor
John Boyle O'Reilly and publisher Patrick Donoghue.
She began publishing her poetry in the Irish People in
Dublin, the newspaper of the Fenian Brotherhood formed in 1858. Most of her work, however, was published in
the Boston Pilot, the leading Irish Catholic newspaper of the 19th
century. The Pilot published a
collection of her works, entitled Land League Songs, priced at just ten cents.
Her most famous poem is probably Hold the Harvest, a
powerful indictment of corrupt British land management that produced Irish
famines, emigration and a weakened, discouraged peasantry. The poem was a call for Irish farmers to keep
their own harvest rather than give it to the landlords. It reads in part:
O
pallid serfs, whose groans and prayers have wearied Heaven full long
Lookup!
There is a law above, beyond all legal wrong;
Rise
up! The answer to your prayer shall come, tornado born
And
ye shall hold your homesteads dear, and ye shall reap the corn.
Fannie died of heart failure at age 34 in Bordentown, New
Jersey. Her body was taken by train to
Boston. There the casket was open for
family and friends to view her body at the Tudor home on Beacon Hill before being buried
at the Tudor family plot at Mt. Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge. Despite the Parnell family's insistence that her
body remain here, numerous attempts were made to return her body to Ireland
for reinterment at the Parnell family plot at Glassnevin Cemetery in Dublin.
Find more about Irish history and heritage in Massachusetts by visiting IrishHeritageTrail.com
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