Fenian Fear looks into the truth of a 19th century Irish would-be assassin

January 28, 2020
Issue 

Fenian Fear
By Peter Murphy
Galeforce聽Promotions Publication, 2018
178pp.

鈥淣ot of sound mind when I committed me crime, some said. Others... I'd orchestrated the whole damm thing. On reflection, I do ask meself鈥 Was I morally or legally responsible for what I had done? You see, I never set out to harm anyone, but simply to remind the British empire dat as an Irishman... I wasn't about to stand idle and watch as me fellow countrymen were being hanged for defending their own country.鈥

So wrote Henry James O'Farrell, an alleged Irish Fenian (as 19th century Irish revolutionaries were known), who made a failed assassination attempt on Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh, in Sydney on March 12, 1868.

In Fenian Fear, author, historian and filmmaker Peter Murphy has written a work of historical fiction based on O'Farrell's real-life exploits. He poses聽questions about whether O鈥橣arrell was part of an orchestrated conspiracy to murder a member of the British Royal family聽鈥 and whether聽his trial was a miscarriage of justice.

Born in 1833 in Dublin, the son of a butcher, O鈥橣arrell鈥檚 family immigrated in 1841 to Australia. Henry wanted to join the Roman Catholic priesthood but clashed with the hierarchy聽of the Australian Church, which refused to ordain him.聽O鈥橣arrell suffered from alcoholism and a deterioration of his mental health. In 1867 he was picked up by police in Ballarat, Victoria after waving two pistols and muttering gibberish at a crowd.

After he was released from an asylum, O鈥橣arrell made his way to Sydney. There, on March 12, 1868, as Prince Alfred was holding a charity picnic for sailors in the suburb of Clontarf, O鈥橣arrell聽carried out his assassination attempt.

In response, an enraged mob would have lynched O鈥橣arrell had the police not intervened and transported O鈥橣arrell to Darlinghurst prison. While there the New South Wales colonial government searched for evidence that O鈥橣arrell was linked to a wider Fenian plot to murder members of the British Royal family. The Colonial Secretary, Henry Parkes, was an Orangeman known for his anti-Catholic views. He pressed聽O鈥橣arrell to sign a confession linking his actions to the Fenians.

The聽Fenians denied any involvement, but the assassination attempt fanned the flames of anti-Irish sentiment. Mobs attacked Irish businesses and homes across Australia.

Fenian Fear makes a convincing case that聽O鈥橣arrell was suffering from mental illness, and should have been judged insane as the time of his assassination attempt.聽

Parkes and his pro-Royal loyalist associates聽saw Irish Catholics as "jabbering baboons"聽and "disruptive troublemakers". To further his sectarian agenda, Parkes tried to push through the Treason Felony Act and The Public Instructions Act, both of which would have severely curtained the rights of ordinary citizens, especially Irish Catholics.

During the process of interrogating O鈥橣arrell, Parkes obtained a signed confession stating聽that his actions were part of a broader Fenian plot. O鈥橣arrell聽later retracted this confession, writing another statement for Sydney Catholic Archbishop John Polding and Father Thomas O鈥橠wyer.

O鈥橣arrell was clearly insane when he committed his crime. But despite a plea for clemency from Prince Alfred, O鈥橣arrell was hanged at Darlinghurst jail on April 21, 1868. In the aftermath of O'Farrell's execution, Father O鈥橠wyer would play a leading role in defeating Parkes' proposed laws. He made public O鈥橣arrell's statement that he had acted alone out of a desire to avenge the injustice of British rule in Ireland.

By narrating the story from O鈥橣arrell鈥檚 perspective, we can see how his actions were exploited by the authorities聽to whip up anti-Irish sentiment and push聽draconian laws. More than 150 years later, there is a clear聽parallel with contemporary governments exploited fears of Islamic terrorism to justify draconian attacks on civil liberties, including criminalising dissent and circumventing due process.

In his book, Murphy has well-captured this important time in Australian history. Having assisted Peter FitzSimons in researching his book The Catalpa Rescue, Murphy is familiar with the Irish freedom struggle in Australia. It is therefore appropriate that he ends Fenian Fear with a quote from John Boyle鈥橭 Reilly, the Irish Fenian prisoner who who escaped from jail in Western Australia and played a crucial role in the famous 1876 Catalpa rescue of Fenian prisoners:聽鈥淭he Tree of Democracy will never bear fruit unless it is watered from the wells of justice, independence and fair play in the hearts of the people.鈥

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