Irish Rebel Maud Gonne Describes Boer War British Atrocities During New England Speaking Tour in February 1900
One hundred and twenty-two years ago in February 1900, Irish rebel, activist and poetic muse Maud Gonne, came to New England to tell Americans about the atrocities of the British in South Africa's Boer War.
After arriving in New York City on January 30, Gonne made her way to New England, making stops at New Haven, Pawtucket, Lowell, Fall River and Boston.
She spoke forcefully about British refugee camps filled with women and children, and described efforts by Irish and Irish-Americans to fight alongside the Boers.
Gonne's husband, Major John MacBride, led the Irish Transvaal Brigade on the side of the Boers during the war. They were married in 1903 and divorced in 1905.
Known as Ireland's Joan of Arc, Gonne was renowned for her beauty and fiery disposition. The Boston Globe described her as "picturesque in a black velvet gown with a silver girdle at the waist...her splendid voice extremely musical."
Illustration of Maude Gonne in The Boston Globe, February 1900
Gonne spoke in Lowell on Sunday, February 11, 1900 in Associate Hall, and later met with a group of German-Americans from Lawrence.
Then on Monday, February 12, she addressed 2,500 people in Fall River, during which eight Irish societies of 500 men and women preceded her speech with a parade that included two brass bands and a drum corps.
Gonne arrived in Boston on Sunday, February 17, and was greeted at South Station by a delegation of 50 men and women from Irish societies, who escorted her to the Vendome Hotel on Commonwealth Avenue.
The following day Gonne spoke at Tremont Temple on Boston Common, before 2,000 cheering supporters. There she uttered a phrase that bespoke the mindset of many Irish people.
"From an Irish point of view," she said, "it matters not whether it be right or wrong, the nation that is the enemy of England is a friend and ally of Ireland."
That proposition was later rephrased by Irish rebel James Connolly as "England's difficulty is Ireland's opportunity."
Gonne left from New York on March 7 to return to Ireland, just in time to protest Queen Victoria's first and only visit to Ireland in April 1900.
Maude was the longtime muse of Irish poet William Butler Yeats, who also came to Boston on several occasions to promote Irish theater. In his famous poem, Easter 1916, Yeats referred to MacBride, who was executed by English soldiers in the wake of the 1916 Easter Rising.
Learn more about Boston's Irish history by visiting IrishHeritageTrail.com, and follow current activities at IrishBoston.org.
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