6 May 1882: The Assassination of Cavendish
& Burke aka The ‘Phoenix Park Murders’ on this day. The Under Secretary for
Ireland Thomas Henry Burke, and the newly arrived Chief Secretary Lord
Frederick Cavendish, were both stabbed to death in the Phoenix Park by members
of a secret organisation known as ‘The Invincibles’. Five of the assassins were
later executed in Kilmainham Jail and a number of others were sentenced to long
terms of imprisonment. This event rocked Anglo-Irish relations to the core and
was the most shocking and audacious attack on members of the British Political
Establishment in Ireland during the course of the 19th Century.
'The Phoenix Park tragedy, as it may well be
called, occurred on the evening of Saturday, May 6, 1882. Its victims were Mr.
Thomas H. Burke, the under-secretary, and Lord Frederick Cavendish, the new
chief-secretary. Undersecretary Burke, on that evening, was walking from the
Castle to his lodge or official residence in the Phoenix Park, when he
accidentally met Lord Cavendish, who accompanied him in the direction he was
going.
When near the Phoenix Monument, they were
surrounded by five or six men, armed with knives, who attacked them instantly.
Surprised and unarmed the secretaries made scarcely any resistance, and were
stabbed and hurled to the ground where they expired in a few minutes.'
https://www.libraryireland.com/Atlas/XCII-Phoenix-Park-Murders.php#:~:text=The%20Phoenix%20Park%20tragedy%2C%20as,%2C%20the%20new%20chief%2Dsecretary.
Cavendish – who was married to Lucy Cavendish
the niece of British Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone, and had worked as
Gladstone's personal secretary had only arrived in Ireland the day he was
assassinated! He was not the main target but Burke. He had just met by chance
with him as they walked towards the vice regal Lodge and was a man of whom it
could be truly said he was in the wrong place at the wrong time.
The hunt for the perpetrators was led by
Superintendent John Mallon, a Catholic who came from Armagh. He suspected a
number of former Fenian activists. A large number of suspects were arrested and
kept in prison by claiming they were connected with other crimes. By playing
off one suspect against another Mallon got several of them to reveal what they
knew.
The 'Invincibles' leader James Carey, along
with Michael Kavanagh and Joe Hanlon agreed to testify against the others. Joe
Brady, Michael Fagan, Thomas Caffrey, Dan Curley and Tim Kelly were convicted
of the murder and were hanged by William Marwood in Kilmainham Gaol in Dublin
between 14 May and 4 June 1883. Others were sentenced to serve long prison
terms.
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