By JOHN O’DEA,
National Historian, A.O.H..
In the social organization of no nation
of antiquity were societies of greater influence than
in pagan Ireland. During many centuries these
societies, composed of the bards, ollamhs, brehons,
druids, and knights, contended for precedence.
In no country did the literary societies display greater
vigor and exercise a more beneficent power than in
pagan Ireland. Although the Hebrews and other
Asiatic nations had societies organized from among
the professions, yet in Ireland alone these societies
seem to have been constructed with a patriotic purpose,
and in Ireland alone they seem to have had ceremonies
of initiation, with constitutions and laws. These
societies existed from the earliest times until after
the coming of St. Patrick. Traces of them are
visible during all the centuries from the conversion
of Ireland down to the Anglo-Norman epoch, and it
is apparent that the clan system and the introduction
of the feudal system by the English failed to eliminate
completely their influence.
When the Irish emigration flowed towards
the American colonies in the eighteenth century, the
social instinct early found expression in societies.
One of the earliest of these was founded in Boston,
where, in 1737, twenty-six “gentlemen merchants
and others, natives of Ireland or of Irish extraction”,
organized the Charitable Irish Society. In Pennsylvania,
where the Irish emigration had been larger than in
any other colony, the Hibernian Fire Company was organized
in 1751. The Friendly Sons of St. Patrick was
founded in Philadelphia in 1771, and about that time
societies bearing this name were founded in Boston
and New York, as convivial clubs welcoming Irish emigrants
to their festive boards. These societies were
formed upon the model of the Friendly Brothers of
St. Patrick, which had existed in Dublin and other
Irish cities a generation before, and was well and
favorably known throughout Ireland.
The Society of the Friendly Sons of
St. Patrick in Philadelphia contained some of the
most prominent merchants and leading citizens of the
city, and in 1780 they subscribed L103,000, or one-third
of the sum collected, to supply the Continental army
with food. Among its members were Commodore Barry,
the Father of the American Navy; General Stephen Moylan;
General Anthony Wayne; and the great merchants, Blair
McClenachan, Thomas Fitzsimons, and Robert Morris.
Washington, who was an honorary member, described it
“as a society distinguished for the firm adherence
of its members to the glorious cause in which we are
embarked.” Whether upon the field or upon
the sea, in council or in the sacrifice of their wealth,
their names are foremost in the crisis of the Revolution.
The Hibernian Society for the Relief
of Emigrants from Ireland was founded in Philadelphia
on March 3, 1790. Other Hibernian Societies,
with the same title and organized for the same purpose,
were founded in other cities along the Atlantic coast
in the early years of the nineteenth century, but
the Philadelphia Hibernian Society was, from the character
of its members, the extent of its beneficence, and
the length of its existence, the most famous.
The emigrants from Ireland during the eighteenth century
had pushed on to the frontier, or, in some instances,
remained in the cities and engaged successfully in
mercantile pursuits. The emigration which came
after the Revolution was, however, in great part composed
of families almost without means. Unable to subsist
while clearing farms in the virgin forest, thousands
were congested in the cities. The Hibernian Society
extended a ready and strong hand to these helpless
people, and not only aided the emigrants with gifts
of money, but also secured for them employment, disseminated
among them useful information, and provided them with
medical attendance. While the Hibernian Society
was regarded as the successor of the Friendly Sons
of St. Patrick, yet the two societies, which contained
largely a membership roll bearing the same names,
flourished, in the work of patriotism, side by side.
The first officers of the Hibernian Society for the
Relief of Emigrants from Ireland were: President,
Chief Justice Thomas McKean; Vice-President, General
Walter Stewart; Secretary, Matthew Carey, the historian;
Treasurer, John Taylor. It was said that no other
society in America contained so many men distinguished
in civil, military, and official life as the Hibernian
Society. In almost every city where the Friendly
Sons of St. Patrick and the Hibernian Society for
the Relief of Emigrants were found, there was a close
and intimate connection between them, which ultimately
resulted in amalgamation.
The Ancient Order of Hibernians traces
its origin to those orders which flourished in pagan
Ireland, and which exercised so potent an influence
upon the history of the Celtic race. The order
of knighthood was the first of these orders to be
founded. It existed from the earliest times,
and is visible in the annals of the nation, until
the Anglo-Normans invaded the land in the twelfth century.
In pagan Ireland the knightly orders became provincial
standing armies, and there are many glorious pages
describing the feats of the Clanna Deagha of Munster,
the Clanna Morna of Connacht, the Feni of Leinster,
and the Knights of the Red Branch of Ulster. When
the island was Christianized, these knightly orders
were among the staunchest supporters of the missionary
priests, and were consecrated to the service of the
church in the sixth century, assuming the cross as
their distinctive emblem, and becoming the defenders
of religion.
