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Home > Thomas D'Arcy McGee


Thomas D'Arcy McGee, ( April 13, 1825- April 7, 1868) was a Canadian journalist and politician.


Sometimes simply known as D'Arcy McGee, he was born on April 13, 1825 in Carlingford, Ireland . In 1843 at age 17 he emigrated to the United States where he found work as assistant editor of Patrick Donahoe 's Boston Pilot Catholic newspaper in Boston, Massachusetts. A few years later he returned to Ireland where he became politically active and edited the nationalist newspaper Nation. His support for the Fenians, forerunners of Sinn Féin, and his involvement in the armed uprising in Tipperary in 1848 resulted in a warrant for his arrest. McGee escaped the country and returned to the United States.

In the States, he founded Irish-American publications in New York City and Boston, and generally supported the cause of Irish immigrants. In 1857 he went to Canada where he set up the publication of the New Era in Montreal, Quebec. Politically active, his anti-England sentiments showed up again in his advocacy of Canadian independence from Britain. In 1858 he was elected to the Parliament of Canada and worked for the creation of an independent Canada.

Moderating his radical Irish views, McGee denounced the Fenian BrotherhoodFounding of The Fenian Brotherhood The Fenian Brotherhood was an Irish-American revolutionary secret society, founded in the United States by John O'Mahony in 1858. O'Mahony, who was a Celtic scholar, named his organization after the Fianna, the legendary in America that advocated a forcible takeover of Canada from Britain by the United States. A faction of American Fenians sent an invasion force into Canada in 1866 that was repelled and arrested by American authorities. Canadians, with Irish sympathizers in their midst, and spurred by numerous rumors of another, more massive invasion, lived in fear of the Fenians for several years.

On April 7, 1868, D'Arcy McGee was assassinated in Ottawa, Ontario.

He was interred in the Cimetière Notre-Dame-des-NeigesFounded in 1854, Cimetiere Notre-Dame-des-Neiges is a 343-acre (1. 39 km²) cemetery located in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The entrance and the grounds run along a part of chemin Cote-des-Neiges and up the slopes of Mount Royal. The cemetery shares the moun in Montreal, Quebec.

Patrick J. Whelan, a Fenian sympathizer, was accused, tried, convicted, and hangedHanging is a form of capital punishment / execution, or a method for suicide. Hanging may involve breaking of the neck (drop-hanging; causing instant unconsciousness without breathing, and quick death), or one or more of the following: closing the airway for the crime. Decades later, his guilt was questioned and many believe that he was falsely accused in order to be a scapegoat for the murder. His case is dramatized in the Canadian play, Blood On The Moon.

External links

The following is a list of some of McGee's writings:

MacGee, Thomas D'Arcy MacGee, Thomas D'Arcy MacGee, Thomas D'Arcy MacGee, Thomas D'Arcy MacGee, Thomas D'Arcy

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