Irish History, Historical Biography - Europe, Labor Leaders, Activists, & Social Reformers, United States Studies, Peoples & Cultures - Biography, Historical Biography - Britain, Political Biography, Ethnic & Minority Studies - United States, Nationalism
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Overview
In 1871, John Devoy, a young Irishman fighting for Irish independence, came to the United States in exile. Yet even while across the ocean, this Fenian greatly influenced Irish affairs. Terry Golway's assiduously researched biography of Devoy chronicles a lifetime of activism in which he garnered tremendous financial and moral support for the cause in Ireland. Devoy was instrumental in both the Easter Rising in 1916 and the creation of the Irish Free State.
Intimate details of Devoy's life and his work are artfully interwoven as Terry Golway captures John Devoy's valiant role in Ireland's struggle for freedom.
Editorials
From Barnes & Noble
Devoy, an activist for Irish independence, came to the United States in exile and found himself a hero in his adopted country. This book is a companion to the acclaimed PBS series on the Irish in America.David Murray
Golway...has produced a well-researched biography of a man whose life has hitherto been given too little attention.— The New York Times Book Review
Library Journal
New York Observer columnist Golway follows the stirring life of John Devoy, a convicted Fenian deported in 1871 to America, where he enjoyed a long, dedicated life as a journalist, publisher, political leader, and gun runner for Irish independence. (LJ 2/15/98)David Murray
Golway...has produced a well-researched biography of a man whose life has hitherto been given too little attention.— The New York Times Book Review
Kirkus Reviews
The first full-length study of the Irish Samuel Adams—a master propagandist and organizational dervish who transformed the cause of his native land's freedom from poets' pipe dream to political reality. Jailed in 1866 for participating in the Fenian revolutionary brotherhood, Devoy (18421928) was released in 1871 and exiled for the remaining years of his sentence. Disembarking in New York, he used America as an effective beachhead from which to assault British misrule. For the next 50 years, Devoy influenced nearly every major aspect of Anglo-Irish and Irish-American relations through his work as an editor for the New York Herald, publisher of the Gaelic American, and leader of Clan na Gael, an Irish-American group that supplied the rebels with money and ammunition. In the late 1870s, he allied with Michael Davitt in championing land reform and with Charles Stewart Parnell in pushing for home rule. Golway, a New York Observer staffer and coauthor of The Irish in America (not reviewed), is as adept at detailing Devoy's daring as he is at explaining the background of Irish politics and Devoy's turf battles (Devoy could direct sharp, occasionally unfair invective at rebels like Eamon de Valera if he detected backsliding or harebrained schemes). Remarkably, 50 years after he first clipped the British lion's tail, he secretly contacted Germany during WW I, defying American neutrality, in an effort to secure arms for another uprising—thus setting in motion the events that lead to the Easter Rebellion, the catalyst for Ireland's successful revolt against John Bull. In summing up Devoy's last difficult years—the loss of hearing and sight, a bittersweet reunion with the fianc‚e henever married, and grudging acceptance of an Irish Free State that did not yet achieve full independence—Golway poignantly evokes the cost of the rebel's single-minded commitment as "Irish America's conscience, defense, and . . . chief organizer." A riveting biography of one of the key figures in forging the American connection to Irish republicanism.Book Details
Published
December 1, 1998
Publisher
St. Martin's Griffin
Pages
392
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780312303860