Among the names which are upon the
rolls of the ancient orders of knighthood are those
of most of the kings, bards, saints, and statesmen,
and in the long list there was no family of greater
renown than that of Roderick the Great, to which belonged
Conall Cearnach and Lugaidh, who, according to MacGeoghegan
and others, were the direct ancestors of the O’Mores
of Leix. In this family the ancient splendor
of the knightly orders was a tradition which survived
for centuries, and they were in almost continual rebellion
against the English, from the siege of Dublin by Roderick
O’Connor until the rebellion against Queen Elizabeth,
led by Rory Oge O’More and his son Owen in the
latter part of the sixteenth and the early seventeenth
century. A nephew of Rory Oge, the sagacious and
statesmanlike Rory O’More, revived the ancient
orders in the Catholic Confederation of Kilkenny in
1642. A grandson of Rory O’More, Patrick
Sarsfield, Earl of Lucan, was the most distinguished
commander of Irish armies who opposed, in Ireland,
the forces of William of Orange.
There is no stranger story in all
history than the intimate connection of the O’More
family with the annals of the Ancient Order of Hibernians.
The lineage of this family furnishes the links connecting
the ancient orders of pagan Ireland through the centuries
with the Ancient Order in modern times. Under
the names of Rapparees, Whiteboys, Defenders, Ribbonmen,
etc., the Confederation of Kilkenny was carried
on through the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries
until the nineteenth. At various times the duties
of these organizations were subject to local conditions.
Thus the Defenders were occupied in protecting themselves
and their priests against the hostility of the Penal
Laws, engaging in armed conflict with the Orangemen
in the north, while the Whiteboys were waging war
against the atrocities of landlordism in the south.
Between these two organizations there was a secret
code, which operated until they were combined, under
the name of Ribbonmen, in the early nineteenth century.
The contentions of the Whiteboys regarding Irish landlordism
have since been acknowledged to be just, and have
been enacted into statutes. The Defenders joined
with Wolfe Tone in the formation of the United Irishmen.
About 1825 the Ribbonmen changed their
name to St. Patrick’s Fraternal Society, and
branches were established in England and Scotland
under the name of the Hibernian Funeral Society.
In 1836 a charter was received by members in New York
City, and in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania.
The headquarters were for some years in Pennsylvania,
but in 1851 a charter was granted to the New York
Divisions under the name of “The Ancient Order
of Hibernians.” New York thus became the
American headquarters. National conventions were
held there until 1878, since which year they have been
held in many other cities biennially. Many of
the most distinguished leaders of the Irish race in
America have been members of the Order, and from a
humble beginning, with a few emigrants gathered together
in a strange land, the membership has grown to nearly
200,000. General Thomas Francis Meagher, Colonel
Michael Doheny, General Michael Corcoran, and Colonel
John O’Mahony were among the members in the late
’50’s.
Among the organizations which have
sprung from the ranks of the A.O.H. were the powerful
Fenian Brotherhood, the Emmet Monument Association,
and scores of smaller associations in all sections
of the United States and Canada. During the Know
Nothing riots, the Order furnished armed defenders
for the Catholic churches in New York, Philadelphia,
and Charleston, and it has ever been foremost in preserving
its position as the hereditary defender of the faith.
In 1894, the Ladies’ Auxiliary was founded,
and this body of women numbered in 1914 over 63,000,
and had donated great sums to charity, education,
and religion. The A.O.H. had, in 1914, assets
of $2,230,000. It pays annually, for charity,
sick and death benefits, and maintenance, over $1,000,000,
and during its existence in America has donated nearly
$20,000,000 to works of beneficence. One of the
most celebrated of the gifts of the Order was the endowment
of the Chair of Celtic in the Catholic University
of America, and one of its greatest gifts to charity
was its contribution of $40,000 to the sufferers from
the San Francisco earthquake.
The Clan-na-Gael is a society
organized to secure the independence of Ireland by
armed revolution. Its organization is secret and
it is the successor of the Irish Revolutionary Brotherhood,
called in America the Fenian Brotherhood, which promoted
many daring raids and risings in Ireland in 1867.
The I.R.B. was perfected by James Stephens in Ireland,
and by John O’Mahony in America, from 1857 to
1867. An invasion of Canada was made in great
force under the general direction of Colonel William
R. Roberts, president of the Fenian Brotherhood, but
was unsuccessful owing to the attitude of the United
States Government, which declared that the Fenians
were violating the principles of neutrality.
