1 December 1901: The death of Thomas Clarke Luby, Fenian,
at his home in Oak Street in Jersey City, USA on this day. His was the son of
the Reverend James Luby a Protestant clergyman, He studied at Trinity College
Dublin and at the Temple in London but was from an early age attracted to the
Nationalist Movement. Initially a
supporter of Daniel O’Connell he tried to organize a Rising in Dublin in 1848
but when that and the events in Tipperary proved a fiasco he fled Ireland for Australia
then the USA. In 1851 he tried to join the French Foreign Legion but to his
great disappointment they were not recruiting at the time.
Ten years after
leaving he was back in his native city and on 17 March 1858 in a Timber yard on
Lombard Street East he along with James Stephens and others founded the IRB aka
‘the Fenians’. He travelled the Country helping to organise resistance and
recruit members for the oath bound society. He played a leading role in the
success of the Irish People newspaper. He was arrested along with other
members in 1865 and was charged with ‘Treason-Felony’ and sentenced to twenty
years of imprisonment.
He was released in 1871 and moved to the USA. He became
active in Clann na Gael and the Irish Confederation, raising funds and
promoting the cause of Irish Freedom. He went on to become a respected
journalist, lecturer and author. One of the ‘Grand Old Men’ of the Fenian
movement he never wavered in his commitment to the Cause.
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