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MICHAEL See also: farmer in Co
.
Mayo, was See also: born on the 25th of See also: March 1846
.
His
See also: father was evicted for non-payment of See also: rent in 1851, and migrated to See also: Lancashire, where at the age of ten the boy began See also: work in a See also: cotton See also: mill at
See also: Haslingden
.
In 1857 he lost his right arm by a machinery accident, and he had to get employment as a newsboy and printer's " devil." He drifted into the ranks of the Fenian brotherhood in 1865, and in 187o he was arrested for treason-felony in arranging for sending fire-arms into See also: Ireland, and was sentenced to fifteen years' penal servitude
.
After seven years he was released on ticket of leave
.
He at once rejoined the " Irish Republican Brotherhood," and went to the See also: United States, where his See also: mother, herself of See also: American See also: birth, had settled with the rest of the See also: family, in See also: order to concert plans with the Fenian leaders there
.
Returning to Ireland he helped C
.
S
.
Parnell to start the See also: Land See also: League in 1879, and his violent speeches resulted in his re-arrest and consignment to See also: Portland by See also: Sir See also: William
See also: Harcourt, then home secretary
.
He was released in 1882, but was again prosecuted for seditious speeches in 1883, and suffered three months' imprisonment
.
He had been elected to parliament for Meath as a Nationalist in 1882, but being a convict was disqualified to sit
.
He was included as one of the respondents before the Parnell Commission (1888–189o) and spoke for five days in his own defence, but his prominent association with the revolutionary Irish schemes was fully established
.
(See PARNELL.) He took the See also: anti-Parnellite See also: side in 1890, and in 1892 was elected to parliament for See also: North Meath, but was unseated on petition
.
He was then returned for North-See also: East See also: Cork, but had to vacate his seat through bankruptcy, caused by the See also: costs in the North Meath petition
.
In 1895 he was elected for West Mayo, but retired before the dissolution in 1900
.
He died on the 31st of May 1906, in See also: Dublin
.
A sincere but embittered Nationalist, anti-See also: English to the backbone, anti-clerical, and sceptical as to the value of the purely See also: parliamentary agitation for Home See also: Rule, See also: Davitt was a notable representative of the survival of the Irish
See also: physical force " party, and a strong See also: link with the extremists in See also: America
.
In later years his Socialistic Radicalism connected him closely with the Labour party
.
He wrote constantly in American and colonial See also: journals, and published some books, always with the strongest See also: bias against English methods; but his force of character earned him at least the respect of those who could make See also: calm allowance for an open enemy of the established order, and a higher meed of admiration from those who sympathized with his See also: objects or were not in a position to be threatened by them
.
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