After the disorganization of the Fenian Brotherhood,
the idea of revolution languished until revived by
the founding of the Clan-na-Gael by Jerome
J. Collins in 1869, and the membership during the
twenty years from 1880 to 1900 included almost fifty
thousand of the flower of the men of Irish blood in
America. The principle of revolution was first
given organized public expression in America through
the formation in 1848 of the Irish Republican Union,
which was succeeded by the Emmet Monument Association,
these societies influencing the creation of the Sixty-Ninth
and Seventy-Fifth Regiments of the New York State
Militia, and the Ninth Massachusetts, which became
so famous for valor during the Civil War. Although
not putting forth all its strength, so as to allow
full scope to the parliamentary efforts to ameliorate
the state of the Irish people, the Clan-na-Gael
is as vigorous a section as ever of the forces organized
for the service of patriotism.
The Land League, founded in Ireland
in 1879, was transplanted to America in 1880, when
the first branch was established in New York City
through the efforts of Patrick Ford, John Boyle O’Reilly,
John Devoy, and others. Michael Davitt soon after
came to America and travelled through the country
founding branches of the League. In a few years
the whole American continent was organized, and in
this organization Michael Davitt declared that the
members of the Ancient Order of Hibernians and the
Clan-na-Gael were everywhere foremost.
To the enormous sums collected by the League in this
country, and to the magnificent labors of Parnell,
Davitt, Redmond, Ferguson, Dillon, Kettle, Webb, and
others in Ireland, is due in a large measure the present
improved state of the people, resulting from the sacrifices
made by those who supported this greatest of leagues
devoted to the amelioration of unbearable economic
conditions. A Ladies’ Auxiliary to the
Land League was established by the sisters of Parnell,
and was for some years a brilliant vindication of
the power and justice of feminine participation in
public questions.
The Land League, the name of which
was changed to the Irish National League in the early
’80’s, having prepared the path to eventual
victory, declined in potency after the political movement
was divided into Parnellites and Anti-Parnellites
in 1890. The elements composing these rival parties
were, through the initiative of William O’Brien,
M.P., and in commemoration of the one hundredth anniversary
of the United Irishmen of Wolfe Tone’s day,
joined in 1898 under the name of the United Irish
League, John E. Redmond becoming the first president,
and also the chairman of the Parliamentary Party which
it had been instrumental in uniting. This organization
is now a living, vital force in the affairs of Ireland
on both sides of the Atlantic, Mr. Redmond being still
its head, with Michael J. Ryan, of Philadelphia, as
president of the American Branch.
The Knights of Columbus were organized
in 1881 by Rev. Michael McGivney, in New Haven, Connecticut,
and a charter was granted by the Connecticut Legislature
on March 29,1882. At first the activity of the
organization was confined to Connecticut, but the time
was ripe for its mission, and it soon spread rapidly
throughout New England. In 1896 it began to attract
the attention of Catholic young men in other parts
of the nation, and during the next few years its appeal
was made irresistibly in almost every State. It
now exists in all the States of the Union, the Dominion
of Canada, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, Panama, Porto
Rico, Mexico, Cuba, and the Philippine Islands, with
a total membership of 328,000, of whom 108,000 are
insurance members and 220,000 associate members.
Its mortuary reserve fund is $4,500,000, being over
$1,000,000 more than is required by law. It is
one of the most successful fraternal societies ever
organized, and the Irish-American Catholics have given
to it the full strength of their enthusiasm and purpose.
The temperance movement among Catholics
was, from the visit of Father Mathew in 1849, largely
Irish. The societies first formed were united
by no bond until 1871, when the Connecticut societies
formed a State Union. Other States formed unions
and a national convention in Baltimore in 1872 created
a National Union. In 1878 there were 90,000 priests,
laymen, women, and children in the Catholic Total Abstinence
Benevolent Union. In 1883 the Union was introduced
into Canada, and in 1895 there were 150,000 members
on the American continent. From the C.T.A.B.U.
were formed the Knights of Father Mathew, a total
abstinence and semi-military body, first instituted
in St. Louis in 1872.
The Catholic Knights of America, with
a membership chiefly Irish-American, were organized
in Memphis, Tennessee, in 1877, and the advantages
offered for insurance soon attracted 20,000 members.
The decade of the ’70’s was prolific of
Irish Catholic associations. The Catholic Benevolent
Legion was founded in 1873, shortly followed by the
Catholic Mutual Benevolent Association, the Catholic
Order of Foresters (which started in Massachusetts
and spread to other States), the Irish Catholic Benevolent
Union, and the Society of the Holy Name, which latter,
although tracing its origin to Lisbon in 1432, is
yet dominantly Irish in America.
In the large industrial centres there
are scores of Irish county and other societies composed
of Irishmen and Irish-Americans, organized for the
service of country and faith, beneficence and education,
and all dedicated to the uplifting of humanity and
to the progress of civilization. The ancient
genius for organization has not been lost, the spirit
of brotherhood pulsates strongly in the Irish heart,
and through its powerful societies the race retains
its place in the advance of mankind.