17 July 1798: Henry Joy McCracken, United Irishman, was
executed OTD. His ancestors on both sides had come from the Continent to escape
religious persecution. His father was a wealthy businessman and when he was
twenty-two he was entrusted with the management of a cotton factory. In 1791 he
co-operated with Thomas Russell in the formation of the first society of United
Irishmen in Belfast and when the society in 1795 assumed its secret and
military organization, he became one of the most trusted members of the council
in the north.
In 1796 he was arrested and imprisoned in the notorious
Kilmainham Jail in Dublin along with his brother William. After his release he
returned to Belfast and renewed the plans to bring about a Revolution in
Ireland. He was appointed head of the United Irishmen of Antrim. In June of
1798 he raised the insurgents there to take arms and attack the Crown Forces.
He and his followers briefly seized Antrim town but were defeated and
dispersed.
McCracken went to hiding in the vicinity but was betrayed
and was taken prisoner. His trial and conviction by court-martial followed. The
British offered to spare his life on condition of his giving information
concerning other leaders. His aged father encouraged him to spurn the
proposition. On 17 July 1798 he was executed by hanging at the Cornmarket in
Belfast on the evening of the conclusion of his Trial.
His sister Mary Ann McCracken [above in old age] accompanied
him almost to the last, and wrote:
At five p.m. he was ordered to the place of execution…. I
took his arm, and we walked together to the place of execution, where I was
told it was the general's orders I should leave him, which I peremptorily
refused. Harry begged I would go. Clasping my hands round him (I did not weep
till then) I said I could bear anything but leaving him. Three times he kissed
me, and entreated I would go... I suffered myself to be led away... I was told
afterwards that poor Harry stood where I left him at the place of execution,
and watched me until I was out of sight; that he then attempted to speak to the
people, but that the noise of the trampling of the horses was so great that it
was impossible he should be heard; that he then resigned himself to his fate.
The United Irishmen, their Lives and Times, Robert R. Madden
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